@@cbj008g7 not exactly. usually the county is in charge of arrest warrants and stuff of that nature where as police usually just police cities with patrolling etc.
Basically. Bigger cities usually have their own police department, while the other smaller cities and towns in the county are covered by the sheriff's department. And for the State troopers, they almost always patrol the highways.
For anyone looking for more in depth answer. The sheriff is in theory in charge of the whole county. When a city incorporates mean they want to be in charge of themselves essentially they may create a police department. So the sheriff patrols unincorporated areas within the county
I think they meant a sheriff's deputy, not the sheriff of the county. Police work for a municipality which is considered a corporation by US code. Cops have limited jurisdiction within city limits and patrol that city. A sheriff's deputy patrols the entire county and has higher jurisdiction than city cops and can patrol the city and county areas.
@@Jamesright449 county or country, as in countryside. But i fixed it for you and the other guy. Stop getting hung up on a single word that might have been used in a different way you aren't used to
That was a good description, but I feel like it was only half of it. It's probably important to talk about their job duties as well, because they are a little different.
The best example today is when the sheriff deputy pulled over the officer for speed couple days ago. He was able to pull him over because he was a sheriff and had jurisdiction over the city officer.
@@lolhi3105 In Texas theoretically an police officer from Dallas can pull you over, fine you or even arrest you in say Houston. This is because they are licensed by the state. However that also means they will have to go to court in that county when the time comes and local police frowns on it, so it rarely happens. If it is a serious crime they will detain you and call local police to come and take over. Departments also have mutual aid agreements.
Sheriff's Dept usually, but not always, patrols the county. Leaving specific cities and municipalities to be patrolled by their respective police departments
Unless those cities are also part of the county, in which case their jurisdiction also falls there. Also I don’t know what you mean by specific municipalities, both counties and cities are municipalities. Did you mean like a town or a village?
@@KufLMAO that's what I meant, I figured people would be able to make the inference on their own so I used municipalities instead of wasting time by typing out extra words that weren't needed
@@KufLMAO Generally county sheriff will leave enforcing the law to the city police within the city limits. Constables where used will as they generally serve warrants and such countywide even within the city. However any cop is within their right to enforce the law if they choose. In some states even a cop from another city can theoretically detain and arrest you though they usually won't unless something serious.
Then you also have some county police departments too. Me personally I work for the City Sheriff's Office where our main function is the courts, civil process, and the jail.
Sheriff himself is appointed and elected by the people, he hires and appoints deputies to do patrol work. Typically the sheriffs agencies works in more rural areas and small towns. In some states local jails are required by law to be run by the sheriff, so the sheriff is also responsible for them as well.
The primary difference between a police officer and a deputy sheriff is their jurisdiction, or the geographical area in which they can legally operate. A deputy sheriff typically possesses jurisdiction over an entire county, which may contain several small towns and cities.
Same in Florida lmfao, I live in the Palm Harbor area and for every 3 PCSO cars I see, I also see at least 1 Largo/Clearwater PD car. I've literally seen a Tampa PD car down here. Like what?
There's only one sheriff per county, and he's usually administrative. He has deputies, like the police chief has officers. A deputy can stop/arrest you in the city or county. A police officer's jurisdiction is the city limits.
I live in Memphis,TN and the county encompasses about 5-8 cities. It's rare but happens in some states. We have county deputies in all of the cities within the county however each city has its own police department. We also have state troopers(state police) in the same area.
