
History of The 
Annandale Police Department
Presentation to the Annandale History 
Club
October 1, 2012
Jeff Herr, Annandale Police Chief
		The 
		current Chief of Police for the Annandale Police Department is Jeff 
		Herr.
		Chief 
		Herr was hired and appointed as an Annandale Police Officer in 1992 
		after serving two years as an officer with the Goodview Police 
		Department. He was hired by then Police Chief Myron Morris. At the time 
		he started they had a two room office in the old City Hall, which was 
		formerly Annandale's school building which had been built in 1888. His 
		interview took place in the City council chambers; as 
		an extension of the interview Chief Morris took him out for lunch at the 
		Frontier Cafe.
		In 1992 
		the Annandale Police Department included Chief Myron Morris, Jeff Herr 
		and three part-time officers. At that time Herr said the police 
		department answered 500 
		calls for service that year. At the present time, APD is answering 
		approximately 3,000 calls for service per year. The current staffing is 
		five full-time officers, eight part-time officers and a part-time 
		secretary.
		In 2000, 
		when Police Chief Myron Morris retired, he recommended then 
		Sgt. Jeff Herr as his replacement, and 
		he was appointed to this position. Jeff Herr said, "The Annandale Police 
		Department is a very friendly and service orientated police department 
		where officers pay great attention to detail and follow up with citizen 
		complaints." He said, "It 
		is important to deal with the little things so they don't become big 
		things," and that the Annandale Police Department has excellent tools, 
		equipment and resources to do just that.
		In 2002 a 
		new city hall was built and the police department is currently located 
		in this building.
		Chief 
		Herr was honored on April 2, 2012, for 20 years of service with the 
		city. He is in the process of documenting the history of the department.
		Some 
		aspects of police work include patrol, investigation, narcotics, school 
		resource officer, training and clerical.
		Patrol:  Officers 
		all start on patrol. Each officer has the ability to work their cases 
		from the initial call all the way through the interviews and 
		investigation.  We 
		often use part-time patrol officers to cover shifts, whether 
		it be vacation for a full-time officer or 
		a special event such as the 4th of 
		July celebration. Currents shifts are between 8 and 11.5 hours.
		
		Investigation:  Every 
		case is not cleared in one day so cases are prioritized.  The 
		largest case in Chief Herr's 20 years with the department was the DeVan 
		Hawkinson homicide in March 2011. Herr said the Hawkinson homicide was 
		worked for several months.  After 
		the investigation the trial started and continued for several months 
		after.  Chief 
		Herr recalled testifying for several hours during the Grand Jury which 
		came back with an indictment for murder. He again testified for the trial 
		where a guilty verdict was determined.
		Chief 
		Herr and Wright County Detective Mike Lindquist were the lead detectives 
		on the Hawkinson case. The Annandale officers investigate all of our 
		felonies, some of which we reach out for assistance on from the Wright 
		County Sheriff's Office. The request for assistance is based on the 
		resources and needs of the case. Herr believes that by working all of 
		our cases, the Annandale officers are able to stay on top of crimes in 
		our area and investigate immediately before details are lost.
		School 
		Resource Officer: Officer Nancy Engfer, a 20-year employee of the 
		Annandale Police Department, was for many years the School Resource 
		Officer, where her interaction with the students helped solve problems 
		and also helped avoid problems.  She 
		worked at the school full time and spent three months in the summer 
		working narcotics.  Because 
		the program had lost school funding, the position of School Resource 
		Officer ended in 2008.  Jeff 
		Herr also mentioned Jim Rudolph, who volunteered in the schools for 19 
		years. Rudolph was the eyes and ears of the school before this program 
		was initiated and he was affectionately known by the students and staff 
		as "the Sheriff". After funding returned in 2014, the 
		SRO program was re-instated and the current officer assigned is Peter 
		Standafer.
		
		Narcotics:  Chief 
		Herr said that people will find ways to abuse drugs and that meth users 
		and possible labs are in the county. The Annandale Police Department 
		works our narcotics cases on a priority basis and also works closely 
		with the Wright County Special Investigation Unit (SIU). Annandale 
		Officers investigate narcotics cases, draft and execute search warrants.
		Herr 
		talked about how the department, in the past, instituted a trained, 
		black lab, detector dog, by the name of "Tucker" who would assist on 
		search warrants and traffic stops when requested. Tucker was retired 
		after having hip problems. He was not replaced in the department, and 
		when a K-9 unit is needed one is called in from an assisting agency.
		
