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The mission of the Division of Alaska State Troopers is to preserve the peace, enforce the law, prevent and detect crime, and protect life and property. The Division is comprised of posts assigned to four geographic detachments that provide patrol, enforcement, and search and rescue to all areas of the state and a central headquarters.
For a list of resources in Alaska, visit dps.alaska.gov/cdvsa/home. Sign Up for Alerts from DPS Sign up to receive email and text message alerts from the Alaska Department of Public Safety about law enforcement activity across the state.
The Department of Public Safety (DPS) is the state agency charged with providing functions relative to the protection of life, property, and wildlife resources.
Welcome to the State of Alaska, Daily Dispatch page. Below, you may search for the date range you would like to view the daily dispatch reports for, or you may search by incident number.
State Trooper Recruit with a Bachelor degree or higher $42.45/hour ($88,296/year) Applicants with a current police certification and at least one year of experience may qualify for higher rates of pay:
The Department of Public Safety (DPS) is the state agency charged with providing functions relative to the protection of life, property, and wildlife resources.
Welcome to the Alaska Department of Public Safety Citizens Online Crime Reporting System. If this is an Emergency, please stop and call 911. Using this online citizen crime report system allows you to submit a report immediately and print a copy of the police report.
With the advent of statehood in 1959, the name of Alaska's law enforcement agency was changed to the Alaska State Police and the organization became a division of the Department of Public Safety. The new State Police added 13 former U.S. Marshals and 10 new recruits to their ranks, increasing their number to 78 commissioned officers.
The Alaska Bureau of Investigation (ABI) is responsible for coordinating and conducting major criminal investigations within Alaska State Troopers jurisdiction. This includes homicides, sexual assaults, sexual abuse of minors, human and sex trafficking, fraud, forgery, and computer and internet crimes.
DPS public records could include Alaska State Trooper Incident Reports, Body-Worn Camera Footage, State Trooper Collision Reports, etc. DPS does not possess the records of local police departments or federal law enforcement agencies. Step 1: Click the button below to start your public records request. Start Public Records Request