Nevada Department of Public Safety

The Department of Public Safety of the State of Nevada, commonly known as the Nevada Department of Public Safety (DPS), is a department of the state government of Nevada.[2]

Nevada Department of Public Safety
Logo of the Nevada Department of Public Safety
Logo of the Nevada Department of Public Safety
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AbbreviationNV DPS
Agency overview
Employees1,566.51
Annual budget$507,687,637 (2019–2021)
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionNevada, USA
Size110,577.82 square miles (286,400 km2)
Population3,210,931 (2024)
Legal jurisdictionNevada Statewide
Governing bodyGovernor of Nevada
General nature
Operational structure
Headquarters555 Wright Way Carson City, Nevada
Director of NV DPS responsible
  • George Togliatti[1]
Agency executive
  • Sheri Brueggemann, Deputy Director of NV DPS
Website
Nevada DPS website

The agency is headquartered at 555 Wright Way in Carson City.[3]

Organization

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The Director of the Nevada Department of Public Safety is appointed by the Governor of Nevada. must be confirmed by the Nevada Senate The director is assisted in managing the Department by one deputy director and several division directors.


Divisions

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DPS is divided into divided eight Divisions and five Offices :

  • Office of the Director
  • Nevada Capitol Police Division
  • Emergency Management Division
  • Nevada State Police
  • Nevada Investigation Division
  • Nevada Parole and Probation
  • Records, Communications & Compliance
  • Nevada State Fire Marshal
  • Nevada Training Division
  • Office of Criminal Justice Assistance
  • Office of Professional Responsibility
  • Office of Traffic Safety
  • Office of Cyber Defense Coordination
  • Office of Homeland Security


Office of the Director

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The Office of the Director provides administrative support for the Department of Public Safety, provides support services and resources to assist local law enforcement agencies, and provides training criteria and licensing for law enforcement officers. The office also administers the Homeland Security Program and state and federal funds in grants for juvenile justice, victims' assistance, law enforcement, and narcotics control.

Nevada Capitol Police

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The Capitol Police serve as the primary law enforcement agency for the capitol complex, as well as other state buildings in Carson City, patrolling the buildings and grounds 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

State Emergency Management Division

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The State Emergency Management helps Nevadas prepare for, respond to, and recover from disasters, including coordinating state disaster response and working with local, federal, and nongovernmental partners to develop state emergency plans.

Nevada State Police

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The Nevada State Police Division is responsible for law enforcement on state highways and waterways, criminal investigations, criminal laboratory analysis, motor vehicle and commercial vehicle inspections, boat inspections, and public education about safety issues.

Nevada Division of Fire Safety

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The Division of Fire Safety provides training and certification to firefighters and emergency response personnel, investigates fires across the state, and has responsibilities related to the safety of fireworks, elevators, explosives, amusements rides, day care centers, and boilers.

Investigation Division

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The Nevada Investigation Division has dedicated resources to proactively enforce criminal violations throughout the State of Nevada, and focuses its efforts in several areas: major crime investigations, drug enforcement, pharmaceutical diversion, auto theft, and criminal intelligence analysis and homeland security as conducted by the Nevada Threat Analysis Center (NTAC). It carries out enforcement of controlled substance laws, provides investigative services to all criminal justice agencies, and supports law enforcement statewide through the collection and dissemination of criminal and threat information.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Governor Sisolak Appoints George Togliatti as Director of Nevada Department of Public Safety".
  2. ^ "Mission Statement". Nevada Department of Public Safety. Retrieved 2015-06-27.
  3. ^ "Contact Information". Nevada Department of Public Safety. Accessed October 26, 2008.
  4. ^ "Our Philosophy, Mission and Goals". Nevada Department of Public Safety - Investigation Division.
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