The Hillsboro Police Department grew to five employees in 1947, and expanded to 31 employees by 1976. In 1980, officer Gerald H. Erickson became the only officer in the department to die in the line of duty. The department hired Ron Louie as chief of police in 1992. The department had grown to 54 sworn officers in 1994. In 1995, Hillsboro police partnered with the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and
Intel Corporation to start the Oregon High-Tech Crime Team to investigate and prosecute computer based crimes. Intel donated $100,000 to the program. By 1999, the department had seven officers assigned to the team. In 2003, the unit was dissolved after 93 arrests and the recovery of $208 million, after private funding ended and a new FBI lab was opened. in eastern Hillsboro The department became the first police agency in Oregon to collect
racial information from traffic stops in May 2000. The information was collected to train officers to not target minority groups. In 2006, police chief Ron Louie and one other officer were appointed to a six-person, statewide task force to analyze racial profiling along with the
American Civil Liberties Union’s top person in the state, and former
Oregon Supreme Court justice
Edwin J. Peterson. The department established a mediation program in 1997. That program reached its goal of providing 32 hours of formal training for its entire workforce, becoming the first law enforcement agency in the United States accomplish this task. The department purchased a closed Albertson's grocery store for $2.6 million in January 2001. In December 2001, the department took issue with the appropriateness of some of the questions in the
United States Department of Justice’s anti-terrorism interviews that followed the
September 11 attacks. HPD became nationally accredited in 2004 by the
Commission on Accreditation for Law Enforcement Agencies (CALEA), and regionally accredited in 2008 by the Oregon Accreditation Alliance. The agency remained CALEA accredited until 2007. In 2003 officer Lila Ashenbrenner became the first woman in the department with a command position. At that time women made up 19% of the 106 officer force. Ron Louie (1992-2007), The department's Life Intervention program for fighting
truancy in schools was named a finalist an award by the
International Association of Chiefs of Police in 2009. Carey Sullivan served as chief from July 2010 to March 2013, with former chief Ron Louie serving as interim chief. The city hired Lee Dobrowolski as the new chief, taking office in February 2014. The department, in conjunction with the Fire Department, announced a joint training facility would be built near
Hillsboro Stadium. ==Operations==