		Training: 
		Chief Herr often teaches classes at the training center in Annandale. 
		This facility was built to provide training to our police and fire 
		department in the city of Annandale.  Jeff 
		Herr said, "It's all about saving lives." Officers are trained in use of 
		force, defense tactics, firearms, active shooter training, domestic 
		response, and medical training to save lives.  The 
		training center has various resources from a padded "red man" suit to 
		protect the trainer during contact training to a small house which was 
		moved on site for entry training to simulate a real life environment.
		
		Clerical: 
		Accurate reports are part of an officer's job. In addition there is a 
		part-time Administrative Assistant who provides office management, 
		incident overview and court management for chargeable offenses, along 
		with greeting the public via phone and in person.
		
		
		Equipment:  The 
		Annandale Police Department's first Taser was acquired in 2003.  Jeff 
		Herr said that the officers need to communicate with people and know 
		when the use of the Taser is necessary.  They 
		also have the ability to use less lethal shotguns and launchers which 
		can be used to impact a suspect with a knife, thus knocking the air out 
		of an aggressor, which may save his/her life.  The 
		police department has rifles in their squads which were donated by 
		SLR-15 rifles Inc.  The 
		department has a speed trailer which can be placed at various locations 
		around the city to make drivers more aware of their speeds.  Our 
		squad cars are equipped with video systems which capture 90% of actions, and 
		audio is collected through the use of a lapel microphone.
		
		
		Uniforms:  Former 
		Police Chief John Monk chose dark blue for the police uniforms and also 
		designed the patch used on the uniforms to this date.
		
		
		Community Programs:  In 
		2003 Officer Nancy Engfer received training for D.A.R.E. (Drug Abuse 
		Resistance Education), a police officer led program in schools.  The 
		program was beneficial, but was suspended for financial reasons.
		
		The Annandale Police Department participates in National Night Out, 
		Neighborhood Watch and Operation Identification.
		
		The Annandale Police Department has a Bike Rodeo, formerly sponsored by 
		Lakedale Telephone Company (before the company was sold).  In 
		2012 David Burd at State Farm Insurance Company sponsored the Bike 
		Rodeo.
		
		Demonstrations to Cub Scouts include aspects of police work, including fingerprinting 
		and footprint casting.
		
		
		Vehicle Fleet:  The 
		first Annandale Police squads were red, white and blue with the words 
		"Protect and Serve."  The 
		squad color was changed to solid white.  The 
		Annandale police cars are now the traditional black and white.  The 
		present vehicle fleet includes two squad cars and a SUV.  Some 
		of the funding for the SUV was through drug forfeiture money.
		
		
		Training Center:  Annandale 
		had only a small 20'x20' outdoor shoothouse, built in 1998 for live fire 
		entry training.  A 
		new police training center was built in 2000 at a cost of $279,000.  At 
		the time there was only one other training facility in the state, 
		located in Hutchinson.  The 
		Annandale training center is a revenue generating facility used by about 
		45 other departments each year.  After 
		a two-day shoothouse instructor class, outside departments can rent the 
		training facility for $450 a day, plus the cost of ammunition and 
		targets.  A side 
		benefit to the community is that the visitors use local hotels and 
		restaurants.  A 
		small residential house for training was donated and moved by Jim 
		Schwebel.  The 
		Annandale Fire Department also uses the house and training center for 
		training.
		
		
		Annandale Police Chiefs:
| 
				
				? - 1969 | 
				
				George Ryti | 
| 
				
				1969 - 1977 | 
				
				Richard Elliot | 
| 
				
				1977 - 1987 | 
				
				William Ledwein | 
| 
				
				1988 - 1991 | 
				
				John Monk | 
| 
				
				1991 - 2000 | 
				
				Myron Morris | 
| 2000 - 2020 | 
				
				Jeff Herr | 
| 2020 - | Pete Standafer | 
		
		On May 20, 2006, Chief Herr attended Peace Officers Memorial Day, where 
		former Annandale Police Chief George Ryti (1905-1977) was honored along 
		with other Minnesota officers killed in the line of duty. 
		
		"Chief Ryti heard a call broadcasted of a drunk driver driving without 
		headlights.  As 
		he was responding to the area, he was broadsided by this vehicle.  Chief 
		Ryti was seriously injured in a car accident on December 26, 1969, and 
		died from his injuries on September 16, 1977."  - 
		Minnesota Law Enforcement Memorial Association.
		
		Notes by Annandale History Club Secretary