POLICE DEPARTMENT

Eastlake Police Station

35150 Lakeshore Boulevard
Eastlake, Ohio 44095


Emergency: Dial 9-1-1

Phone: 440-951-1400
Fax: 440-951-7781

Tips? Email us!

Chief: Michael Werner contact ext. #1120
E-mail: mwerner@eastlakeohio.com

Office Hours
8 a.m. – 4:30 p.m.

Mission

To serve and protect persons and property in Eastlake in accordance with federal, state and local laws and ordinances;

To be responsive to the citizens of Eastlake and its government;

To cooperate with various governmental agencies, not restricted to Eastlake, when such cooperation is desirable and/or necessary.

The mission is to be accomplished by maintaining the highest ethical standards of conduct: by safeguarding citizens’ rights, applying the law with consistency, and treating the public with dignity, respect, and courtesy.

History of the Eastlake Police Department

The first police chief for the Village of Eastlake was Richard Taylor. He started as chief in 1949, working for no pay and using his own car to patrol the village streets.

The village officially became a city in 1955. Chief Taylor and his part-time policemen worked out of the first police station, a small building at the intersections of Roberts Road, Beachpark, and Lakeshore Boulevard. The police station consisted of a small room that contained a desk, two chairs, and two file cabinets. The rest of the building was the city hall and clerk’s office. The building later became Steve’s Barbershop.

The second police station was a little larger room in a concrete building that also was used as the city hall and clerk’s office. This station had its first prison holding cell, a steel cage constructed in a section of the Hinkle service garage. The location of this building was known as the Hinkle Block and it is located across from the Subway shop on Lakeshore Boulevard.

The third police station and city hall was the Albrecht estate that the city purchased in 1956. The police station was remodeled by members of the department from the original kitchen area and pantry to include a chief’s office, two supervisors’ offices, a dispatching area, jail cell, visitors’ area, and a locker room in the basement. The department had eight regular patrolmen, 15 part-time officers, and several auxiliaries. Also during this period, a second police care was purchased. The police cars were station wagons with a gurney in the back and an oxygen tank and mask. The reason for this type of police vehicle was that the police department not only patrolled the city, investigated crimes, but also served as an ambulance for any injuries or illnesses of the public.

Interim chiefs from the tenure of Chief Taylor were Lieutenant Glen (Poppy) Wise, Patrolman Lloyd Sawyer, Sergeant Daniel Daugherty, and Lieutenant Eugene Sydlow.

The next four police chiefs were David Daugherty (appointed November 1961), Wilson Kelly (July 1967), William J. DePledge (1972) and David Gary Fink (1989). The sixth and present chief is John R. Ruth, who was appointed on May 5, 1995. Chief Ruth has created many new programs and innovations such as the juvenile diversion program, a sub-station in the city, and opportunities for boys and girls in the city through our P.A.L. program, including a P.A.L. center with fully staffed personnel.

The Eastlake Patch

For the first twelve years, the Eastlake Police Department used a triangular shoulder patch that included the Great Seal of Ohio. In March, 1962, Mayor Mabel Johnson had a contest for the design of a new patch. Sgt. Dave Daugherty, Spl. Patl. Bob Davis, and Wickliffe art teacher Ernie Whitworth submitted the winning design, which became the new shoulder patch and departmental emblem. Being World War II veterans, they were aware of the “ruptured duck” pin. This was more properly known as the World War II Honorable Discharge pin. They were issued to all service members who were honorably discharged between September 8, 1939 and December 21, 1946. The similarity of design is obvious.

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