Police Chief Cracks Down on Tattoos

Nancy

New Member
Joined
Oct 19, 2003
Messages
2,279
Reaction score
2
Police Chief Cracks Down on Tattoos

8 minutes ago

By JESSICA GRESKO, Associated Press Writer

SAN DIEGO - The police chief in the nation's seventh-biggest city is cracking down on his own officers' tattoos.

Effective Wednesday, San Diego police officers with "excessive" body art must cover it up with long sleeves or turtlenecks while on the job. Hot summer temperatures won't be an excuse.

"For 37 years in this business, I have never worn anything but long-sleeve shirts with a tie. I think it's the way officers ought to look," said Chief William Lansdowne, who announced the policy in a long-sleeve shirt and a tie.

The new policy, outlined in a five-page memo, is expected to affect half a dozen of the department's more than 2,000 officers, police spokesman Dave Cohen said.

Lansdowne, who took over the department last year, said he believes San Diegans deserve a professional, well-groomed force. He said the new policy — which also covers piercings, branding and decorative scarring — will help project that image.

The rules say tattoos covering more than 30 percent of the exposed skin of a uniformed officer must go undercover. So must tattoos that rise above the collarbone and any tattoo depicting nudity, violence, or profanity. Ditto for racist tattoos, Nazi insignia, pentagrams and gang symbols.

Lip, eyebrow, tongue and nose piercings are out. Uniformed women get one earring per ear on duty (keep it in the earlobe, please). Men get none.

The head of the union representing San Diego police didn't object to the rules but said he had hoped officers who already have large tattoos would be exempted.

"We have officers that have military tattoos, that have flowers," said San Diego Police Officers' Association President Bill Farrar. "It's more prevalent now."

Other California police departments have similar regulations. Los Angeles requires officers to cover their tattoos. The New York Police Department, however, has no rules on the books specifically prohibiting tattoos.
___
On the Net:

http://www.sannet.gov/police
 
:ugh: Nancy, I do not want to be rude to you but, You kept posting boring news.
 
Cheri said:
:ugh: Nancy, I do not want to be rude to you but, You kept posting boring news.

It can be boring, but there are others that were quite out of this world that many of us may have never looked for it nor seen it in the regular mainstream news.
I just think that she feels like maybe some of us would like to read some news she's posted. ;)
I do enjoy reading some of what she's posted -- if you don't like it, just move on to something else. Not meaning to insult you or anything -- but she does have a right to post here as far as it doesn't insult anyone nor is a rude post, etc. You know what I mean? :wave:

Sure I have found some posts (generally speaking) extremely boring, but never said a word because those were relevant to other post'ers -- I simply moved onto something different.

Cheers!
 
I think it's stupid that the police are doing this. Seeing cops with tattos makes me feel that they are "normal". If the police looked too "perfect", I'd be scared. :eek:
 
I think that this rule is kind of silly. San Diego California is supposed to be warm all year long, so if one expects the policemen to be in pants and long sleeved shirts, I think that's a bit overboard. I can understand that sometimes tattoo can be seen as a status thing especially in the gang groups, but I fail to see why cops have to wear long sleeves to conceal their tattoos. Earrings, nose piercings etc, I guess that's understandable though.
 
Back
Top