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Gotham City Police Department
Gothamcentral1.jpg
Cover to Gotham Central #1. Art by Michael Lark.
Publication information
Publisher DC Comics
Created by Bob Kane
In-story information
Type of organization Law enforcement agency
Base(s) Gotham City
Leader(s) James Gordon (Police Commissioner)
Maggie Sawyer
Agent(s) Harvey Bullock
Major Crimes Unit

The Gotham City Police Department (GCPD) is a fictional police department servicing Gotham City, as depicted in comic books published by DC Comics, in particular those tied into the Batman books.

Contents

[edit] History of GCPD

Acting as both ally and opponent of Batman, the superhero long-established in Gotham, the GCPD has long been steeped in corruption, with numerous officers both high-and-low ranking involved in bribery and even more serious offenses such as drug-trafficking and murder.

The strongest blow against police corruption came when an increasing amount of conspiracy charges against Commissioner Gillian B. Loeb forced him to resign his position, replaced by Peter Grogan. The Falcone crime family, which had had a stranglehold on Gotham's underground for generations, finally crumbled when a series of killings shook the structure of the mafia organization. After the death of Carmine Falcone, the mob lashed out in sloppy, retaliatory crimes, which, in combination with rising gang violence, severely crippled organized crime in Gotham City. Simultaneously, the ebbing presence of corrupt police officers allowed James Gordon to become the new commissioner, a man determined to eradicate crime wherever it existed.

The GCPD has had a long love-hate relationship with the city's vigilante known as Batman. Commissioner Gordon went along with him because Batman got the job done. His successor, Commissioner Michael Akins ordered the arrest of Batman and had the Bat-signal removed from the roof of Gotham Central. Corruption and rot within the police department also rose during Akins' tenure as Commissioner.

[edit] Current status of GCPD

As of DC's One Year Later, James Gordon has been reinstated as Commissioner, along with Harvey Bullock. Harvey came back on disciplinary probation after helping expose a criminal drug ring. Relation with Batman, including the Bat-Signal, have been established once more. Other characters from Gotham Central have appeared in the recent Tales of the Unexpected miniseries, featuring Crispus Allen as the Spectre. Thus far, Detective Driver has appeared in a speaking role. It is unknown what has happened to Commissioner Akins, but it is implied that, following revelations of massive corruption within the department, there has been a drastic cleaning-of-house within the department.

Kate Kane referred to Akins as police commissioner in the weekly 52 series, which reveals the events of the missing year. A later issue, however, showed a brief snapshot of Commissioner Gordon's welcome back party. The circumstances of Akins's departure and Gordon's reinstatement have yet to be explained. Maggie Sawyer is still the commander of the MCU department, and has ended her relationship with former lover Toby Raines.[citation needed]

[edit] Divisions of GCPD

  • Homicide Division
The division that handles murders and some of the more serious non-metahuman crimes in Gotham. This is the division Gordon was a part of before becoming commissioner. Former private investigator Jason Bard is now working on homicide cases for this division.
  • Major Crimes Unit
Led by Capt. Maggie Sawyer, who previously served in Metropolis in a similar position with that city's police, the MCU deals with the most serious crimes, often involving supervillains or politically sensitive cases. This division is the focus of the comic book series Gotham Central.
  • Quick Response Team
Led by Lt. Gerard "Jerry" Hennelly, the QRT is the GCPD's SWAT unit.

[edit] Current roster

  • Gerard "Jerry" Hennelly - Lieutenant and head of the Quick Response Team
  • Mackenzie "Hardback" Bock - Chief of Police and former head of OCCB (Organized Crime Control Bureau)
  • Detective Nicholas "St. Nick" Gage- Gotham PD's newest recruit who've just transferred from Coast City Police Department and a supporting character of Batgirl VI
  • Nora Fields - Supervisor, Coroner's Office. Widow of Charlie Fields.
  • Stacy - Administrative Secretary to Commissioner Gordon, civilian employee.

