Minidoka County Sheriff's Sgt. Richard Koyle talks Jan. 16 about four decades of writing tickets as he sits in his patrol vehicle at the sheriff's office in Rupert.
RUPERT — During Richard Koyle’s first shift as a new reserve officer for the city of Rupert, police cruisers had a single light on top. When an emergency call came in to the station, the dispatcher would flip a switch to turn a light on at the top of the city’s water tower as a signal for the officers to go to a phone booth and call the station for the information.
Sheriff's Sgt. Richard Koyle talks Jan. 16 about the new electronic ticket writing equipment installed in his patrol vehicle at the Minidoka County Sheriff's Office in Rupert. Koyle retires at the end of the month and will not get a chance to use the new system on the streets.
A man wanted on two child sex crimes in Idaho was picked up by U.S. Immigration officials on Thursday when he attempted to illegally cross the…
Minidoka County Sheriff's Sgt. Richard Koyle talks Jan. 16 about four decades of writing tickets as he sits in his patrol vehicle at the sheriff's office in Rupert.
Sheriff's Sgt. Richard Koyle talks Jan. 16 about the new electronic ticket writing equipment installed in his patrol vehicle at the Minidoka County Sheriff's Office in Rupert. Koyle retires at the end of the month and will not get a chance to use the new system on the streets.