Gary Tuggle
Gary Tuggle (born 1963 or 1964) is an American police officer and former Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent who served as acting commissioner of the Baltimore Police Department from 2018 to 2019. Born and raised in Baltimore, Tuggle served the Baltimore Police Department (BPD) in the 1980s before joining the DEA in 1992, where he was an agent in Baltimore, Bridgetown, Chicago, and Miami. After serving as the DEA attaché to the Embassy of the United States, Port of Spain, he worked at DEA headquarters before becoming an assistant special agent in charge of the Washington Field Division, managing the Baltimore office, in 2012. He was appointed as head of the Philadelphia Field Division in 2015. He rejoined the BPD in 2018, appointed as a deputy commissioner[c] by Darryl De Sousa. Tuggle succeeded De Sousa as acting commissioner on May 11, 2018, when he was placed on paid suspension after an indictment for tax evasion. As acting commissioner, Tuggle suspended an officer who had been filmed assaulting a man, oversaw the implementation of the BPD's ShotSpotter system, and broke ground on a new headquarters for the BPD's mounted police. He announced he did not seek to become permanent commissioner in October, saying he did not have sufficient commitment; Michael S. Harrison was appointed to replace him in January 2019 and sworn in two months later.[a] BiographyTuggle was born 1963 or 1964 in Baltimore, one of 10 children. He was raised in East Baltimore and graduated from Patterson High School. He received a Bachelor of Science from Coppin State University and a Master of Business Administration and Master of Arts in government from Johns Hopkins University. He served the Baltimore Police Department (BPD) in the 1980s before leaving for the DEA. He is married with four children and lived in Upper Marlboro when he became commissioner[update].[1][2] Drug Enforcement AdministrationTuggle joined the DEA in 1992, the first of his class to graduate. Ed Marcinko, who gave Tuggle a fitness test when he was a recruit, described Tuggle as having "a positive aura about him" and said, "that man’s going to go places". He was sent to the Caribbean in 1995 to serve in Bridgetown. He was also an agent in Baltimore and Miami. After serving in Chicago, he was the DEA attaché to the Embassy of the United States, Port of Spain. He worked at the DEA headquarters after returning from Port of Spain. He served as an assistant special agent in charge of the Washington Field Division, managing the Baltimore office, from 2012[d] to 2015.[1][2] On July 30, 2015, the DEA announced Tuggle's appointment as head of the Philadelphia Field Division, replacing David Dongilli.[1][3] On February 17, 2016, the DEA, in cooperation with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and local police, announced the seizure of US$488,000 in heroin and handguns and US$40,000 in cash near Newark, Delaware. Some of the heroin contained fentanyl. The seizure was potentially the biggest in Delaware history. After the seizure, Tuggle said, "folks will undoubtedly live now that would have otherwise gotten a hold of this crap and probably would have died".[4][5][6] He was appointed as vice chairman of the executive board of the Philadelphia High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area on August 19, 2017.[7] Return to the Baltimore Police DepartmentOn February 9, 2018, BPD commissioner Darryl De Sousa announced changes to the management of the BPD. He appointed Thomas Casella[e] as a deputy commissioner,[c] but Casella's appointment was suspended when documents showing two complaints against him were leaked.[8] Despite De Sousa later saying the complaints against Casella were invalid,[11] he said that he and Casella agreed to not follow through with the promotion. He selected Tuggle on March 2.[9]
Tuggle after becoming acting commissioner[2]
Tuggle became acting commissioner on May 11, after De Sousa was indicted for tax evasion and placed on paid suspension by mayor Catherine Pugh.[10][12][13] De Sousa resigned on May 15; Tuggle continued as acting commissioner.[14][15][16][17] Tuggle became commissioner amid high violence rates, despite a decrease relative to 2017 under De Sousa, a federal consent decree, and the aftermath of De Sousa's indictment. Tuggle was undecided on whether he would seek to become permanent commissioner, saying "I haven't even had a solid discussion with my wife about it".[2] Tuggle made his first public appearance as acting commissioner on May 14, after a quadruple shooting. He described the department under him as "business as usual", saying he would keep the crime plan of De Sousa and that, "the priority is just keeping that continuity".[2][18] Under Tuggle, the BPD began implementing a ShotSpotter system, where sensors on buildings quickly alert nearby police officers to gunfire. The system was planned to be rolled out in a 5 square miles (13 km2) area of West Baltimore and later spread to East Baltimore. Tuggle said the system "will continue to position us to be proactive in the crime fight, but also quickly reactive should a gun be discharged".[19] Tuggle suspended a BPD officer after a video was shared on Twitter by activist DeRay Mckesson of the officer tackling DeShawn McGrier against the steps to a house and repeatedly punching him after he yelled at the officer. A nearby officer did not intervene and McGrier did not fight back. Tuggle said the incident "deeply disturbed" him and launched an investigation. Pugh said "we are working day and night to bring about a new era of community-based, Constitutional policing and will not be deterred by this or any other instance that threatens our efforts to re-establish the trust of all citizens in the Baltimore Police Department."[20][21][22] Tuggle accepted the assaulting officer's resignation the next day, and he was under investigation for second degree assault, while Warren Brown, McGrier's attorney, said the assault injured his jaw, nose, ribs, and eye socket. While Brown said the nearby officer should have intervened, Tuggle said that "he had an obligation not only to contain the situation that he had in front of him, but he [also] had an obligation to keep himself safe".[22][23][24] Under Tuggle, the BPD, First Mile Stable Charitable Foundation, and B&O Railroad Museum broke ground on a new headquarters for the BPD mounted police on September 17. The headquarters was planned to be on 2.5 acres (1.0 ha), include 12 stalls, and cost US$2.5 million.[25] Tuggle announced that he was not seeking to become permanent commissioner on October 9, saying that while he believed the BPD's consent decree could be resolved, it would "take an extended commitment – I'm going to say five to seven years" that he did not have. Tuggle said he had not received an interview to become permanent commissioner and Pugh said she respected his withdrawal. City councilman Brandon Scott said that he did not think Tuggle had the sufficient support of the city council even if he were nominated, saying that Tuggle "didn't seem like he had the relationships and the wherewithal to garner the support". At the time of his announcement, Baltimore had its most fatal 30-day period since 2015 with 43 killings.[26] Two days later, BPD chief spokesman T.J. Smith resigned, citing an "unstable environment" and "political turmoil".[27] On November 16, Pugh announced that Fort Worth Police Department chief Joel Fitzgerald was appointed as permanent commissioner to replace Tuggle.[28] After Fitzgerald withdrew from consideration due to résumé issues and a medical emergency with his son, she appointed Michael S. Harrison, the chief of the New Orleans Police Department, on January 8, 2019.[29][30][31] Harrison was sworn in on March 12.[32][a] Notes
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