Police in a small village in Michigan’s Saginaw County have resumed patrols after securing liability insurance.
Oakley Police Chief Robert Reznick obtained the insurance and reinstated patrols over the weekend. The Oakley Board of Trustees voted 5-1 last week to disband the force of about 12 certified officers because it didn’t have insurance. The village has a population of 300 but about 100 reserve officers.
Trustee Francis Koski tells WEYI-TV the police department shouldn’t have resumed without board approval. He says the board should have reopened the department because it shut it down.
Reznick tells the Saginaw News the council’s action allowed the department to resume as soon as it had insurance. He says he disagrees with critics who say the village has too many officers because the police presence stops crime.
Topics Michigan Law Enforcement
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
California AG Opposing Oil Pipeline Special Permit to Waive Safety Regulation
Here’s a List of Gulf Energy Infrastructure Damaged in Iran War
Mustard Maker Caught Pumping Pollutants Into River for Years and Lying About It
Lululemon Slips as Texas Announces Probe of ‘Forever Chemicals’ 

