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The Wyoming Highway Patrol is the highway patrol and de facto state police agency for the U.S. state of Wyoming, and has jurisdiction across the entire state. The goals of the Wyoming Highway Patrol are to make Wyoming's highways safer by reducing the number of traffic crashes, deaths, and injuries; to apprehend and arrest criminals using Wyoming's highways; and to assist motorists in trouble.
This is a list of law enforcement agencies in the state of Wyoming.. According to the US Bureau of Justice Statistics' 2008 Census of State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies, the state had 90 law enforcement agencies employing 1,691 sworn police officers, about 317 for each 100,000 residents.
Alaska and Arkansas are the only states with both a highway patrol and a state police. The Alaska Highway Patrol is a bureau of the Alaska State Troopers while the Arkansas Highway Patrol is the uniformed patrol division of the Arkansas State Police. A separate Arkansas Highway Police [5] exists as part of the Arkansas Department of ...
Sep. 2—CHEYENNE — Missing data is preventing people from getting a clear picture of crime and policing in Wyoming, some say. To date, Wyoming Highway Patrol has yet to submit any data to the ...
Two men were arrested by the Wyoming Highway Patrol while driving a white 2019 Lamborghini Huracan Spyder allegedly stolen from a rental agency. A green Huracan was also allegedly taken.
BOISE, Idaho, Aug. 29, 2024 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Cradlepoint, part of Ericsson, the global leader in cloud-delivered 5G and LTE wireless network and security solutions, today announced that Wyoming Highway Patrol (WHP) is leveraging Cradlepoint dual-modem routers and NetCloud Manager to provide in-vehicle cellular connectivity for its state-wide fleet.
(Wyoming Highway Patrol via CNN Newsource) The roadway is pictured at milepost 12.8 on Teton Pass after it collapsed June 8 2024. The crack across lanes dropped vertically roughly 8 inches in some ...
In response, the Wyoming Legislature authorized creation of the Wyoming Highway Patrol, effective June 1, 1933. Capt. George Smith, the first Patrol director, was also a visionary, pushing for a state speed limit and a driver licensing law years before they became a reality.