Josephine County Sheriff Daniel Steals Election? Daniel said, "I Intend to Restore Full Police Services … Without Askin’ … Residents to Pay More Money."
Grants Pass, OR – Dave Daniel is now in denial he made that promise; he just can’t seem to remember what he told the voters. Hopefully this article will refresh his memory. Since that pledge, Daniel has brazenly made many trips to the pump with his leaky sieve. Here is the factual documentary of what Daniel promised the voters to win his election. The following article is from videotape recording of Daniel’s campaign speech at a public meeting held on October 15, 1998. Notice what the sheriff promised before he was elected. Compare this to what he is saying now, in 2001.
Daniel now has a budget of approximately $9.4 million. This amount is millions more than Calvert’s budget, which was somewhat over $5 million. Did Daniel lie to the voters of Josephine County thus ripping the office of Sheriff from a better qualified man by deception? In a letter to the editor prior to the 1998 election, former District Attorney Tim Thompson indicated that Daniel wasn’t qualified to be sheriff. Did Daniel lie to the voters is a fair question, and the residents of Josephine County deserve an honest answer. After the reader has read Daniel’s promises, the choice whether Daniel has fulfilled his campaign pledges is easy. If he has not, and Thompson’s assessment of Daniel was correct, Daniel must be held accountable by denying him a second term in office. This article does not address Daniel’s administrative skills in running the multimillion-dollar sheriff’s office. This issue has been written about in past articles on Strobezone and more articles are planned.
Note the grammatical errors made by Daniel in word usage and mispronounced words such as gonna are not typos but written as Daniel actually spoke the words during his campaign speech.
Promises Daniel Made in 1998 to get Elected Sheriff
"I intend to restore full police services to the residents of Josephine County without askin’ the citizens and the residents to pay more money to do it
. I’m gonna do that by putting all available personnel back in uniform driving marked patrol units. I’m gonna put detectives back in uniform, not all of them because some detectives are on federal grants, and I can’t touch them. But, there’s several detectives down there I’m gonna put in uniform. And I’m gonna put stars and light bars on their cars, on their unmarked cars. And in addition to doin’ detective work they’re gonna back up patrol and they’re gonna respond to calls. I’m gonna put administrators back in uniform driving marked units includin’ the sheriff. I’m gonna take that nice crown Vic he drives and put a star on it and put light bars on it. Gonna do the same thing with the other administrators. That doesn’t mean they’re not gonna do administrative work. Because they’re gonna continue to do administrative work, but in addition to that they are gonna back up patrol and answer calls for service."Protect and Serve the Public
"The primary duty of any law enforcement agency is to protect and serve the public. The primary unit of the law enforcement agency that does that is its uniform patrol division. These are the men and women out there answering your calls for service. Investigating your burglaries, investigating your thefts. When you have a cut like the sheriff took in 1995 of that uniformed partrol division, you have to sit down and figure out how can I best continue to serve the people of the county with what we have left? Well, after the layoffs in 1995 there was only nine patrol deputies left.
And the sheriff will tell you nine patrol deputies, how are we gonna get out and continue to respond to calls for service with nine patrol deputies? Can’t do it. So he severely restricted calls for service to only life threatening emergency calls. Well, that wasn’t the full story. Let me tell you the full story, because I was there. After the layoffs there’s four patrol officers left, four patrol sergeants, I’m sorry, left. There’s certified police officers none of’em laid off. Why weren’t they told to get out and start answering calls for service? There’s six detectives left after the lay offs all certified police officers, none of them laid off. Why weren’t they told to get in uniform, get out and let’s start answering calls for service?
There’s four administrators left, the sheriff, the under sheriff, and two lieutenants. All certified police officers, none of them laid off. Why didn’t the sheriff lead by example and say we’re gonna get in uniform, we’re gonna get out there, and we’re gonna continue to provide the best service possible for the people of Josephine County. "
Daniel Promises to do the Job with Available Funds
"The sheriff got his budget cut, sure, but you
do the best you can with the funds you have to operate any agency. The sheriff only gets a certain amount of money. You do the best you can to continue to serve the citizens of Josephine County with that amount of money.If it means you have to reorganize your department to do that, then you reorganize it. If it means you have to put on a uniform and start answering calls, then that’s what you do. It has to be done."
Daniel Mocks Calvert
"For the last three years what we have heard from the sheriff’sdepartment is I can’t respond to your burglary because we don’t have the funds. You’ve heard that I can’t answer your telephone calls because we don’t have the personnel. We can’t come out and take your stolen car report; it’s beyond available resources.
Well, I think that’s unacceptable, unacceptable to me not to respond to your burglaries and thefts.
What you have to do, you have to reallocate your resources and do the best job possible with what you have to make it work and protect and serve the citizens of Josephine County. It should have been done three years ago. Could be done today. Will be done when I’m elected."2001, General Calls Not Answered in Off Hours
"The second goal I expect to accomplish immediately is I’m going to eliminate the automated telephone answering system we have down here. A system like that may be great in Los Angeles, they might need it there, but you don’t need it in Josephine County.
When you call the sheriff’s department you need to talk to a real person not a machine. And it should have been done six years ago. I would like to talk about getting that wall down they now have up. How many of you walked into the sheriff’s department and been met by a big glass wall? Yeah, it’s the same with the phone system, you’re cutting yourselves off from the sheriff’s department. You’re putting up a wall, the same wall they’re putting up between the citizens and the members of the sheriff’s department and you’re doing the same thing with the phones.
We all have to work together. If we had 200 patrolmen out there, we still need the public to help us out. And you don’t put up walls, you work with the public. It has to be done."
Sheriff Has a Case of the Gonna
"My third goal is to be a hands-on full time sheriff on duty in Josephine County. What that means is I’m gonna be in uniform everyday. I’m gonna come to work; I’m gonna spend a majority of all my time in Josephine County. If you come into the Josephine County Sheriff’s Office and you want to visit me and I’m not there, it’s not because I’m in Florida, or it’s not because I’m in Las Vegas, it’s because I may be out in Merlin answering a call or I’m in Murphy takin’ a report. That’s the reason I’m not there. If you agree with me that these are changes that are needed, I would appreciate your support in November."
By John Taft, Investigative Reporter 11-08-01 Ed/Doc Updated
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