
Members
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Hours
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Mission
It is the mission of the Blaine County Sheriff's Office to enforce the laws of the State of San Andreas in Blaine and Los Santos Counties. This mission will be adhered to with the highest level of courtesy, commitment, integrity, and professionalism. Further, it is our mission to provide services to the citizens of Blaine and Los Santos Counties as well as provide effective Law Enforcement; safe, humane and secure jails; and security to our courts and Judicial System.
Important Information
All Blaine County Sheriff's Office members are expected to be familiar with all documents and forms that can be found in this section. All these documents are in effect unless command staff has made an announcement in #bcso-annoucments.

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Nathan W, Commander
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Leadership Team

Banker A, Sheriff
Banker has done one hell of a job since he became sheriff and he always ensures that there is no toxicity.
- Joris M.

Noah W, Commander
Noah has been putting a lot of work into the BCSO Chain of Command since he's joined the team. His tremendous work and effort has had a big impact on the BCSO.
-Sel El B.
Commendations
Christian D. | 3C-39
Well I was roleplaying as a drug user that was high on heroin. I looked the symptoms up online and he was able to connect the symptoms to the drug. I was also high on heroin which was laced with krokidil and he was very good at calming me down when I was thinking that I was being chased by aliens.
Thomas B. 3C-41
The way Thomas presented himself on the call we were on together was incredibly professional. We were able to work very well together as a team on this call. He always kept me informed what his thoughts were for the process.
Tomas 3C-41
he did excellent rp he role-played everything out like it should great guy
Ariana G. 3C-60
She did a amazing role play scenarios including me being shots at and how fast she responded and how professionally she acted i think she fully deserves this commendation, once i got wounded she took me as the priority and helped me as fast as she could she stayed calm and he cough the suspect and charged him for his crime, and in general i see her doing really good role play in scenario and out of them she makes all the little details stand out and that's what makes her a great sheriff.
Reese B. | 3C-33
I was on a ride-along with Jonathan R. | 5X-24 and were at a traffic stop with what seemed to be a fake police car. Jonathan requested an additional and within a minute Reese arrived. When Reese arrived he was very professional. He was then briefed on the traffic stop and told to wait on the other side of the car. As the traffic stop proceeded he stayed quiet, watching carefully. Once the subject refused to exit the vehicle, Reese removed the taser from his holster and aimed it to the window. As the scene advanced and the subject was out of the vehicle, Reese stayed professional, making clear and simple commands. After the subject pulled out a firearm, Reese tried to taze the man whilst running towards him. This resulted in a missed taser, but Jonathan managed to fire three rounds into the side of the subject, killing him on scene. After this, Reese grabbed the subject's firearm and took it away. As the scene developed, Reese helped out with bagging & tagging, and was very professional with everything. He performed this whole scene very well.
Ian J | 3C-41 and Norman S. | 3C-53
They are both fantastic RP'ers, I approach Ian as I had been assaulted, and he took a full-fledged incident report along with Norman. Both made sure my injuries were okay, and asked if I needed FD/EMS etc. They took pictures of my injuries, got my story, and more. It really made the situation seem realistic. Hats off to both of those guys. I hope to see them make CoC one day.
Jimmy F. 3C-11
I've been seeing him here the last few days, doing an amazing job with handling scenes, following the book so to speak. He's been one of the best officers within all the leo's in MidwestRP (in my opinion at least.) Since i've seen him doing all this amazing work i think he should be rewarded for his work he's been putting in. Overall he's a great leo, person and there's nothing bad about him. Also he does the best accent in-game where it sounds like he's actually a deputy from BC.
Reese | 3C-33
They worked as a team and did a proper code 5. Filip a trooper was taking over the commands and did them very well for his rank. I got out of the vehicle and had a pistol in my hand and then another trooper called out the gun. They worked as a team to try to deescalate the situation but I was still shot in the end since I shot towards police.
Brett H. 3C-39
I was patrolling as a civ today when I created a scenario that lasted around 40 minutes. During this whole time, Brett was acting professional while being kind to me and trying to help me out the best he could. He stayed calm the whole time and never once acted unprofessionally.
(This is my 1st commendation within BCSO)
Tanner B.
He is just a very nice and professional individual who I really enjoy rp'ing with. I think he deserves a nice promotion because of how he interacted with my scenarios.
Sabre F. 3C-44
They did a fantastic job in a shootout with a subject he was brave and pushed while other officers gave cover fire. He neutralized the subject.
3C-25 KYLE B.
Great role play
Sabre F. | 3C-44
Great interest in our scenario, investigated fully, and had a amazing and heartwarming attitude during our scenario.
Brett H. 3C-29
He handles scenes very well he can handle stressful moments very well and over all he has done a lot and shown good work as a deputy.
Grant H. | 3C-30
-Great Scene Control.
-Keeping Control Of A Aggressive Suspect.
-Used The Right Level Of Force Needed To Control The Suspect
Matt T. 3C-78
