I doubt the various departments test for it, but that’s because it’s just not relevant. “Roid rage” is mostly an urban legend, and considering that Testosterone is a Schedule III controlled substance it’s highly doubtful that police would abuse it. (for fear of losing their jobs or felony prosecution)
That speculation would be dead wrong.
Peter Kos, Jr.
1

Wow, Peter. You have some really strong opinions. Very authoritative. That said, I have a few questions:

Care to clarify why “roid rage” is “mostly an urban legend”?

When you say “it’s highly doubtful that police would abuse [steroids]”, do you mean that, non-categorically, all cops are perfect law-abiding citizens? My comment was with regards to a culture of steroid use in suburban police departments. In fact, I made the comment because I had a long conversation with a journalist friend about the fact that the Garland, Texas PD has a major problem with their officers using steroids. Yes, I’m speculating but it’s based on actual reporting work.

Also, can we please address your comment about steroids being hormone replacement for men? Come on, now — that’s not how steroids work. I have to assume you’re trolling at this point.