Lafayette Police Department (Louisiana)


The Lafayette Police Department is the principal law enforcement agency in Lafayette, Louisiana, with the exception of the campus of University of Louisiana, which falls under the responsibility of the UL Police.
The Lafayette Police Department has a variety of specialized units, including SWAT, Mounted Police, Traffic Unit, K-9 Unit, C.S.U. Unit, and two joint units with the Lafayette Parish Sheriff's Office, Metro Crime Scene/Forensics and Metro Narcotics. The LPD's new recruits are trained at the Lafayette Parish Sheriff's Office's Acadiana Law Enforcement Training Academy. The LPD is CALEA accredited.

Command Structure

The Chief of Police is Toby J. Aguillard, Attorney at Law, who was named the Lafayette Chief of Police on November 3, 2016 by Mayor-President Joel Robideaux. Chief Aguillard comes to the Lafayette Police Department with a combined 28 years law enforcement and criminal justice experience. Chief Aguillard served as the Director of Internet Crimes Against Children Division for the Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff's Office from 2006 through 2016. He also served as the Director of the Tangipahoa Parish Sheriff's Office Sex Offender Compliance Unit. Chief Aguillard has devoted his career to protecting our children and has worked as a contracted instructor for the United States Department of Justice Internet Crimes Against Children Training Programs.
In addition to Chief Aguillard's law enforcement background, he also has 10 years’ experience as a criminal prosecutor, working as an Assistant District Attorney and an Assistant Attorney General at the Louisiana Department of Justice. He is licensed to practice law by the Louisiana Supreme Court and the United States Supreme Court. He was previously a Commissioned Special Officer for the Louisiana State Police and a Commissioned Deputy for the United States Marshal's Office, Eastern District of Louisiana.
Chief Aguillard holds a bachelor's degree from St. Joseph Seminary College and a law degree from Southern University Law Center-Baton Rouge.

Division Commanders

Patrol

Patrol is the main and most visible division of the LPD. Along with regular patrol, the LPD has 4 specialized units in this division.
The Services Division provides vital non-emergency services to the citizens of Lafayette.
The Criminal Investigations unit is divided into four sections.

SWAT

The LPD operates a SWAT team of approximately 28 officers. These officers receive 60 hours of entry level SWAT training, as well as regular training throughout the year. The SWAT Team is prepared to support not only the LPD, but any other law enforcement agency requesting their help.

Lafayette Crime Stoppers

The LPD participates in the Lafayette Crime Stoppers program. The LPD encourages citizens to call the tip line to report crimes. Tipsters are kept completely anonymous, and any tip leading to a felony arrest or grand jury indictment will receive a cash reward. The number is: 232-TIPS.

Operation FALCON

The Lafayette Police Department participated in the U.S. Marshals Operation FALCON to round up fugitives in Lafayette and Acadiana. The operation caught 165 fugitives across Acadiana.

Recognition

The Lafayette Police Department is known nationally for the case of the Southside Rapist. From the early 1980s through 1995, a serial rapist preyed on women on the city's south side. After using all of the technology available to them, the LPD contacted and work with Dr. Kim Rossmo, who had developed a new type of profiling. The LPD was one of the first agencies to use geographic profiling to help find a suspect. Through geographic profiling and the DNA obtained from a cigarette butt, Randy Comeaux, a former sheriff's deputy, was found and convicted of the rapes.

In popular culture

The South Side Rapist case and the LPD were featured on an episode of truTv's Forensic Files.