Major Crimes Unit:

  • David Cornwell - Lieutenant, Major Crimes Unit commander of the second (night) shift, successor of deceased Lt. Probson.
  • Josh Azeveda - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Partnered with Trey Hartley.
  • Harvey Bullock - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Restored to duty under severe scrutiny.
  • Romy Chandler - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Partnered with Takahata.
  • Eric Cohen - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Partnered with Andi Kasinsky.
  • Nelson Crowe - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Partnered with Jackson Davies.
  • Marcus Driver - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Partnered with Josephine MacDonald.
  • Trey Hartley - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Partnered with Josh Azeveda.
  • Andi Kasinsky - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Partnered with Eric Cohen.
  • Josephine "Josie Mac" MacDonald - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Partnered with Marcus Driver. Possesses the psychic ability to find lost people and objects.

[edit] Former members

Note: The following are either deceased or have been dismissed from the Gotham City Police Department.

  • Crispus Allen - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Partnered with Renee Montoya. Killed by Jim Corrigan, now the Spectre.
  • Jim Corrigan - Corrupt CSI, killed Crispus Allen. Killed by Allen's son.
  • Roger DeCarlo - Corrupt officer. Killed by Poison Ivy after accidentally murdering one of her orphans and attempting to cover it up.
  • Hugh Foley - Opposed Jim Gordon, killed by Billy Pettit during No Man's Land.
  • Peter Grogan - Corrupt commissioner after Loeb and before Gordon, dismissed.
  • Andy Howe - Briefly served as police commissioner after Mayor Krol fired Gordon.
  • David King - Police Captain, former ally of Gordon, killed during Year Three.
  • Stan Kitch - Former lieutenant, now a defense attorney.
  • Stan Merkel - Watch Commander/Patrolman killed during Dark Victory.
  • Renee Montoya - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Partnered with Crispus Allen. Resigned after Allen's death, now the Question.
  • Timothy Munroe - Corrupt officer. Killed by Poison Ivy after accidentally murdering one of her orphans and attempting to cover it up.
  • Nate Patton - Detective, Major Crimes Unit. Partnered with Romy Chandler. Killed by the Joker.
  • Billy Pettit - Head of SWAT team, went insane. During No Man's Land he and several other officers broke away from Jim Gordan who considered his actions too soft. Pettit later killed a fellow police officer for an imagined betrayal. Soon after he was tricked and killed by the Joker.
  • Jordan Rich - Corrupt officer, shot Jim Gordon. Killed indirectly by Harvey Bullock in retaliation.

[edit] Commissioners

  • Commissioner Gillian B. Loeb — The corrupt commissioner of police during the first year of Batman’s operation in Gotham. In Christopher Nolan's The Dark Knight, Loeb was a legitimate cop who was murdered by the Joker when poison was put into his drink.
  • Commissioner Jack Grogan - he was Commissioner after Loeb and before Gordon. He was mentioned in the last page of Miller's Batman: Year One and has a one panel appearance in the Catwoman Year One Annual and also in Batman: The Man Who Laughs and Batman and the Monster Men #1.
  • Commissioner James Gordon — Replaced Grogan and worked with Batman in trying to clean up the Gotham police department. When he retired, he handed the GCPD over to Michael Akins, only to take the job back some years later. The adoptive father of Barbara Gordon, the original Batgirl and later Oracle.
  • Commissioner Vane- Former Chief Inspector, only served as commissioner briefly when Gordon was demoted to patrolman in Detective Comics #121. During his brief tenure, he oversaw Dr. Hurt's experiments.
  • Commissioner Peter Pauling — Another corrupt commissioner, appointed by Mayor Hamilton Hill. Like Hill, he was working for Rupert Thorne. Pauling issued a shoot-to-kill order for any police officer who spotted Batman, and secretly tried to have Gordon, who was working as a private detective, killed. Pauling eventually died at Thorne's hands and a desperate Mayor Hill re-instated Commissioner Gordon. Pauling may not have existed in the Post-Crisis DC universe.
  • Commissioner Sarah Essen Gordon — The wife of James Gordon, appointed Commissioner by Mayor Krol while her husband was demoted. This put a great strain on her relationship with her husband and they split up for a while. Although she had previously been a critic of the Batman, she agreed to Mayor Krol's instructions that she use him. Mayor Krol sacked her after he lost his re-election bid against Marion Grange, replacing her with Andy Howe.
  • Commissioner Andy Howe — A lawyer who served briefly as Commissioner during the lame-duck Mayoralty of Armand Krol. (Detective Comics #693, January 1996) When the "Clench" virus was released in Gotham and the city descended into anarchy, most police officers ignored Howe and took orders from James Gordon, at that point a private citizen. Howe lost his job when Marion Grange became Mayor and immediately re-instated James Gordon. (Robin #28, April 1996)
  • Commissioner Michael Akins — Took over from James Gordon. After the events of the War Games arc, Akins declared all vigilante actions were now illegal, and issued a shoot-to-kill order for any sight of Batman or his associates. He left the position under unspecified circumstance.
  • Commissioner Tolliver - Police commissioner in the alternate 1889 of Gotham by Gaslight. He is mayor when Batman first emerges and defeats Jack the Ripper. Claiming the victory as his own, Tolliver is then elected mayor in the sequel, Master of the Future.

