The days of having a separate police force patrol the seat of Maine’s state government are numbered.
The Maine Capitol Police, responsible for safeguarding the buildings and people inside the government complex around the State House, will be gradually absorbed by the Maine State Police in the coming years, according to the state’s public safety chief.
Michael Sauschuck, the commissioner of the Maine Department of Public Safety, which oversees both agencies, broke the news to Capitol police officers in an email Wednesday afternoon, according to a copy obtained by the Bangor Daily News. The state police will assume management of the agency in the short term, but the real transition will take place gradually over years through a process of attrition, meaning that when Capitol officers leave their job, they will be replaced by a trooper, he wrote.
“This change will improve resource allocation, operational efficiency, and crisis response. It will also serve to strengthen the bond and join the security mission shared by the Executive Protection Unit,” Sauchuck wrote, referring to a team of troopers that protect the governor.
“This is a major change that will impact each of you in both a personal and professional manner,” he continued. “I’m confident that this change will have a long-term positive impact on the bureau’s ability to accomplish our public safety mission.”
The announcement “blindsided” the union that represents Capitol officers, a union official said, and comes less than two months after Capitol Police Chief Matthew Clancy resigned following an August arrest during which he allegedly assaulted a Hallowell police officer. A lieutenant has led the Capitol department since then.
The transition will take place at a time when Capitol officers have recorded a surge in threats to lawmakers and as the state police, Maine’s largest law enforcement agency, has undertaken structural changes in recent years to alleviate the burden on its overworked officers.
“I don’t understand why this is happening now and why we aren’t involved in the process,” said Kevin Anderson, executive director of the Maine State Law Enforcement Association, the union that represents Capitol Police officers. He learned of the commissioner’s email Wednesday night from an officer and as of Thursday afternoon, had yet to be contacted by Sauschuck directly, he said.
Saushuck’s email indicated that he would be answering questions from Capitol officers about the transition during meetings on Wednesday and Thursday afternoon.
State Police Lt. Greg Roy, who oversees special services for the agency, will take over leadership of the Capitol Police on Monday, according to his email. Capitol Police Lt. Steven Trahan, who has run the department since Clancy’s resignation, would be Roy’s second in command.
Shannon Moss, spokesperson for the Department of Public Safety, did not respond to specific questions about the transition in an email Thursday afternoon. In a statement, she said the change would “better support the growing demands at the Capitol.”
Sauschuck also referred to the broader public safety environment when explaining his decision to officers.
“The threats against our legislators and properties continue to grow while the general atmosphere gets more dynamic by the day. You’re living it, so that’s not news to you,” he wrote on Wednesday, and referred to the department’s “ever increasing workload” and “limited resources.”
“We have been able to add some additional sworn and civilian personnel to help us accomplish the mission, which has been great, but leadership transitional periods as we have now, should be geared toward the next generation of the Capitol Police Department and not just today,” he wrote.
Capitol police are well liked and do a great job, Anderson said. Replacing them with troopers would likely cost more to taxpayers because troopers are paid at a higher hourly rate, he said.
The state police also rankled some of its partner police departments a few years ago when the agency pulled back from patrol duties in rural areas to focus more on specialized assignments, a decision that agency leaders said had to do with staff shortage that had spread officers thin. Lawmakers recently funded new trooper positions to help with staffing issues — including record overtime logged by troopers last year — but Anderson wondered why the department would now want to take over the Capitol police, a process that could take a long time if it depends on officers leaving.
In the meantime, the state police are represented by a different union.
“There are a whole bunch of things that could become problems,” Anderson said. “Two different contracts, two layers of supervision, so many things that could have been discussed ahead of this announcement.”


