Crime & Safety

Ellisville Resident Volunteers as Eureka PD Officer

Another volunteer police officer was approved at a recent Eureka board of aldermen meeting.

The newest member of the Eureka police force comes from neighboring Ellisville.

officers recommended Ellisville resident Robert Powell to become a reserve police officer this month and the approved him at a recent council meeting. Reserve officers serve communities for free, but have the same certifications as paid officers.

Powell graduated from the Eastern Missouri Police Academy, and completed Eureka's employment process.

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He is an Internet technology engineer for SSM Health Care and lives in Ellisville with his wife.

Two other reserve officers were added to the Eureka Police Department, and the . Eureka Police Chief Michael Wiegand said one of them, , was since fully employed by another police force.

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Wiegand said Eureka's city ordinance caps the total number of reserve officers that can be serving the city at any one time at six.

Eureka police reserve officers are community members who volunteer their time to fulfill many of the roles handled by full-time sworn police officers, he said.

Reserve officers receive the same training as full-time officers and work alongside them in every aspect of departmental operations, Wiegand said. Reserve officers are required to work a minimum of 12 hours every month and attend regular training classes.


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