Police follow whatever corrupt law is passed even if it unconstitutional and a elected Sheriff has to follow the constitution. That's the real difference coming from a deputy.
every department is different with their duty weapon policy. for example, my department used to be an option of a .40 or .45 after your probation period was up otherwise you were stuck with a 9 (a 147 grain subsonic ONLY)
For those wondering: Deputies (“sheriff’s”) just have different jurisdiction. Which is the county. Like instead of MPD, OPD, EMS whatever city PD it is, it’s OCSO, WCSO, etc. you get the point? It goes from PD (police department) to SO (sheriffs office) which is just the law enforcement service for the COUNTY, not an individual corporated township. They sometimes also have different specialized units. Like where I live, there are smaller cities that make up the county, and because of that each department doesn’t have the budget or resources to all have a tac unit. So the county sheriffs office is the only department that has one. It saves money and resources and is just as effective. Hope this helps anyone who needed it
A sheriff also has state jurisdiction which means they can conduct their business all across the state, a patrol officer is a local jurisdiction which means they can only conduct their work in said city.
That makes sense. Every policeman that i've dealt with is a prick with a power trip But pretty much Every sheriff I've dealt with seems like a normal person
Only partly true. Chiefs of Police are APPOINTED (usually by a mayor or a city council). Sheriffs are voted in. This makes a major difference, as a Chief of Police can be randomly fired, while a Sheriff can (generally) only be voted out next time.
The U.S. Marshals function as part of the federal U.S. Department of Justice. Police departments function at the city level. It's like a Amazon delivery driver giving orders to a USPS city carrier
Police Department’s are assigned to a city. While a Sheriff Department is assigned to a county and is assigned to multiple city’s with in the county. Now you know.
Keep in mind though he answered the question super literally. "The" sheriff is one dude in a county. The law enforcement officers you see driving squads with the word "sheriff" on the side and in uniforms that say "sheriff" on them are sheriff's deputies. Basically the same as any city police officers minus jurisdiction and a few aspects of their jobs
Based on my experience in gta5. U have police downtown in the city. When u go out on the highway to some rural area, u will have sheriff chasing you instead of cop
he explained exactly what people know allready..... good job. i think the question was a bit deeper than that, talking bout jurisdiction and difference in task and authority.
Also everyone is forgetting a sheriff is voted into office by their constituents. The people have more of a say in law enforcement than with police departments.
For those wondering wtf he just said. He basically dodged the question. As police officer he just patrols the town or city he’s stationed at a deputy sheriff is responsible for the whole county
Depends on where you live in the country. I work as a Sheriffs Officer and I mainly work within the courts providing security. I also help transport prisoners to different counties for court. However I know some states where the sheriffs department also respond to calls for service and work inside the county jails supervising inmates.
I think they meant what’s the difference between a police officer and a deputy. As a deputy I was selected by a Sheriff and became deputized by the Sheriff and I go where I am told and do what the county needs of me in a law enforcement capacity. Police are municipal and work under the hierarchy of the city’s police department(s). Then there are state troopers, etc. law enforcement is a very long arm across the world. From local, state, federal, and international.
Yeah, he answered the correction super literally. He isn't technically wrong but we all know the dude asking the question meant sheriff's deputies and not just "sheriff". People just get confused on the terminology because deputies have the word "sheriff" on their squads and uniforms
All law enforcement leaders should be elected, in my opinion. That could solve most of the problems we currently have with the police. Let’s try to do this the easy way first.
The Sheriff is an elected position. The under-sheriff runs the Sheriff's department. The Sheriff is the Senior Law Effective Officer. He or she out ranks the police chief. The Sheriff's Department patrols the non-city areas of the county. Also, the Sheriff's Department handles the county jail.
The Sheriff upholds the CONSTITUTION/LAW!!! Police enforce policy!!! Key phrase: "appointed by the people" This is why the police can violate your "rights"
I think they are asking about Deputies! I’m a Deputy in Florida…The major difference between Police Officers and Deputies is jurisdiction. Think about the city you live in…that’s what Police Patrol…Sheriff covers the county. Police officers patrol areas are significantly smaller than that of a Deputy. A police officers zone may be a few blocks to maybe 3miles. A Deputy’s zone may stretches 10-20miles.
I think they wanted to know the difference in roles of Police Officers vs Deputy Sheriffs
They do the same things, but the Sheriff's cover a whole county while the police cover a city
@@cbj008g7 not exactly. usually the county is in charge of arrest warrants and stuff of that nature where as police usually just police cities with patrolling etc.
