A History of the Rutland County
Sheriff's Department, Vermont
1781-2007
By Paul J. Crossman, Jr.
Abraham Ives was the first sheriff of record in Rutland County,
Vermont. He was born in Wallingford, VT in 1741 and settled
his family in the Town of Wallingford of the “New Hampshire
Grants” (Vermont) in the early 1770s. He was first elected
Wallingford Town Representative in 1779, and again in 1783.
His most important public office however, was as Rutland county
Sheriff. He served four one year terms from 1781-1875, a job
that required extensive paperwork and a good deal of travel
over poor roads. In those years, Rutland County extended from
the northern boundaries of Rupert, Dorset, and Peru to the
Canadian border, containing at least ninety of the towns of
present-day Vermont. All of these towns were chartered, either
by New Hampshire or Vermont, but many were unorganized and
sparsely settled. Part of Ives’ responsibility was collecting
the state property tax of 1783. Under the Debtor’s Prison
Law, many persons faced imprisonment because they could not
meet their creditors’ demands or pay their taxes. More
property changed hands as a result of irregularities in Ives’
transactions than ever before or since in Vermont’s
history. Ives and his agents had a reputation for being dishonest.
Even after his term as sheriff ended in October of 1875, Ives
found himself in a position so untenable that he fled to Wallingford,
CT. The Debtor’s Prison was abolished in 1833.
Roy H. Leonard (1892-1955) was born in Pawlet, VT in 1892.
He was a WWI veteran, served as a member of the Vermont National
Guard and as a Reserve Officer for 10 years. From 1925 to
1934 he was Chief of Police for Rutland City. He resigned
in 1935 and accepted an appointment with the Attorney General’s
Office as a State Investigator. In 1936 Leonard was elected
as Rutland County Sheriff and served for three terms until
1942. While Sheriff, he figured in the investigation of several
homicide cases in which the state obtained convictions. He
was president of the Vermont Sheriff’s Association in
1938 and 1939. He was one of a three-member committee that
organized the Rutland Post of the American Legion. He was
also and exalted ruler of the Rutland Elks Lodge. Leonard
took pride in the accomplishments of his office during his
three terms of honest, efficient and courteous service to
the people of Rutland County. He was one of the state’s
best-known law officers in 1942 when he went into semi-retirement.
Suffering from a lung ailment, Leonard was advised to move
to a warmer climate. He then relocated to Florida with his
wife where he died on 19 March 1955 at the age of 63.
Geno N. Franzoni (1904-1955) was born in New York City on
4 May 1904. He was a law enforcement officer for 20 years
having served eight years as a Rutland city patrolman and
seven terms as a Rutland County Sheriff from 1943-1955. He
had a wide acquaintance throughout the state and a solid reputation
as a peace officer. During his term of office, and prior to
establishment of the Vermont State police in 1947, Franzoni
had to cope with the most dangerous law outbreaks in this
area. He apprehended several men subsequently convicted of
murder, solved many jail breaks, and was called in for hundreds
of lesser incidents. Among the murders was Ronald Watson who
was executed for fatally knifing Henry Teelon, a Rutland taxicab
driver, at Chittenden on 24 December 1945. Watson was arrested
by Sheriff Franzoni. Franzoni also captured Harold Frotten,
alleged slayer of Robert Stratton of Woodford on 21 October
1944. Frotten, who had been incarcerated at the Bennington
County Jail, escaped and drove a stolen truck to Granville,
NY. Based upon a photograph of Frotten and a report that the
stolen truck had been located in Granville, Franzoni traveled
there, accidentally came upon the suspect, and took him into
custody. Sheriff and Mrs. Franzoni operated the Beacon Restaurant
that they built c.1947 near the Rutland Airport. Franzoni
was also co-founder and treasurer of the Pico Raceway which
was constructed on Route 7 on the site where the General Electric
plant is now located. He was a member of the Royal Order of
the Moose, Elks Club, Italian Aid Society, and the Police
Benevolent Association. He died of a heart attack in Rutland,
VT on 1 May 1955 at the age of 50.
J. Fred Carbine (1905-1977) was born in Rutland, VT on 23
June 1905. He worked for the Rutland Herald in 1928 as a route
delivery driver, transferred to the News Room in 1943, and
because Sports Editor and residence expert on local political
matters. He served three terms on the Board of Alderman and
was Board President from 1945 to 1946. In March 1946 Mayor
Temple named Carbine as Police Chief to fill a vacancy created
when Chief Harold Potter resigned. Carbine was very vigorous
as Chief and vigilant in watching what his officers were doing.
He had teams crack down on suspected houses of ill repute.
