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Colorado Police Officers Told to Cover Tattoos


Posted: Saturday, July 31, 2010
Updated: July 31st, 2010 09:02 AM GMT-05:00


BY DEB STANLEY
Story by TheDenverChannel.com

AURORA, Colo. --

Police officers in Aurora have been given a new regulation: Cover your tattoos or have them removed.

"Some people find tattoos a bit offensive or distracting," said Aurora Police Detective Shannon Lucy.

The new policy started June 15.

"I was very taken back," said Aurora Police Sgt. Graham Dunne. "I am offended by it; I take it personally."

Dunne said it's not so much the inconvenience of the heat of the sleeves, as it is I am being told I look unprofessional.

"It was often a conversation starter for people. I never had anyone who was offended by my tattoos or taken back by my tattoos," said Dunne. "It was always positive."

Lucy said Aurora police will still hire people with tattoos. "But they will need to understand when they come here what the policy is and they will need to be covered," said Lucy.

"I would like to see the department focus more on physical fitness standards than tattoos on a officer," said Dunne. "The public wants an officer who comes to help them to be physically fit, they don't really care if they have a military of patriotic tattoo on their arm."

Officers have the option to purchase long-sleeve shirts for $30, makeup kits for $30 or a pair of slide-on half sleeves for $20 if they don’t want to get the tattoo removed, which could cost thousands of dollars.

7NEWS checked with other law enforcement agencies across the metro area and found most have some sort of tattoo policy, which requires officers or deputies to have tattoos covered.

Denver police officers are allowed to have and show tattoos as long as they are not offensive.

Report a typo or inaccuracyCopyright 2010 by TheDenverChannel.com. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Comments

Posted by colocopper
(07/31/10 - 09:14 PM)
Nice work there Chief. Way to be an administrator and focus on a problem that doesn't really exist and ignore the growing waistlines in law enforcement. Tattoos are now the social norm, not the exception.



Posted by Tom
(08/01/10 - 02:21 AM)
The funny thing is that most of these people who complain about the tattoos in the departments are the ones that dont even have one. They base there reasoning based on their thoughts. How do the know what is unprofessional or not. Becasue if that is the case that officer just called about 90% of the US Military unprofessional. And as myself a Military Police Officer who has served two combat tours in Iraq with tattoos all over I would like that officer to tell me I am unprofessional and show me how that is.



Posted by Mike in Akron, OH
(08/01/10 - 12:32 PM)
Act and appear like the profesionals we are!
I work full time and part-time. Both departments prohibit the display of tattoos. Trying to argue that they are "patriotic, or in honor of the fallen", is a cop-out. This is a profession, and appearing professional is part of the job. No outrageous hair, unnatural hair colors, visible tattoos, or multiple piercings!!



Posted by GBPD309 in Grover Beach, CA
(08/02/10 - 10:41 AM)
Tattoos
Tattoos have nothing to do with how I do my job or the type of person I am. Professional or not, tattoos are common now and not the exception. It is my body, my right, and just because I have a tattoo does not make me unprofessional or not a good police officer. I am fully sleeved with tattoos that are patriotic, LE related, and close to heart. Your the unprofessional one for judging someone just cause they have tattoos.



Posted by on for 25 in Colorado
(08/05/10 - 04:07 PM)
Why now?
@ Mike in Akron - YOUR personal opinion on what looks professional accepted. But the question here in Colorado is, why did Aurora hire people, let them perform their dutites for 10-15 years with their tattos showing, promote them becasue they're good cops, then put a stop gap policy in place at a moments notice? Were these officers "unprofessional" looking before the policy was put in place? No, and knowing a bunch of them I can tell you that they're the the picture of what a cop should look like: physically fit, clean, pressed and creased uniforms with their commendations shining brightly. The same ones they received from a smiling Chief who took a picture with the tattoo'd unprofessional looking officers. But as every good cop knows, don't open your mouth on something, especially if it's against a brother officer, unless you know the whole story.There was a push from a small 'select' portion of the community regarding this issue and the Chief of police caved in to their demands. Wait until it's determined that officers with bald heads have to wear wigs becasue of they look like skin heads or corsets becasue of the food blisters hanging over their belts or lifts in their shoes because they're under 5 foot.








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