Published time: November 12, 2014 19:40
Edited time: November 13, 2014 05:43
A tiny Michigan town with less than 300 residents is finding itself in the national spotlight thanks to recent reports concerning a controversial ad hoc police force in which upwards of 100 people paid money to be a part of.
The years-long saga surrounding the Oakley, MI, Police Department has taken twists and turns as of late, and has been legally abolished twice in recent months, first by the town’s Board of Trustees, then by the Saginaw County Circuit Court.
But while insurance issues were to blame for at least one of those shut-downs — the Board of Trustees said in September that officials would need to purchase a policy to operate as a police force — the heart of the drama surrounding the Oakley PD lately involves a long-standing program in which volunteers have been able to join the force by attending a weeks’ worth of training and writing a check for barely a grand.
“The wanna-be officers pay about about $1,200 for a uniform, bullet-proof vest and gun, and some make additional donations to the police department. In return, they get a police badge and the right to carry their gun almost anywhere in the state, including places that people with normal gun permits can’t, like casinos, bars, stadiums and daycare centers,” ML Nestel wrote for Vocativ last month.
Those volunteer “reservists,” Nestel reported, have included lawyers, doctors and even professional football players from the NFL since Robert Reznick became Oakley’s police chief in 2008 and soon after extended admission in the force to anyone willing to pledge eight hours of service a month, 40 hours of training and, according to Vocativ, attend an indeterminate number of meetings. Sources told…
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