Law
Enforcement Division
Responsibilities
of the Sheriff
The
law assigns to Sheriffs and their Deputies a wide range of
responsibilities, including a variety of functions in the courts,
enforcing laws and apprehending criminals, serving criminal and
civil process, and transporting prisoners.
And as they county’s population grows, so does the demand
on the Sheriff’s Office and its budget.
Court
Security and Services
Deputy
Sheriff Richard Eye is the Chief Court Bailiff assigned to attend
the Circuit Court when it is in session. The Bailiff’s duties
include keeping the peace and assisting the judge, witnesses and
jury, escorting criminal defendants, calling witnesses, and
executing the orders of the court.
Deputy Sheriffs
also are required to serve as officers in Magistrate Court, in
Family Law Master Court, at parenting classes conducted under the
auspices of the Family Law Master, and at commitment proceedings
conducted by the Mental Hygiene Commissioner.
Sworn deputies in
the Law Enforcement Division are also responsible for serving writs,
subpoenas, summons, and other court orders, and processing
extraditions.
Law
Enforcement
The Office of the
Sheriff is the chief law enforcement agency in Hardy County, charged
with enforcing state and county laws and ordinances.
Town police, though, provide local law enforcement in the
incorporated towns of Moorefield and Wardensville.
Among the
Sheriff’s duties are the enforcement of traffic laws and accident
investigations, and criminal investigations related to a wide
variety of offenses including drug possession and trafficking,
burglary and larceny, and domestic violence.
Hardy County
deputies regularly cooperate with law officers from other agencies
and jurisdictions – including the West Virginia State Police,
Department of Natural Resources, and town police – to carry out
their enforcement duties.
Incarceration
of Prisoners
Hardy County
maintains a detention facility as a temporary holding center in
which prisoners may be kept for up to 12 hours for court
proceedings, magistrate hearings and in preparation for transport to
the Regional Jail.
Individuals
awaiting hearings or trial, or who are sentenced to serve time in
jail are confined at the Regional Jail in Augusta, WV.
The Sheriff’s office is responsible for transporting all to
and from the Hardy County detention facility, which is located
behind the courthouse.
The Sheriff’s
office also is responsible for overseeing the “Home
Incarceration” program, under which courts may order defendants to
restrict their movement to home and work locations as an alternative
to serving sentences in the Regional Jail.
Transport
of Prisoners
Whenever someone
is arrested and held for a hearing or trial, that person is
transported to the Regional Jail at Augusta, WV. Regardless of what
agency makes an arrest, the Sheriff’s department is responsible
for holding the individual at the county’s detention facility and
subsequent transport to Augusta.
County deputies
also are responsible for taking custody of prisoners at any
location, near or far, and returning them to Hardy County.
Deputies routinely travel to other states to pick up and
return prisoners.
County
Humane Officers and Conservation Officers
Under West
Virginia law the Sheriff's department is responsible for enforcing
animal humane laws in Hardy County. Deputies are required to
investigate complaints and to take action to prevent the
perpetration or continuation of inhumane treatment of animals.
Failure to do so is cause for removal from office.
County deputies also are empowered to enforce the state’s
wildlife and natural resources conservation laws.
|