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Bay Windows does Ptown and it's new PD Chief
From
Bike Week to Dyke Week
Bay Window features Provincetown's new Police Chief

Provincetown Police Chief Jeff Jaran said one of
his top priorities will be to ensure that all police in the department
are highly trained, including in the area of hate crimes. Photo: Tim
Caldwell, CapeCodToday.com Last month Provincetown welcomed its new police chief, Jeff Jaran, who came to the gay resort town after 20 years of law enforcement service in various communities in New Hampshire.
Jaran joins the department on the cusp of tourist season, one year after a summer in which a pair of high-profile incidents prompted some in the LGBT community to question the department’s effectiveness. Jaran said he intends to show the community his department is committed to keeping the community safe and responding effectively to hate crimes.
He also said he remains supportive of Cape and Islands District Attorney Michael O’Keefe’s efforts to prosecute openly gay Provincetown DJ Barry Scott for resisting arrest, disorderly conduct and disturbing the peace, charges that resulted from Scott’s arrest last July while deejaying at a private house party; Scott and his supporters have claimed that he was unjustly arrested and that police used excessive force. "It’s not going away. I’m not going to shy away from it. It was an incident and it was unfortunate how the whole thing played out, but it is ongoing, and I don’t want to comment on that any further. ... I am optimistic that the Provincetown Police Department, that there was no wrongdoing," said Jaran.
The Barry Scott, other gay bashing cases continues
"It’s not going away. I’m not going to shy away from it.
It was an incident and it was unfortunate how the whole thing played
out, but it is ongoing, and I don’t want to comment on that any
further. ... I am optimistic that the Provincetown Police Department,
that there was no wrongdoing." - Chief Jaran.After months of hearings in Scott’s case an Orleans District Court judge set a trial date of July 23. Jaran
said that one of his priorities as chief is to make sure the department
has proper training to recognize and respond to hate crimes.
Last
September a tourist named Richard Hall was allegedly gay-bashed outside
Spiritus Pizza, and he publicly criticized what he described as the
weak response of Provincetown Police to the incident. This year the
department has tried to strengthen its effectiveness in dealing hate
crimes, bringing in the Anti-Defamation League (ADL) to train both
fulltime and seasonal summer officers in hate crimes for the first time
in about four to five years. Jaran said regular training in hate crimes
would continue.
"We can never get enough training and
professional development. ... We are a leader, and we need to be and we
will continue that, and not only in that area. I would like to focus on
officer retention here and putting out a professional, highly trained
police officer. That is certainly my number one goal," said Jaran.
"It’s (Laconia) known for bike week, but
it’s also a very beautiful tourist attraction, Lake Winnipesaukee, so
I’m comfortable with a tourist driven [environment]." Prior
to taking the position in Provincetown Jaran served as chief of police
in Bow, New Hampshire, a suburb of Concord. He also has experience
working in a community with a large tourist population, having served
as chief in Laconia, New Hampshire, which plays host to the famous
annual Laconia Motorcycle Week.
"It’s known for bike week, but
it’s also a very beautiful tourist attraction, Lake Winnipesaukee, so
I’m comfortable with a tourist driven [environment]," said Jaran.
He
said Provincetown will be the first time he has worked in a town with a
large LGBT population, but he remains committed to ensuring that Ptown
remains a safe environment for the community.
"We’re going to take
an aggressive approach, and hate crimes will not be tolerated on any
level.""Certainly [I
haven’t worked in such a heavily gay community] to the extent that I
have here in Provincetown, but I’m not shy about it. I feel we need to
provide a safe haven, a safe environment. I know there have been a few
incidents over the years that have given the community of Provincetown
a black eye. I don’t want to see that continue. ... We’re going to take
an aggressive approach, and hate crimes will not be tolerated on any
level. But I do try to put a positive spin on things, and a lot of good
things have happened as well," said Jaran.
Residents and
visitors to Provincetown this summer will likely get a chance to meet
Jaran in person. He said as part of an effort to build relationships
with people in the community he walks a regular beat down Commercial
Street.
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