Collin County Sheriff Jim Skinner is a
   32-year law-enforcement veteran, trial attorney, and former prosecutor. He took office on January 1, 2017, and
   oversees 550 personnel, who deliver services to over 1.1MM citizens across 880 square miles in the northeast quadrant
   of the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex. Like others, he recently lead his Office's response to the national emergency
   related to COVID-19 and is keeping an eye on a major project to renovate the intake, infirmary, kitchen, and housing
   areas of the county jail. He's honored to have been designated as a subject-matter expert in connection with the
   work of the President's Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Criminal Justice. In January 2020, he
   was a panelist and speaker at the White House's summit on human trafficking and commemoration of the TVPA 2000.
   As Chair of the Legislative Committee of the Sheriffs' Association of Texas, Sheriff Skinner was proud to be a
   part of the efforts to persuade the people and the 86th Texas Legislature to pass a constitutional amendment and
   several statutes important to law enforcement, including SJR 32 and SB 2100 (2019), which improved the humane
   retirement of law-enforcement dogs and other service animals. And, in May 2018, he spoke, by invitation, at Texas
   Governor Greg Abbott's multi-disciplinary meeting in response to the May 18 Santa Fe High School shooting. 
Since taking office, Sheriff Skinner has implemented several initiatives, including enlarging the Patrol Section to
   keep pace with County growth; starting a fugitive task force with assistance from the U.S. Marshal's Service and
   serving or clearing thousands of aging felony warrants; forming, with seven other sheriffs, the North Texas Criminal
   Interdiction Unit and arresting over 280 traffickers, seizing tons of illegal drugs, seizing several military-style
   weapons, seizing over $6.9 million in bulk cash, stopping three loads of human cargo, recovering just over 110 stolen
   vehicles, and rescuing two missing children in separate traffic stops; forming a new detention intelligence unit and
   gathering intelligence from the county's 1,298-bed jail, including intelligence about gangs and drug cartels; and
   forming a child-exploitation unit that investigates internet-based child exploitation that has arrested 274 subjects
   on felony charges and seized terabytes of child pornography. Sheriff Skinner is also a member of county committees on
   courthouse security, jail population, and local mental-health care.
Sheriff Skinner is also an active member of the National Sheriffs' Association, where he sits on their Board of
   Directors and serves as the Chairman of the Government Affairs Committee. He is a member of the North Texas Crime
   Commission and a former member of its board of directors. He's a member of the board of the local Meals on Wheels
   as well.
Sheriff Skinner's career has spanned over 32 years in law enforcement. He has served as the Second Assistant
   District Attorney and Chief of the Special Prosecution Division of the Collin County Criminal District Attorney's
   Office. In 2008, he prosecuted a District Attorney from the DFW Metroplex for official corruption (15-year sentence).
   He also separately served as an Assistant District Attorney and Special Prosecutor in the Office. In private
   practice, he both consulted on the investigation of financial crimes and represented child victims of sex abuse from
   around the country.
Before graduating the University of Houston Law Center in 2001, Sheriff Skinner served as the Chief Investigator for
   New Mexico's Ninth Judicial District Attorney's Office and over 19 years as a police officer in New Mexico
   and Texas. He worked in homicide, robbery, burglary, gangs, narcotics, vice, white-collar crime, and public
   corruption.
Sheriff Skinner served our country for eight years as a U.S. Air Force Security Police Dog Handler, Investigator and
   EST (SWAT) Team Leader/Operator, stationed in Southeast Asia, New Mexico, and the Middle East.