[edit] Gotham City FBI

The Gotham City Federal Bureau of Investigation unit is also featured in the fictitious Gotham City. The Gotham City FBI drive black vehicles with red emergency lights.

[edit] In other media

[edit] Serials

All other depictions of Batman have portrayed the Gotham City Police Department in some form or another. The 1940s Batman serials has actor Lyle Talbot in the role of Commissioner Gordon in each one. No other members of the force are shown. However, his appearance of Gordon having a feather-duster mustache was later adapted to the comics. Interestingly enough, he portrayed Lex Luthor in the Kirk Alyn serial Superman.

[edit] Batman (TV series)

The 1960s campy Batman featured Neil Hamilton as Gordon and Stafford Repp as Chief O'Hara. Both are depicted as being dependent on Batman and Robin to solve the cases, whereas the clues are easy to discover and interpret. Gordon even keeps a link to the Batcave called "the Batphone" on his desk. In one episode, when Batman appears to be missing, Gordon laments that the police will have to solve a case "ourselves."

[edit] 1989-1997 live action films

All the Tim Burton/Joel Schumacher series seemed to give little depiction on the GCPD at all. In Batman, Gordon is portrayed by Pat Hingle, while the usually corrupt Harvey Bullock is replaced with William Hootkins' Lt. Max Eckhart (who is killed by Jack Napier prior to his accidental transformation). Hingle also appeared in Batman Returns, Batman Forever, and Batman & Robin.

[edit] Batman: The Animated Series

In the acclaimed animated television series, Batman: The Animated Series, the GCPD characters are given more attention such as in "P.O.V", where the major characters of the force in the series participate in a detailed debriefing of an incident. One of the most important contributions from the animated series to the Batman universe is the introduction of Renee Montoya (first as a uniformed constable, then a detective), which would later become a first-grade character in the GCPD comic books. In the printed DC Universe, her presence was so solidly incorporated that she later retired from the Department to assume the identity of the Question.

[edit] Batman Beyond

In this animated series, James Gordon's daughter, Barbara Gordon (former Batgirl in Batman: The Animated Series) is the new commissioner.

[edit] Batman Begins and The Dark Knight

The reboot of the Batman film franchise, Batman Begins, has the GCPD play a pivotal role during the course of the film. Jim Gordon (played by Gary Oldman) is the main focus but others play a role as well. Some are original characters, some are from the comics. Mark Boone Junior plays Detective Flass as dealing with the local mafia, and Colin McFarlane appears as the staunchly vigilante-opposed Commissioner Loeb. Although Flass is shown to be corrupt, Loeb does not seem to be, but he is clearly displeased with the arrival of Batman. This is demonstrated by him calling a SWAT team to capture him; a scene which is lifted from the Year One comic.

The film's sequel, The Dark Knight, features the GCPD extensively. According to the viral marketing campaign for the film, Harvey Dent spearheads an initiative through his office to rid the department of corruption. Also, in response of The League of Shadows' attack from the first film, Commissioner Loeb set up the Major Crimes Unit within Gotham PD to counter possible terrorist attacks alongside riding the city's organized crime. James Gordon is put in charge of the unit. The police have also cooled their animosity towards Batman. The official investigation has jokingly placing Elvis, Abe Lincoln, and Bigfoot on their wall of suspects for Batman. Commissioner Loeb is murdered by the Joker, leading to his replacement by Gordon.

