Image Credit: Chattanooga Mayor’s Office – Thomsonmg2000 / Public Domain
By Ellis Smith and The Tennessee Conservative Staff –
Chattanooga Mayor Tim Kelly on Tuesday announced the appointment of Celeste Murphy, a 25-year law enforcement veteran, as the city’s next police chief.
Kelly said, “I am thrilled to announce my appointment of Celeste Murphy to be Chattanooga’s next Chief of Police. She has a demonstrated track record of keeping people safe and reducing crime, and she brings a life-long commitment to civil rights and community policing.”
According to the Mayor’s office, Murphy helped drive and maintain a double-digit decrease in overall crime in her precincts as Deputy Chief of the Field Operations Division, and has also led department efforts to provide educational and life skills to the city’s youth, including working with local nonprofits to provide alternative pathways to criminal justice involvement.
Murphy said, “As chief, I will bring every resource, every relationship and every ounce of experience to meet this challenge and keep our city and our neighborhoods safe. We are going to expose the humanity in each other by embracing what we have in common. We will work together instead of against each other through conversations and partnerships between the department and the community. And we will enhance both our focus on stopping crime as well as our work to address its root causes.”
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Over the last two decades, Murphy rose through the ranks at the Atlanta Police Department, serving as patrol officer, detective, sergeant, lieutenant, captain, major and deputy chief. She has worked in or supervised every division of the department, including Special Operations, Special Projects, Field Operations, Strategy, and Community Services.
She has taken on multiple high-level assignments for the department, including overseeing policing at the Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport, as well as managing Violent Crime Interdiction. During the period of unrest after George Floyd’s death, she managed approximately 900 patrol officers and worked with the community to restore peace.
As chief, Murphy will focus on three key issues:
- Violent crime reduction
- Leverage technology, interagency coordination and preventative measures to focus on and disrupt the small percentage of people who bear responsibility for violent acts.
- Enhance confidence in neighborhood safety through community engagement.
- Community policing
- Enhance social media engagement on crime prevention and education.
- Conduct in-person events to encourage resident participation and engagement, and work with neighborhoods on nuisance properties to proactively address problem locations.
- Youth engagement
- Partner with schools, Hamilton County and businesses to provide mentorships, internships and job opportunities.
- Leverage dedicated officers to engage with youth and guardians seven days a week. Officers will proactively monitor areas where juveniles tend to congregate, and work with guardians, parents and the court system to make youth initiatives and diversion programs available.
Prior to her appointment as Chattanooga’s next police chief, Murphy served since January 2021 as the deputy chief of the Community Services Division, which encompasses units that are directly responsible for Atlanta’s community-oriented policing.
In that role, Murphy coordinated with the non-profit Policing Alternatives & Diversion (PAD) initiative, which gives officers the discretion to divert offenders committing low-level offenses to social services, and involves a holistic approach for individuals who may suffer from mental illness or homelessness.
She also oversaw five additional sections, including Special Operations (SWAT, aviation unit, motors unit, accident investigations, mounted patrol, special events, and the community liaison unit), Code Enforcement, Strategic Response (responsible for bringing resources to bear for major events or protests), Narcotics and undercover investigations, as well as security at Hartsfield Jackson Atlanta International Airport.
The Atlanta Police Department has an authorized strength of 2,000 officers, and serves a population of more than 500,000 residents. In 2019, the city received more than 1 million calls for police, fire or medical service.
Murphy is a mother of four children, and holds degrees from Syracuse University and Saint Leo University. She succeeds Eric Tucker, who served as interim chief following the retirement of David Roddy. Her appointment is subject to confirmation by Chattanooga City Council.
About the Author: Ellis Smith is the Director of Special Projects for the City of Chattanooga. Follow Ellis on Twitter @ellisthered
3 Responses
Good luck Chattanooga. I’m not very confident that using Atlanta as an example of successful Crime enforcement being the standard of Policing. Would not the idea of better community engagement be served by someone more familiar with said community?
Well Mayor Kelly has his right to hire the Chief he believes will keep him in office another term. Chattanooga has been experiencing some major up-ticks in gun violence throughout 2021. A good Budget and Great Leadership can solve a lot of ills but the farmer needs work and the latter needs time.
A black woman. Typical Woke BS. Must every major city be infected by this commie crap, even in red states like Tennessee?