Nearly one year into his tenure as the head of Massachusetts’ largest police force, State Police Colonel Geoffrey Noble is sitting down with WBZ’s Kristina Rex to talk about the department’s image and reforms he feels are necessary to restore public confidence.
Why he took the job
Noble, a Rhode Island native, was a state trooper in New Jersey for much of his career, including 17 years investigating deaths. He was named Massachusetts’ new state police colonel in September 2024 after a large external search by Governor Healey.
Noble took the job knowing that the state police had just come off of a major overtime scandal, the death of a recruit during academy training, and the first Karen Read trial.
“I worked my entire career and many times I got to work alongside the Massachusetts State Police and the women and men of the Massachusetts State Police in in an operational capacity and through all those experiences I developed a profound respect for the Massachusetts State Police for the institution of the Massachusetts State Police and for what it represents,” Noble said. “Overseeing what was occurring and in the shortfalls and the scandals that had happened – that was not the Massachusetts State Police. That was not representative of the Massachusetts State Police that I had gotten to know personally over the years.”…