William H. Parker (police officer)

Officer

Birthday June 21, 1905

Birth Sign Cancer

Birthplace Lead, South Dakota, U.S.

DEATH DATE July 16, 1966, Los Angeles, California, U.S. (61 years old)

Nationality South Dakota

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1847

His grandfather William H. Parker (1847–1908), was an American Civil War veteran who later served in Congress.

1905

William Henry Parker III (June 21, 1905 – July 16, 1966) was an American law enforcement officer who was Chief of the Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) from 1950 to 1966.

To date, he is the longest-serving LAPD police chief.

Parker has been called "Los Angeles' greatest and most controversial chief of police".

The former headquarters of the LAPD, the Parker Center, was named after him.

During his tenure, the LAPD was known for police brutality and racism; Parker himself was known for his "unambiguous racism".

Parker was born in Lead, South Dakota, and raised in Deadwood.

1922

The Parker family migrated to Los Angeles, California, in 1922, for better opportunities, when the city was advertised as the "white spot of America" during that period.

Despite this advertisement, the Parker family were in a clear minority in the distinctly White Anglo-Saxon Protestant Los Angeles, due to their Catholicism.

1926

Parker originally wanted to be an attorney, and studied at several colleges before enrolling in 1926 at the University of the West's Los Angeles College of Law, an institution which operated in the 1920s and 30s.

1927

He joined the LAPD on August 8, 1927, and continued his legal studies.

1930

Parker graduated with an LL.B. degree in 1930 and passed the bar exam, but opted to continue with the police department instead of practicing law.

During Parker's early years in the department, he was an active advocate for the police and firefighters' union, working to create job security and better wages for members of the police and fire departments.

He served as an LAPD officer for 15 years before taking leave to fight in World War II.

He attained the rank of captain as a planner and organizer of prisoner detention and policing in Sardinia, Normandy, Munich, and Frankfurt.

Parker received the Purple Heart for wounds he received when a column he was in was strafed five days after the Normandy invasion.

Shortly after the war, the French government awarded him the Croix de Guerre with silver star for his service in the war maintaining order after the liberation of Paris.

After the war, Parker returned to the police department and rose through the ranks to captain, then inspector, and then one of the department's deputy chiefs.

1950

Parker became police chief on August 9, 1950, and is credited with transforming the LAPD into a world-renowned law-enforcement agency.

The department that he took over in 1950 was notoriously corrupt.

Seeing ward politics, with its heavy involvement by partisan groups in the police department and mingling of political circles with vice and corruption on the streets, led him to conclude that a differently-organized police force was necessary to keep the peace.

Early in Parker's tenure, the LAPD became a more professional institution more answerable to police administration than politicians.

At the same time, Parker's reforms gave the chief autonomy that was unprecedented compared to the police chiefs of other major cities and which obstructed reforms attempted by Los Angeles mayors later in his career.

Included in his changes were a standardized police academy and more proactive policing methods, practices very similar to military peacekeeping methods to which he was exposed during the war.

Although Parker had a low opinion of Hollywood and how it portrayed American law enforcement, he saw it as an effective tool (particularly the new medium of television) to promote his view of law enforcement's role, in general as well as in Los Angeles, in maintaining order and "civilized behavior".

He first helped produce a panel show related to the LAPD called The Thin Blue Line, a reference to a phrase utilized by law enforcement agencies to refer to the police as the line between civil society and criminality.

Parker is sometimes credited for coining the phrase, but others contest that.

In addition to helping produce the show, Parker was a frequent panel member.

Much more influential was his support for the radio and then television program Dragnet developed by Jack Webb.

Unlike virtually all previous crime dramas, Dragnet attempted to show realistic police procedures.

Parker gave Webb access to police files and allowed him to observe the LAPD in action even to the point of recording the sounds of police cars rapidly leaving the garage.

While accuracy was a major goal of Dragnet, Webb was a strong advocate of the LAPD and stayed away from any story that showed any measure of police incompetence or corruption.

1955

Parker was also a guest on the television program What's My Line? on August 21, 1955.

Parker reduced the size of the police force, changing what had been a walking peace-force to a more militarized mobile response force.

Parker's experience with the numerically larger force of his early career led him to judge that fewer but more professional officers would mean less corruption.

Additionally, the strategy of changing the beat posture to one of mobility led to change from foot patrols to one which favored police cars.

Not incidentally, this also furthered Parker's belief that isolating his officers from the streets would reduce opportunities for corruption.

However, Parker recognized that certain areas of the city and certain functions of the police department needed to remain rooted in the more traditional form of police work.

Although Parker reduced police corruption and cleaned up the overall image of the police, certain sections of the LAPD continued practices similar to the old, semi-corrupt control of vice and petty crime.

The vice squad and reserve force continued to remain controversial elements of the police force.