@@cbj008g7 also, the sheriff's in my county is over all the schools
@@kalewilson7756 He was right they do that plus oversee the county. Its really just authority over a city vs the entire county they work in.
Yeah it really does seem like he missed the point of the question
Police: Covers cities.
Sheriffs and Deputies: Covers counties
State Troopers: Covers states.
Basically. Bigger cities usually have their own police department, while the other smaller cities and towns in the county are covered by the sheriff's department. And for the State troopers, they almost always patrol the highways.
@@jeremiahestill1301 Like the highway to the danger zone?
Guards: covers buildings and shelters
INTERPOL: Covers 196 country's.
White blood cell:
Sheriffs cover a county usually while police cover cities
State police:
@@fletcharoo County police:
Although the OP is right, usually police are city, sheriff is county, and troopers are state. (Kinda).
@@videoeditingprojects2355 you pretty much got the gist of it
My town has police and sheriffs , highways hate state troopers. Got to love it
@@videoeditingprojects2355 Never heard of county police.. I have herd of deputy sheriffs that patrol the county AND THE CITY
For anyone looking for more in depth answer. The sheriff is in theory in charge of the whole county. When a city incorporates mean they want to be in charge of themselves essentially they may create a police department. So the sheriff patrols unincorporated areas within the county
That doesn’t mean that they don’t have jurisdiction within that city. In fact, they can determine whether or not a law is even enforceable.
@@AJ_Sparten1337Oh ok cause I was about to ask "really? They just lose power to the city? What if the whole county becomes incorporated then?" Lmao
Thank you because he slow
I think they meant a sheriff's deputy, not the sheriff of the county.
Police work for a municipality which is considered a corporation by US code. Cops have limited jurisdiction within city limits and patrol that city.
A sheriff's deputy patrols the entire county and has higher jurisdiction than city cops and can patrol the city and county areas.
The country?
That not true, sheriff can only patrol outside or Inside the city not the whole country.
@@Jamesright449 county or country, as in countryside. But i fixed it for you and the other guy. Stop getting hung up on a single word that might have been used in a different way you aren't used to
hugh gurr hurrr durrr grurrr hurgggg 😂
@@lamename8030 glad to see you speak Caveman.
Our Johnsons are usually much larger .😅
Retired Deputy Sheriff
Lol
And a agent is way larger common sense
Bro got so mad he choked the cameraman 🥴
I can’t breathe 🥴😵
🥐
stop it 🥴
Typical 🐷 behavior
I was told police patrol the city, sheriff patrol the counties and trooper patrol the whole state.
That was a good description, but I feel like it was only half of it.
It's probably important to talk about their job duties as well, because they are a little different.
Well, duties are simple when all cops are bastards.
The best example today is when the sheriff deputy pulled over the officer for speed couple days ago. He was able to pull him over because he was a sheriff and had jurisdiction over the city officer.
@@lolhi3105 In Texas theoretically an police officer from Dallas can pull you over, fine you or even arrest you in say Houston. This is because they are licensed by the state. However that also means they will have to go to court in that county when the time comes and local police frowns on it, so it rarely happens. If it is a serious crime they will detain you and call local police to come and take over. Departments also have mutual aid agreements.
The only reason was tl get away from being called a citizen. Cop citizen on patrol, they hate that term theh think they are above us.
@@lolhi3105So then when the deputy drives in the city, he can pull the deputy over!
City cops=city
Sheriffs deputies=county
State trooper = full state jurisdiction/highway patrol
Sheriff's Dept usually, but not always, patrols the county. Leaving specific cities and municipalities to be patrolled by their respective police departments
Unless those cities are also part of the county, in which case their jurisdiction also falls there. Also I don’t know what you mean by specific municipalities, both counties and cities are municipalities. Did you mean like a town or a village?
