Tigard at a glance
Population by race and Hispanic origin
Cities in this database with the most similarly-sized populations
Full-time law enforcement staff, Tigard Police Department
- 70 Officers
- 15 Civilian staff
Full-time law enforcement officers per 1,000 residents
- 1.51 Tigard
- 1.6 National average, cities with 50,000 to 99,999 population
- 2.2 National average
These figures reflect the Tigard Police Department only, and do not include state or other police agencies that may be present in this location.
Federal grant funding for Tigard
USA spending grants for Tigard have not yet been reviewed, please check back soon. Alternatively, why not search for other states, cities, or counties in the database.
Military equipment transfers
We were unable to locate any military equipment transfers for this location using the LESO Property Transferred to Participating Agencies database published by the Defense Logistics Agency. It is possible that this location has acquired military equipment for policing via other sources or programs.
Local police misconduct data, consent decrees, and settlements
Data last updated November 14, 2025
Settlements
We identified 1 publicly reported settlement that resulted in policy changes and $3,800,000.00 in monetary compensation to victims.
| Year | Description | Outcome |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 |
In July 2022, the City of Tigard, Oregon, reached a settlement of $3.8 million with the mother of Jacob Macduff, a twenty-six-year-old man who was shot and killed by a police officer during a mental health crisis. On January 6, 2021, Macduff’s roommate called the police to say that Macduff was experiencing a mental health crisis. Macduff was sitting alone in his pickup truck, unarmed, when six police officers arrived and requested that he exit the truck. When he did not comply, officers fired three beanbag rounds into his windshield. Officer Gabriel Maldonado then fired five close-range gunshots at Macduff, killing him. The officers had called Macduff’s mother, who is a doctor, during the standoff so she could talk to her son as she had helped de-escalate similar situations in the past, but she was disconnected and not contacted again for two hours. As part of the settlement, the Police Department agreed to implement several reforms, including using body cameras department-wide, transitioning from beanbag shotguns to foam projectiles as non-lethal options, clarifying the language in the department’s use-of-force policy, and creating additional de-escalation training. Maldonado resigned from the Tigard Police Department and began working as a Port of Portland police officer four days later. |
Policy changes
Compensation $3,800,000.00 |