Frankfort Police Department to Get Four New Vehicles in Fleet Upgrade
FRANKFORT, Ill. – The Frankfort Police Department will be updating its aging fleet after the Village Board approved the purchase of four new vehicles for a total cost not to exceed $237,296.
The board authorized the purchase of three 2025 Ford Police Interceptor Utility AWD vehicles from Currie Motors of Frankfort. The cost is $46,482 per vehicle, with an additional upfitting cost of up to $20,000 each for emergency equipment and graphics. The total expenditure for the three squad cars will not exceed $199,446.
Additionally, trustees approved the purchase of a 2026 Chevrolet Equinox FWD LT from Phillips Chevrolet of Frankfort to serve as a replacement investigator vehicle. The vehicle costs $27,850, with an estimated upfitting cost of $10,000, bringing the total to $37,850.
The new Equinox will replace a 2010 Ford Fusion which the board declared as surplus property to be sold at auction.
Trustee Michael Leddin, who presented the requests, noted that funding for the new vehicles is included in the current budget. The purchases and upfitting were recommended by the Committee of the Whole following its June 11 meeting.
Latest News Stories
Cato scholar: Fraud being investigated in Minnesota likely occurring across U.S.
Supreme Court could rule on Trump’s tariff authority Friday
Glen Ellyn can’t enforce Airbnb rules vs owner who says was target
WATCH: HHS tells Illinois ‘show us the receipts’ on welfare spending
Illinois quick hits: IG finds 26 cases of sexual misconduct at Chicago schools
IL House speaker signals insurance regulation described as ‘ill-advised’
Logan County native urges oversight of proposed $5B IL data center
Flint Man Charged with 1988 Murder of Wife Joan Bernal Following Cold Case Breakthrough
State leaders slam $10 billion child care freeze, promise action
‘Implicit bias’ training mandate among new health care-related laws in Illinois
WATCH: Child care funding freeze; Trump rebuts Jan. 6 testimony from Kinzinger, Pelosi
Illinois quick hits: Pritzker reacts to HHS funding freeze; Chicago crime dashboard released