@@KufLMAO that's what I meant, I figured people would be able to make the inference on their own so I used municipalities instead of wasting time by typing out extra words that weren't needed
@@KufLMAO Generally county sheriff will leave enforcing the law to the city police within the city limits. Constables where used will as they generally serve warrants and such countywide even within the city. However any cop is within their right to enforce the law if they choose. In some states even a cop from another city can theoretically detain and arrest you though they usually won't unless something serious.
Then you also have some county police departments too. Me personally I work for the City Sheriff's Office where our main function is the courts, civil process, and the jail.
Or a CDP? forgot about those lil shits
People like sheriffs
The Sheriff is elected by the people, the Chief of Police is appointed by Mayor or city counsel.
Police is different in the UK, it covers a whole county and the only city with it's own force is London, with the Met, COLP and GLP.
The sheriff is an elected position
"appointed by the people"
That’s literally what he said just worded different
The difference is that a sheriff is able to be held accountable at the ballot box, and police officers are unelected, so there is no accountability.
He can't even answer a simple question
He did they meant deputy but said sheriff
Exactly.
Sheriff is the boss.
are cops allowed to arrest aliens from space?
Lmao what kind of question is that 😂😂😂😂
@@minhmo-lc8gxwe need an answer tho in the event it occurs
Yes they can, and if they catch them in the States then they will be extradited back on our ufo through the nebula to their respected home planet. 👽 👾
@@minhmo-lc8gxknowing this guy it’s “a good question”
Yes, my buddy from mars was booked for FUI in Los Angeles
Sheriff himself is appointed and elected by the people, he hires and appoints deputies to do patrol work. Typically the sheriffs agencies works in more rural areas and small towns. In some states local jails are required by law to be run by the sheriff, so the sheriff is also responsible for them as well.
Police officers patrols in cities while sheriffs patrols in counties
They don't all do patrol.
@@BrandensOutdoorChannel it was just an example 😁
I get gut feelings about people. You’re one of the good ones bro. Be safe and go home💯
Sheriff basically has more jurisdiction also when it comes to patrolling
I live in Kansas and there is a county called Riley county there police is riley county police department so they just do both city and county.
Good question
@@jokeboy_rblxrblx2006 Reading the website, there was a consolidation of sheriff and city police into one agency.
🤵ya'll vote me for sheriff please🤵
What's The Difference Between The Black Plate Carrier and The Brown Plate Carrier?
Just the colors and one may have more room to fit stuff
The primary difference between a police officer and a deputy sheriff is their jurisdiction, or the geographical area in which they can legally operate. A deputy sheriff typically possesses jurisdiction over an entire county, which may contain several small towns and cities.
2 up loads today so far good job keep going
We wear different uniforms. There you go, now you know the difference.
In Dayton OH, Sheriff's and city Police be all over together, they be like "What Jurisdiction?" 🤣🤣
Same in Florida lmfao, I live in the Palm Harbor area and for every 3 PCSO cars I see, I also see at least 1 Largo/Clearwater PD car. I've literally seen a Tampa PD car down here. Like what?
There's only one sheriff per county, and he's usually administrative. He has deputies, like the police chief has officers. A deputy can stop/arrest you in the city or county. A police officer's jurisdiction is the city limits.
I live in Memphis,TN and the county encompasses about 5-8 cities. It's rare but happens in some states. We have county deputies in all of the cities within the county however each city has its own police department. We also have state troopers(state police) in the same area.
He most likely meant “Deputy Sheriff”
To the Sherrif you're a constituent first
To the police you're a subject of their authority first
He knew he meant Sheriff’s Deputies, not the Sheriff.
Police follow whatever corrupt law is passed even if it unconstitutional and a elected Sheriff has to follow the constitution. That's the real difference coming from a deputy.
Sheriffs generally protect the people from corrupt police.
Yes if you are dealing with corrupt police badly you’re supposed to call the sheriff immediately
Police protect the city and sheriff’s protect that county
The difference between a police officer and a sheriff is that the sheriff knows at least a little bit about the constitution.
