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In 1970 the rank of Inspector was approved by the City Council and
Bill Ware was hired in that position. Retired Corporal Dale Adams
was the last officer to hold that rank.
In the summer of 1974, the
department’s shooting range, west of the 1800 block of State Road
200, was closed due to complaints from residents to the north of
bullets striking their houses. The department negotiated for the
use of the Lowell correctional facilities range.
The City Council, on September
17, 1974, appointed Lee McGehee to succeed K.C. Alvarez as Police
Chief effective October 1, 1974.
The 1970’s witnessed the
beginnings of Ocala Changing from a small city to become the fifth
fastest growing metropolitan area in the United States by the end of
the 1980’s.
The Ocala Police Department’s
municipal jail as abolished February 1, 1976. Changes in Florida’s
Constitution had eliminated municipal courts and the need for city
jails. The City prisoners would henceforth be housed at the County
Jail. The entire first floor of the police administration building
had originally been constructed to hold the jail, radio room,
municipal courtroom, judge’s office, clerk of the court office and
the city prosecutor’s office. Once all these functions were
consolidated at the county courthouse, the first floor was converted
into additional space for the police department. A computer based
communications center was constructed in the former municipal court
area. During this same period, voters approved the annexation of
West Ocala into the city. Ocala’s city limits were extended from NW
16th Avenue (now Martin Luther King Avenue) to just west
of Interstate 75. This annexation was one of the largest single
land growth periods in Ocala’s history.
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