Have been on many scenes with him where they have gone out of control, and he always has been able to calm and diffuse the situation in the most professional and formal way, he is very passionate about his role within the BCSO and show how proud he is to be apart of the wonderful department, so I am commending him for his amazing work and hard work towards his role and having a lot of knowledge toward his department, also can handle scenarios to any extent.
Jocelynn L. 3C-79
I was an active civ and Chris H. let her do the 10-11, she made contact and handled it really well.
Sabre F. | 3C-32
I was called to a vehicle roll over in Paleto. Myself and Davis. N | 5D-15 were the first units that arrived on scene and the vehicle was totaled. We then find out there was a person in side. I try to call to dispatch for Fire and EMS. There was multiple volunteer fire in RTO but none of them wanted to respond. I was told there was county en-route. I was streaming so I wanted to actually RP it out. I call dispatch two-three times each a few second apart and they do no answer me either since they went 10-6 in RTO without advising units or they may not of wanted to respond since I was calling dispatch so frequently. I then ask if I can have a few units respond to help extract a male out of a rolled over vehicle. Sabre F. | 3C-32 and 3C-206 decided out of everyone in RTO which there was about 10-15 units in RTO. Those two then decide to respond to help extract this person. They responded and once they arrived on scene they both were helping out by trying to keep the victim conscious and calm. As me being scene command I came up with a plan. The victim already had a C-Collar on and we were trying to keep him conscious before other units arrived on scene. Once they arrived on scene we worked as a team and everyone had their own job. One person's job was to talk to the victim and keep him conscious. My job was to slide the backboard behind the victim between him and the seat and make sure he was secure. Once I did that I had other people make sure he doesn't slide when the one of the deputies cut the seat belt. We successfully worked together to get the victim extracted with what we had. We used our tools and worked together as a team which if you were in that scene in real life you would have to do what you need to do, especially when there was fuel leaking from the vehicle and no active Fire or EMS.
Sabre F. | 3C-32
I was called to a vehicle roll over in Paleto. Myself and Davis. N | 5D-15 were the first units that arrived on scene and the vehicle was totaled. We then find out there was a person in side. I try to call to dispatch for Fire and EMS. There was multiple volunteer fire in RTO but none of them wanted to respond. I was told there was county en-route. I was streaming so I wanted to actually RP it out. I call dispatch two-three times each a few second apart and they do no answer me either since they went 10-6 in RTO without advising units or they may not of wanted to respond since I was calling dispatch so frequently. I then ask if I can have a few units respond to help extract a male out of a rolled over vehicle. Sabre F. | 3C-32 and 3C-206 decided out of everyone in RTO which there was about 10-15 units in RTO. Those two then decide to respond to help extract this person. They responded and once they arrived on scene they both were helping out by trying to keep the victim conscious and calm. As me being scene command I came up with a plan. The victim already had a C-Collar on and we were trying to keep him conscious before other units arrived on scene. Once they arrived on scene we worked as a team and everyone had their own job. One person's job was to talk to the victim and keep him conscious. My job was to slide the backboard behind the victim between him and the seat and make sure he was secure. Once I did that I had other people make sure he doesn't slide when the one of the deputies cut the seat belt. We successfully worked together to get the victim extracted with what we had. We used our tools and worked together as a team which if you were in that scene in real life you would have to do what you need to do, especially when there was fuel leaking from the vehicle and no active Fire or EMS.
Justin K. | 3C-206
I was called to a vehicle roll over in Paleto. Myself and Davis. N | 5D-15 were the first units that arrived on scene and the vehicle was totaled. We then find out there was a person in side. I try to call to dispatch for Fire and EMS. There was multiple volunteer fire in RTO but none of them wanted to respond. I was told there was county en-route. I was streaming so I wanted to actually RP it out. I call dispatch two-three times each a few second apart and they do no answer me either since they went 10-6 in RTO without advising units or they may not of wanted to respond since I was calling dispatch so frequently. I then ask if I can have a few units respond to help extract a male out of a rolled over vehicle. Sabre F. | 3C-32 and 3C-206 decided out of everyone in RTO which there was about 10-15 units in RTO. Those two then decide to respond to help extract this person. They responded and once they arrived on scene they both were helping out by trying to keep the victim conscious and calm. As me being scene command I came up with a plan. The victim already had a C-Collar on and we were trying to keep him conscious before other units arrived on scene. Once they arrived on scene we worked as a team and everyone had their own job. One person's job was to talk to the victim and keep him conscious. My job was to slide the backboard behind the victim between him and the seat and make sure he was secure. Once I did that I had other people make sure he doesn't slide when the one of the deputies cut the seat belt. We successfully worked together to get the victim extracted with what we had. We used our tools and worked together as a team which if you were in that scene in real life you would have to do what you need to do, especially when there was fuel leaking from the vehicle and no active Fire or EMS.