Definitely not what bro was asking we already knew 😂😂. Great work tho. Love the vids
My question is why do you have a light on your vest
It activates his aimbot when he sees any black man
@@russellthompson3718 racist but funny 💀
in case you're walking through an area with no lights you don't want to be hit by a vehicle
@@benhartland4708 Or so other officers can spot you in the dark.
@@PremiumFuelOnly that too, we wear them when we are assigned alone
I think they meant Deputies. Deputies enforce laws over a County.
What guns are you allowed to use on dury
every department is different with their duty weapon policy. for example, my department used to be an option of a .40 or .45 after your probation period was up otherwise you were stuck with a 9 (a 147 grain subsonic ONLY)
Actually the Sheriff runs the Sheriff's department. A Sheriff's Deputy works jails, courts or patrol in county areas.
For those wondering: Deputies (“sheriff’s”) just have different jurisdiction. Which is the county. Like instead of MPD, OPD, EMS whatever city PD it is, it’s OCSO, WCSO, etc. you get the point? It goes from PD (police department) to SO (sheriffs office) which is just the law enforcement service for the COUNTY, not an individual corporated township. They sometimes also have different specialized units. Like where I live, there are smaller cities that make up the county, and because of that each department doesn’t have the budget or resources to all have a tac unit. So the county sheriffs office is the only department that has one. It saves money and resources and is just as effective. Hope this helps anyone who needed it
you got city police county sheriffs and old school scheriffs with magnum 44 revolvers XD
Unless down south where everyone is a sheriff lol
A sheriff also has state jurisdiction which means they can conduct their business all across the state, a patrol officer is a local jurisdiction which means they can only conduct their work in said city.
Not the state just the county
What was your scariest encounter while being a police officer?
Yuh
@Gray Just Gray 😂
not getting half off at places to eat, chipotle is the best they actually have a button for LE discount on the register
...ice cream headache..?
@@Ashengraychild1 He looks like he spends more time posing than patrolling
The sheriff and deputy's are above you, hero.
Terrible explaination.
Good question.
The information is not wrong tho
Nah he's right, the person asking the question just doesn't know the difference between the sheriff and sheriff's deputies
That makes sense. Every policeman that i've dealt with is a prick with a power trip But pretty much Every sheriff I've dealt with seems like a normal person
Constitutionally sheriff is supposed to be Top law enforcement because they are appointed
Only partly true. Chiefs of Police are APPOINTED (usually by a mayor or a city council). Sheriffs are voted in. This makes a major difference, as a Chief of Police can be randomly fired, while a Sheriff can (generally) only be voted out next time.
Remember the SHERIFF runs the county while Police have a Chief that runs the city.
The U.S. Marshals function as part of the federal U.S. Department of Justice. Police departments function at the city level. It's like a Amazon delivery driver giving orders to a USPS city carrier
Sheriff's got more power than the cops.facts
The sheriff has county authority which extends the bounds of most cities.
Local Police - City, municipality jurisdiction
Sheriff Deputies - County jurisdiction
A cop is most likely to be in town, and they’re the ones to least pull you over
Police Department’s are assigned to a city. While a Sheriff Department is assigned to a county and is assigned to multiple city’s with in the county. Now you know.
Legislated vs elected. The sheriff is the only form of law enforcement recognized by our constitution.
I think they mean sheriffs department not the elected official.
And then Troopers do Highway & Statewide
Sheriffs are constitutional LEOs and local police are formed by local municipalities.
Sheriff sounds more trustworthy
Keep in mind though he answered the question super literally. "The" sheriff is one dude in a county. The law enforcement officers you see driving squads with the word "sheriff" on the side and in uniforms that say "sheriff" on them are sheriff's deputies. Basically the same as any city police officers minus jurisdiction and a few aspects of their jobs
Sheriff Deputy’s sounds better
Based on my experience in gta5. U have police downtown in the city. When u go out on the highway to some rural area, u will have sheriff chasing you instead of cop
A sherif can wear a cowboy 🤠 hat
A better question would be police vs deputies
This dude really compared himself to an actual sheriff lol
he explained exactly what people know allready..... good job.
i think the question was a bit deeper than that, talking bout jurisdiction and difference in task and authority.