Also featured are three detectives, Stephens (played by Keith Szarabajka), Wuertz (played by Ron Dean) and Anna Ramirez (played by Monique Curnen). While Stephens is a good and honest cop, he is not without faults: while he deliberately keeps Gordon's fake death a secret, his short temper leads to him starting a fight with the Joker in his cell; the Joker subdues Stephens and uses him as a hostage to escape from prison (although Stephens survives the ordeal). Wuertz and Ramirez, however, are corrupt and involved with the mob. Dent was gathering evidence against Ramirez and Wuertz whom he suspected was corrupt when he was working for Internal Affairs. Wuertz and Ramirez help the Joker kidnap Rachel Dawes and Harvey Dent. Dawes dies due to the Joker's plans. Wuertz shows no remorse, but Ramirez, who was taking bribes to help pay for her sick mother, is devastated. Dent, now scarred and going by the name "Two-Face", confronts both. A flip of the coin secures Wuertz's death but leads to Ramirez simply being punched out. Batman and Gordon find Dent, and Batman is forced to kill Dent to save Gordon's (obviously innocent) son. They concoct a plan for Batman himself to accept the blame for the deaths of Dent's victims, so that all the good Harvey did will stand. The police subsequently ignite a manhunt for Batman.

[edit] Batman: Gotham Knight

Gordon, Ramirez, and Crispus Allen all appear in three of the shorts in Batman: Gotham Knight, which bridges the gap between Batman Begins and The Dark Knight; Crossfire, In Darkness Dwells, and Deadshot.

Gordon was voiced by Jim Meskimen, Ramirez was voiced by Ana Ortiz, and Allen was voiced by Gary Dourdan.

While Gordon resembles how he was portrayed in Batman: Year One and The Long Halloween, both Flass and Loeb resemble, respectively, Harvey Bullock and Michael Akins rather than their comic book counterparts. It's been speculated and comments made on the commentary track of Batman: Gotham Knight seem to hint that Ramirez is loosely inspired by Renee Montoya.

[edit] The Batman

On the animated series The Batman, the focus of the GCPD in the first two seasons is on Detectives Ellen Yin and (prior to his Clayface transformation) Ethan Bennett. The corruption on the force is attributed to Chief Angel Rojas, who appeared often in those seasons. However, in the Season 2 finale, Jim Gordon, recently appointed Commissioner, calls off the manhunt and forms an alliance with Batman to help keep Gotham safe for his daughter, Barbara. Neither Rojas or Yin has been seen since then, though one episode that take places in the future implies that sometime between now and then, Yin will replace Gordon as Commissioner and Bennet becomes Chief of Police.

[edit] Alternate officers of the law

  • Batman (1960s TV show)
  • Batman (1989 film)
  • Birds of Prey (TV series from 2002-2003)
  • Detective Jesse Reese - Was played by Shemar Moore. Is an honest cop in New Gotham who learns of the Birds of Prey and begins to help them. He later enters into a relationship with Huntress. It is later revealed that Reese's birthname was Jesse Hawke, son of crime boss Al Hawke, who became a police officer to atone his family's sins. This version of the GCPD does have a corruption problem (though it is unclear how bad since a few other honest officers have cameos) and appears to no longer have Jim Gordon at its head.
  • The Batman (TV series from 2004-2008)
  • The Dark Knight (2008 film)
  • Detective Anna Ramirez - Played by Monique Curnen, she is a corrupt cop involved in the scarring of Harvey Dent and the death of Rachel Dawes by the Joker. She also appeared in Batman: Gotham Knight, voiced by Ana Ortiz. The commentary on the Batman: Gotham Knight DVD, indicates she might be loosely inspired by Renee Montoya. She received a head injury from Dent after he cracked her head with the bottom of his gun, and later implied from Gordon that she didn't survive her trauma, though she might not have regained consciosness yet.
  • Detective Wuertz - Played by Ron Dean, he is a corrupt cop involved in the scarring of Harvey Dent and the death of Rachel Dawes by the Joker. He was later killed by Dent.
  • Detective Stephens - Played by Keith Szarabajka, he is an honest police detective, if not aversed to police brutality. He aided Gordon when he faked his own death.

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Detective Comics #819



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