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Tag: Karrie Howard

  • New Cleveland Chief of Police, Safety Director Sworn In a Week After Karrie Howard Resigns

    New Cleveland Chief of Police, Safety Director Sworn In a Week After Karrie Howard Resigns

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    Mark Oprea

    Former Chief of Police Wayne Drummond was sworn in as interim Director of Public Safety, replacing former director Karrie Howard who resigned last week following an investigation into an infringement of city policy.

    Dorothy “Annie” Todd, the former deputy chief of Cleveland Police, was sworn in by Mayor Justin Bibb as the city’s new chief of police Thursday morning.

    And former Chief of Police Wayne Drummond was also installed as the city’s new Director of Public Safety, a move that comes a week after former director Karrie Howard resigned, which came days after a Fox 8 investigation showed Howard admitting to violating a city policy he claimed he was unaware of.

    Mayor Justin Bibb, who swore in both Drummond and Todd on Tuesday, framed Howard’s step-down more as a natural path for the former director, who had held his post since 2020, rather than a result of a controversy.

    “Karrie and I spoke frequently about the future of the department, and we often had frank conversations about the leadership that was needed for the department to be successful moving forward,” Bibb said. “Specifically, to reach our ambitious goals, public safety must be focused on delivering for residents and free from distraction. And there must be a high degree of confidence at every level to ensure collaboration.”

    “Karrie felt that now was the right time to make a change in leadership,” Bibb added, “and made the difficult and hard decision to resign.”

    click to enlarge Dorothy "Annie" Todd is the city's newest chief of police, the second woman to hold this role in the city's history. - Mark Oprea

    Mark Oprea

    Dorothy “Annie” Todd is the city’s newest chief of police, the second woman to hold this role in the city’s history.

    On February 22, Fox 8’s Peggy and Ed Gallek revealed that Assistant Director of Public Safety Jakimah Dye had crashed her city car with her children inside in a violation of City of Cleveland policy that states “employees shall not transport any person other than City employees.”

    In a follow-up interview that day, Howard told the Galleks that he was oblivious to such city policy. He himself, he told Peggy Gallek, had done the same as Dye. “So, I’ve had my son in the car,” he told Fox 8. “We reviewed the policy. I didn’t know their was a policy.”

    Regardless of why Howard resigned, the new roles at CPD and Public Safety come at a seemingly tough time for both departments, when battling violent crime—as both Todd and Drummond said—remains a top priority, all while the CPD navigates an ongoing officer shortage that Bibb himself believes he can budget his way out of. (The city’s still short about 424 officers, News 5 found.)

    “Our new incentives around recruitment and retention, I think, are going to show real dividends to the CPD,” Bibb said. “We’re optimistic that we’ll have a sizable large police class by the end of this first quarter to replenish the ranks.”

    Todd began her career as a CPD traffic controller in the late 1990s, was acting deputy chief since 2022, after taking Joellen O’Neill’s role, and was commander of CPD’s Third District for three years before that. She is the second woman to hold the chief of police role in Cleveland’s history.

    Though less vocal than Drummond, Todd told press in City Hall’s Red Room on Thursday that, as chief, she’s prioritizing preventing juvenile crime, along with convincing the new Department of Justice monitors of “the progress we’re making and made throughout the years” with the Consent Decree.

    All three told press that the near formation of Cleveland’s own Gun Crime Intelligence Center, a copy of a similar center in Cincinnati, is the city’s best bet for taking guns used for criminal activity off the streets—a nod to those used in the West 6th and Public Square shootings downtown last summer.

    Bibb himself fashioned Cleveland as safer than it was three, four years ago, even with 2023’s 200 homicides clocked in. “We’ve seen a 14 percent reduction in homicides in out city,” he said, since 2020.

    As for Dye, the assistant director still has her job in the Department of Public Safety. She’s not allowed to drive her city car during an ongoing internal investigation.
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    Mark Oprea

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  • Cleveland safety director resigns after I-Team interview

    Cleveland safety director resigns after I-Team interview

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    [Watch previous FOX 8 I-Team coverage in the player above.]

    CLEVELAND (WJW) — The FOX 8 I-Team has learned city of Cleveland Safety Director Karrie Howard has resigned.

    The mayor’s office has confirmed he submitted his resignation, which is effective immediately. It reads:

    Dear Mayor Bibb,

    I am writing to inform you of a significant decision that I have made regarding my role as the Chief Director of Public Safety for the City of Cleveland. After much contemplation and deliberation, I have chosen to resign from this position. Serving the City of Cleveland has been a profound honor. I am appreciative of the opportunity to serve.

    In Service,
    Karrie D. Howard, Esq.

    Karrie Howard resignation letter

    This comes days after the I-Team revealed an assistant safety director had crashed a city car with kids on board, and Howard admitted on camera that he too had driven with his son in a city car.

    Howard had the job of enforcing compliance with city policies by safety employees, yet he also admitted he was unaware of the city policy regarding children in a city vehicle.

    The policy says employees can only have other employees in city vehicles.

    This week, the I-Team also challenged Howard on our finding of no city records of regular fire inspections of “maximum risk” buildings such as high-rises.

    The safety director said the fire department does not use the term “maximum risk,” yet it’s on page No. 1 of the inspections policy.

    Last year, the I-Team also revealed Orange police pulled Howard over in a city car late at night for running a stop sign. He claimed he had been out driving around high-crime areas in Cleveland.

    Howard has also made headlines for inflammatory comments about the ethnic background of many police officers.

    City Police Chief Wayne Drummond has been appointed to serve as interim public safety director while a search for the city searches for Howard’s permanent replacement, according to a news release from the city. Drummond has been a Cleveland police officer for more than 30 years, according to the release.

    Deputy Chief Dorothy Todd has been permanently promoted to chief of police.

    “Todd has served in the division for more than 20 years and we are confident that her leadership will set a course for success moving forward,” reads the release.

    City council members in a statement Friday thanked Howard “for his years of service to the city of Cleveland.”

    During his tenure with the city, Howard has served as Chief Prosecutor, and most recently as Public Safety Director. As a Marine Corps veteran, JAG Officer in the Air Force Reserves, and public servant, Howard has devoted his life to serving people. Council wishes him well in his future endeavors.

    Council looks forward to working with Interim Public Safety Director Drummond and congratulates incoming Chief of Police Dorothy Todd.

    Statement from Cleveland City Council members

    Public Safety Chair Mike Polensek, Ward 8, said, “I’ve worked with Interim Safety Director Drummond for more than 30 years and I trust he will continue his work to make Cleveland a safer city.”

    Council President Blaine Griffin, Ward 6, said, “Chief Todd and I have worked collaboratively over the years on many pressing and sensitive safety issues in Cleveland. I look forward to building upon the relationship.”

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    Ed Gallek

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