Also everyone is forgetting a sheriff is voted into office by their constituents. The people have more of a say in law enforcement than with police departments.
In short and simple terms, when smaller cities can't afford their own police department they hire Sheriffs.
For those wondering wtf he just said. He basically dodged the question. As police officer he just patrols the town or city he’s stationed at a deputy sheriff is responsible for the whole county
Police were hired to violate your rights, while a sheriff, is elected to violate your rights.
Depends on where you live in the country. I work as a Sheriffs Officer and I mainly work within the courts providing security. I also help transport prisoners to different counties for court. However I know some states where the sheriffs department also respond to calls for service and work inside the county jails supervising inmates.
Sheriff is the most powerful man in the counties
‘I police the city’ 👀🫣
I think they meant what’s the difference between a police officer and a deputy. As a deputy I was selected by a Sheriff and became deputized by the Sheriff and I go where I am told and do what the county needs of me in a law enforcement capacity. Police are municipal and work under the hierarchy of the city’s police department(s). Then there are state troopers, etc. law enforcement is a very long arm across the world. From local, state, federal, and international.
Yeah, he answered the correction super literally. He isn't technically wrong but we all know the dude asking the question meant sheriff's deputies and not just "sheriff". People just get confused on the terminology because deputies have the word "sheriff" on their squads and uniforms
Not him putting all his gear on for a 30 sec video 😂😂😂
Sheriffs and Deputies patrol the whole county and Officers patrol cities
All law enforcement leaders should be elected, in my opinion. That could solve most of the problems we currently have with the police. Let’s try to do this the easy way first.
The Sheriff is an elected position.
The under-sheriff runs the Sheriff's department.
The Sheriff is the Senior Law Effective Officer. He or she out ranks the police chief.
The Sheriff's Department patrols the non-city areas of the county. Also, the Sheriff's Department handles the county jail.
Deputies have authority over a county. Officers have authority within city limits, usually.
Officers can only arrest within their City limits a Deputy Sheriff technically has jurisdiction all over the state.
County.
And that they provide public service in the county 😂??
Sheriffs can be held accountable for there actions through elections.
Sherifs keep police in check
Deputy Sheriffs cover the county but also all the unincorporated areas of a city.
I just know that All Police have a Very Stressful Job and The Higher the Rank the More Stressful it will Be 😞
Police cover the city, Sheriff Cover the county and state troopers cover the state 🫡 I know because I got chased by all 3 one time 😂
Sheriffs basically are the boss.
One has a 👒 and the others wearing a different 👒 's
Sheriff is in Rural areas And Police is for Urban .
The Sheriff upholds the CONSTITUTION/LAW!!! Police enforce policy!!!
Key phrase: "appointed by the people"
This is why the police can violate your "rights"
Sherriffs have more authority also.
And one is a higher rank than the other
I think they are asking about Deputies!
I’m a Deputy in Florida…The major difference between Police Officers and Deputies is jurisdiction. Think about the city you live in…that’s what Police Patrol…Sheriff covers the county. Police officers patrol areas are significantly smaller than that of a Deputy. A police officers zone may be a few blocks to maybe 3miles. A Deputy’s zone may stretches 10-20miles.
Sheriffs cover the whole county and control the jail you only cover the city that’s the main difference!
The sherriff is also the top law man in the county charged with upholding the constitution. All other LEOs fall beneath his purview.
The sheriff's job is supposed to be protect your constitutional rights and uphold your constitutional laws
Sheriffs are elected. That’s the biggest difference.
The sheriff is an elected official, not an appointed individual.
In my city the Sheriff took care of the courts, jail & civil process while city cops responded to 911 and handled all criminal complaints.