Date: Fri 27-Dec-1996
Date: Fri 27-Dec-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: ANDYG
Quick Words:
police-Rios-sergeant-promotion
Full Text:
Rios Named As New Police Sergeant
B Y A NDREW G OROSKO
The Police Commission has promoted police patrol officer Jose "Joe" L. Rios to
the rank of sergeant.
Commission members elevated Rios to the post Monday, following an executive
session.
Rios joined the police department in April 1990. He had been a police officer
at Fairfield Hills Hospital and a special deputy sheriff for the Danbury
sheriff's department before joining the town's police department.
The Newtown resident has been an investigator for the Statewide Narcotics Task
Force. He is an FBI-trained marksman. Most recently, Rios served as the police
department's school resource officer, which is an policeman who handles law
enforcement matters in the upper school grades.
A 1985 graduate of Norwich University in Northfield, Vermont, Rios has a
bachelors degree in criminal justice.
Rios fills the vacancy created by the retirement of Sgt Klaus Ertl earlier
this year. Sgt Ertl worked at the police department for 26 years.
Rios joins John Qubick, Martin Pytko and Henry Stormer as sergeants.
Rios, 33, said Thursday that he looks forward to the challenges he will face
as a police supervisor.
Becoming a sergeant after a decade in the law enforcement field is a natural
progression, Rios said.
As the school resource officer, Rios worked at Newtown High School and Newtown
Middle School, both in plainclothes and in uniform. He said he enjoyed working
in the educational environment.
As the resource officer, Rios taught the Drug Abuse Resistance Education
(DARE) course, was an instructor for various classes, and investigated
complaints.
"I was busy in the schools, which is good," he said.
As a sergeant, Rios will supervise patrol officers at the scenes of various
incidents and will work at the police station.
"I feel very honored to have been selected," he said, noting there was keen
competition for the sergeant's post. Preparing for the sergeant's written
examination involved a good deal of study, he said.
"It was a difficult, but fair test," he said.
The four patrol officers with the highest marks on the written test in
descending order were: Rios, youth officer Michael Kehoe, patrol officer James
Mooney, and patrol officer George Sinko.
More than 15 patrol officers took the written examination for police sergeant.
The town requires that applicants for a sergeancy have served as police
officers for at least five years.
Candidates for promotion who received a passing grade on a written test then
appeared before an oral examination board. The top three finishers were
referred to the Police Commission.
A police sergeant must have a good knowledge of state law, police policy and
procedures, as well as have good communications skills, according to Police
Chief James Lysaght, Jr. A sergeant also needs technical expertise in the area
of investigations.
The written examination focuses on: state criminal and motor vehicle law;
management practices; decision-making abilities; ethics, rules and
regulations, among other subject areas.