His patrolmen never knew where he might show up to see if
they were patrolling their designated area. Although carbine’s
men often grumbled about it at times, they did what their
chief told them. Upon the death of Sheriff Geno Franzoni in
1955, Carbine was named by Gov. Joseph Johnson to fill out
the term. When first appointed as Sheriff, Carbine had custodial
supervision of the County Jail on Center Street. On one occasion
Sheriff Carbine was beaten unconscious by an escapee but recovered
in a few days and went across county to bring the prisoner
back to jail. Carbine was a member of the New England Police
Chief’s Association and President of the Vermont Police
Association. He was President of the Vermont Sheriff’s
Association from 1966 to 1968. The county jails were turned
over to control of the state as regional correctional centers
in 1969. Sheriff Carbine then moved his office from the old
Rutland County Jail on Center Street up the hill to the Rutland
County Courthouse. He made a special effort to accommodate
attorneys by providing competent civil process serving, one
of his trademarks. He called for an increase in the patrol
duties of deputy sheriffs and for modernizing the police equipment
available to deputies. He sponsored several schools for police
officers and deputies of the county in conjunction with the
FBI. Sheriff Carbine resigned in April 1976 due to ill health
and died 12 August 1977 at the age of 72.
Lee D. Jones (1929- ) was appointed Sheriff of Rutland County
by Governor Thomas Salmon on 8 July 1976 and held that position
for 20 years until retiring on 30 June 1996. He was a career
law enforcement officer, having previously served as a Vermont
State Trooper from 1954 to 1975. Sheriff Jones worked to improve
and modernize that department beginning with a reduction in
Special Deputies from 120 to 45 men and women. This resulted
in more efficient training and a more dedicated work force.
New in-service training methods were held every year and included
accident investigation, report and affidavit writing, use
of radio and radar equipment and firearms training. Sheriff
Jones also set up a payroll system in 1977.
Robert J. Elrick (1962- ) was appointed as Rutland County
Sheriff to replace Lee Jones by Governor Howard Dean on 21
June 1996. Elrick, 33, had been Assistant Director at the
Vermont Police Academy in Pittsford. He knew the county well
and had developed valuable relationships in the community.
He challenged the department’s supervisors to cross-train
deputies so they could deal with any situation that might
arise. After serving as Sheriff for eight years Elrick returned
to the Vermont Police Academy as Director.
Stephen P. Benard, (1959- ) a ten-year veteran with the Ludlow
Police Department, who had 14 years service with the Rutland
County Sheriff’s Department, became the new Rutland
County Sheriff.
The Rutland County Sheriff’s Department currently has
a jurisdiction of over 945 square miles of urban and rural
areas. The department currently has 19 full time and 16 part
time deputies. The Department is under contract to provide
patrol services to Chittenden, Clarendon, Hubbardton, Pittsfield,
Proctor, Shrewsbury, Tinmouth, Wallington, and West Rutland.
Several businesses also utilize RCSD services including Southern
Vermont Regional Airport, Carris Reels, CVPS, Devil’s
Bowl Speedway, Diamond Run Mall, GE, Green Mountain National
Forest, Heritage Family Credit Union, Killington LTD, North
County Properties and area schools. During 2006 these services
amounted to 52,000 man-hours at a cost of $1.3 million. Deputies
also respond to calls for domestic violence, assaults, breaking
& entering, larceny, intoxication, shoplifting, automobile
accidents, license checks, traffic violations, funeral escorts,
court bailiff, transports, civil process and more. RCSD currently
has 20 cruisers, two snowmobiles and one motorcycle. Standard
weapon carried is a 40 cal. Glock model 23. Shifts are generally
five to six days on and two days off, both days and nights.
Rutland County Sheriffs
– 1781 to 2009
Abraham Ives 1781-1785
Jonathan Bell 1785-1802
Arunah W. Hyde 1802-1809
Eleazer Flagg 1809-1812
Ralph Paige 1812-1813
Eustus Barker 1813, 1815-1818
Thomas Hooker 1814
William Fay 1817
Jonathan Dyke 1819-1931
Jacob Edgerton, Jr. 1831-1833
John A. Conant 1833-1835
Ira Parsons 1835-1841
Jabob Edgerton, Jr. 1841-1861
William M. Field 1861-1878
D. P. Peabody 1878-1910
Enos C. Fish 1910-1919
Henry R. Adams 1919-1937
Roy H. Leonard 1937-1943
Geno N. Franzoni 1943-1955
J. Fred Carbine 1955-1976
Lee Jones 1976-1996
R. J. Elrick 1996-2004
Stephen P. Benard 2004-Present
|