St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department

Metropolitan Police Department – City of St. Louis
The current Seal of the Metropolitan Police Department
The current patch of the Metropolitan Police Department
SLMPD officer badge, with number omitted.
Flag of City of St. Louis
Common nameCity of St. Louis Police Department
AbbreviationSLMPD
MottoOfficium moris principatum et aequi Omnibus (Latin)
Service, Integrity, Leadership, and Fair Treatment to All
Agency overview
Formed1808 (1808)
Employees 2000 full-time (2026)
Annual budgetUS$241,500,000 [FY 2026]
Jurisdictional structure
Operations jurisdictionSt. Louis, Missouri, United States
Jurisdiction of the Metropolitan Police Department
Size69.99 square miles (181.3 km2) (total) (land)
Population273,541 (2026)
Legal jurisdictionCity of St. Louis
General nature
Operational structure
Overseen bySt. Louis City Board of Police Commissioners
Headquarters1915 Olive Downtown West, St. Louis
Police Officers926(2025)
Corrections personnel and Civilian members373 (2025)
Commissioners responsible
  • Chris Saracino, President
  • Sonya Jenkins-Gray, Vice-President
Agency executive
Bureaus
4
  • Bureau of Crime Control Strategies
  • Bureau of Professional Standards
  • Bureau of Support Operations
  • Bureau of Operations
Patrol Divisions
3
  • South Patrol
  • Central Patrol
  • North Patrol
Facilities
Stations3 Patrol Stations, 6 sub-stations
Justice CentersCity Justice Center 200 S.Tucker Blvd. St. Louis, Missouri
Marked and Unmarked vehicles2000+
Helicopter/Airplanes6 Helicopter, 1 Fixed Wing
Horses4
K-9's8
Notables
Anniversary
    • August 7, 1808 (1808-08-07)
    • (218 years ago)
Website
Metropolitan Police Department official website

The Metropolitan Police Department – City of St. Louis (also known as the SLMPD or St. Louis Police) is the primary law enforcement agency for the city of St. Louis, Missouri.

According to the Mapping Police Violence dataset, SLMPD has the highest police use of deadly force per capita. The SLMPD union has strongly resisted attempts to establish independent oversight of police misconduct. When Kimberly Gardner, the top prosecutor in St. Louis, sought to establish a unit within her office to independently investigate police misconduct, the leader of the SLMPD union said Gardner should be removed "by force or by choice."