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  Washington State Patrol title head District 4 Detachments

WSP District 4 Map District 4 is situated in northeast Washington and serves Adams, Ferry, Lincoln, Pend Orielle, Spokane, Stevens, and Whitman counties. The combined population of the seven counties is over 544,000 citizens.

The district has the obligation of providing professional traffic law enforcement and assistance to the public on approximately 1,700 miles of state and interstate highways. We also work closely with all local law enforcement agencies to provide additional law enforcement support.

The District 4 headquarters is located in Spokane (pictured below) with detachments located in Colfax, Colville, Ritzville, Spokane. A full-service crime laboratory is also located in Spokane. District 4 Headquarters Select a link below for more information on each detachment.

Colfax Detachment



Comprising of 2,151 square miles, Whitman County ranks 10th in size among Washington counties. The county is situated in the southeast region of Washington along the Washington-Idaho border. Patrol car in Pullman Along the southern border lies the Snake River Canyon that cuts a 2,000-foot deep swath through the Palouse Hills. The rich, dark soil covering the rolling-hills is where much of the nation's finest wheat and legumes are produced.

The county is also home to Washington State University's main campus, located in Pullman. Several small but expanding high-tech firms are diversifying Pullman's economy. The 620-acre campus features modern classrooms and laboratories, libraries, and museums, student residences, recreational and athletic facilities, a student union, and a community hospital.


Colville Detachment

The Colville Detachment covers the entire Ferry and Stevens County area. Ferry County is bordered on the south and east by the Columbia River and by Canada to the north. Its county seat is Republic, the only significant community in the county, which was incorporated in 1900 and named after the Republic gold mine. Scenic South East Washington For decades the town was one of the nation's largest gold producers and two active gold mines remain in operation, but now the community is also supported by agriculture, lumber, and outdoor recreation.

Stevens County is bordered by the Spokane River on the south and the Columbia River to the west. The county seat is Colville with Kettle Falls just to the north. The falls, for which the town of Kettle Falls was named, was lost when the Grand Coulee Dam backed up the Columbia River and created Franklin D. Roosevelt Lake.


Ritzville Detachment


Sundown in the Palouse The Ritzville detachment covers Adams County and parts of Lincoln County. Adams County is largely an agricultural county in Eastern Washington. Apart from Interstate 90, which passes near the county seat of Ritzville, the county's road system is characterized by a north-south and east-west grid pattern following section lines. Glacial floods formed a series of waterfalls along the Palouse River before it entered the Snake River. Palouse Falls is the only one left and is located in Franklin County to the south. The falls have a height of 198 feet and are most spectacular in the spring and early summer.


Spokane Detachments



The Spokane detachments cover Pend Oreille, Spokane and part of Lincoln counties. A combination of sprawling lumber, mining, and farming communities comprise the entire area of Pend Oreille and North Spokane Counties of northeastern Washington. Pend Oreille County was the last county to be created in Scenic North East Washington Washington State on November 11, 1911. In that year, Pend Oreille was separated from its parent county, Stevens. Newport is the county seat and is located on the Washington/Idaho state line. The population of Pend Oreille County was 6,025 in 1970, estimated to be 11,526 in 1998. The name Pend Oreille is said to have come from a French trapper’s description of the dangling earring pendants worn by a local Indian tribe.


Spokane County is the center of the "Inland Empire." It includes parts of the Spokane Valley plains, Okanogan, Selkirk Highlands, and Palouse Hills of Eastern Washington. Spokane is the seat of Spokane County. Veiw of Spokane It is located on the Spokane River and is crossed by Interstate 90. Today Spokane, population 195,629, is the major urban center of the Inland Northwest. Fairchild Air Force Base is one of the city's largest employers. Gonzaga University calls Spokane home. Points of interest include Riverside State Park, the site of Spokane House; Cheney Cowles Museum, housing exhibits on Eastern Washington history; and the Museum of Native American Cultures.




Additional resource information about the District 4 region
is available on our District Contacts and Resources page.

 

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