BOYNTON BEACH, FL (Boca Post) (Copyright © 2026) — Boynton Beach Police are marking a major leadership transition with the retirement of Assistant Chief John Bonafair after 27 years with the Boynton Beach Police Department, the agency announced.
The department credited Bonafair with a wide-ranging career that began long before his command-level role in Boynton Beach. In its public statement, Boynton Beach Police said Bonafair served the community of Pahokee earlier in his career and later built a long tenure at BBPD that touched both operational and investigative sides of the department.
Over nearly three decades, the agency said Bonafair held assignments that included SWAT Commander, work in the Vice Unit, and oversight of Investigative Services. Boynton Beach Police also said he played a key role in launching the department’s Real Time Crime Center, a program the agency described as part of its public safety infrastructure.
The announcement, posted publicly by the department, prompted an immediate flood of reactions from residents, colleagues, and current and former public safety personnel. Most comments centered on congratulations and gratitude, with many describing Bonafair as a steady presence in the department and in the community.
Several commenters pointed to the length of his career in uniform and the milestone that comes with stepping away after decades of service. “Congratulations Chief, enjoy retirement,” one commenter wrote. Another added, “Thank you for keeping us safe. Have a great well earned retirement.”
A number of messages appeared to come from people who know Bonafair personally or professionally and referenced shared history in law enforcement. One commenter wrote, “Went to the academy with this dude! Congrats!!!!” Another offered a longer note that read like a message between peers: “Congrats, brother. From the days of the academy together all the way to now—outstanding work. Believe it or not, I’m still in the game but that light at the end is looking real friendly.”
Other comments emphasized character and leadership rather than rank, with multiple people calling the retirement “well deserved.” “Congratulations Assistant Chief Bonafair! Thank you very much for your selfless service to our community,” one resident wrote. Another commenter summed it up in a few words: “One of the best.”
The post also sparked side conversations about traditional uniform details. A few commenters asked about service markings, including one person who wrote, “Curious the service bars on his sleeve how many years per each?” Another added their own comparison from experience: “Wow what does each hash mark represent??? I have 27 years on and have 5 hashes. 5 for each dedicated year.”
Boynton Beach Police, in its statement, framed Bonafair’s retirement as the end of a long run of public service and the beginning of a new chapter. The agency thanked him directly and said it wished him “a retirement filled with new adventures.”
For residents, the immediate impact is less about a single case or a single incident and more about a change in the department’s upper leadership. Assistant chiefs typically oversee major operational functions, internal divisions, and strategic initiatives—work that often isn’t visible day-to-day but shapes staffing, priorities, and how resources get deployed. Boynton Beach Police did not include details in its statement about a successor or internal promotions tied to the retirement.
What comes next will likely be internal: transition planning, leadership assignments, and continuity for the units and programs Bonafair previously led or helped build. For the public, the key takeaway is straightforward. A long-serving command staff member is stepping away after a career the department says spanned vice work, SWAT leadership, investigative oversight, and the rollout of a modern crime center program.
More police activity coverage is available on Boca Post’s police activity page.

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