PUBLIC SAFETY DIRECTOR AMBROSE RETIRING AFTER 34 YEARS OF SERVICE 

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PUBLIC SAFETY DIRECTOR AMBROSE RETIRING  

AFTER 34 YEARS OF SERVICE 

   

Newark, NJ – January 27, 2021 – Mayor Ras J. Baraka announced today that Public Safety Director Anthony F. Ambrose will retire as of March 31, 2021, after serving the City of Newark for 34 years and since 2016 as Public Safety Director.

When I appointed Director Ambrose as Public Safety Director, I knew that his leadership, work ethic, integrity and love for our city is what we needed to fulfill my vision of combining Police, Fire, and Emergency Management into one department,” said Mayor Baraka. “His service to the City of Newark has been paramount. I appreciate all that he has given, and I hope for nothing but the best in his retirement.”

Director Ambrose has led the reforms under the 2014 federal consent decree, which has made the Newark police more accountable and transparent in their engagement with the public. Every Newark patrol officer is now equipped with a body-worn camera and a dashboard camera, and is trained in de-escalation tactics. Every officer also undergoes bias perception training, and civil rights oriented “stop, search, and arrest” training.

Also during his tenure, homicides in 2019 fell to their lowest since 1961, and most violent crimes have dropped by double digits every year. Likewise, complaints against officers have dropped by double digits each year. Last year, the Newark police removed 496 guns from the street and did not fire a single shot; and effective today all plainclothes Newark police officers will wear bodycams.

“I praise the men and women of the Newark Department of Public Safety, along with our residents and clergy members. There’s still a lot of work to be done by my successor, but I’m pleased to be leaving the Police and Fire Divisions and the Office of Emergency Management in a better place than it was when I arrived five years ago. Mayor Baraka has been my strongest supporter, a great boss and will remain a good friend,” Director Ambrose said.

Director Ambrose decided to become a cop when he was five, during a snowstorm when he saw a lone NPD patrol car cruising down the snow covered street.

“Right then I knew what I wanted to do,” he said.

Then in 1986, he joined the force, rose quickly through the ranks under the tutelage of former Police Chief Joe Santiago to become chief by 1999, followed by serving as Police Director, Undersheriff for the Essex County Sheriff’s Office, and Chief of Detectives for the Essex County Prosecutor’s Office, before becoming Public Safety Director for the City of Newark.

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