Dang.
I started a new career last month myself. I'm in my fifth week of field training as a newly minted LEO. Small town, small department. Department already going through some big changes - hopefully all shakes out well on the other side. I've got about 7 or 8 weeks left riding with my TO before ghosting - the way they do it is having a TO shadow you in another vehicle while you're riding solo. That'll be interesting. Was already warned that if another call drops while I'm handling a call, he'll have to split out and go handle it while I figure it out on my own.
So far its been a kick in the pants.
Congrats! ... or condolences, whichever you deem to be appropriate. After 30 years in law enforcement, I'm glad to be retired. I wish you a long and unexciting career. Beware the small town politics.
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Congrats on the new LEO gig. I wish you a long and uneventful career. While not sworn I worked 24 years in law enforcement and my best day was my last one. That career opened many doors for me that I would never have been able to do on my own. My teaching for the department landed me a job teaching at a college, and doing both of those has now got me started booking my own safety meetings at companies. I also put some of it to work in my part time driving jobs teaching as part of my job duties. Gather all the knowledge you can, do as many varied things as you can, and you will always be able to use it later in life.
There are advantages to starting with a small agency that you wouldn't get in a large city. Small agencies need the officers to do a little bit (or a lot) of everything, so you'll learn patrol, criminal investigation, crime scene evidence collection, arrest procedures and case preparation for trial. You'll likely learn to do your own probable cause affidavits for warrants, and you may have a few kicked back by a magistrate because you left out a key word here or there. In big agencies, there are office dweebs who handle the paperwork while patrol acts as a taxi service to bring folks into the jail and dump them. On the down side, you may be the only officer on the street at times with the nearest backup 15 - 20 minutes away. You'll learn some creative techniques to keep your hide intact while awaiting help.
My last position was with a small sheriff's office. We had 8 deputies when I started here, not enough for 24 hour coverage. That meant whoever lived close to the call got called out in the middle of the night. One riot, one ranger. Twenty minutes minimum for backup to arrive. On the rare occasion when someone was drunk enough to want to fight, I pointed to my handheld radio with a little red button on top. I told the guy "If I have to push that little red button, it will rain police for an hour, and they won't be happy getting dragged out of bed." He decided to go peacefully. Good thing, because that little red button didn't do anything, and the handheld radio was worthless that far from the repeater.