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Where the Girls Are...virtually everywhere

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Hyerdahl

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Apr 17, 2006, 1:02:17 PM4/17/06
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ASHBEL S. GREEN
The Oregonian

Acting Portland Police Chief Rosie Sizer has joined the growing ranks
of women leading major U.S. police departments.

Five of the 50 largest departments --Detroit, Boston, San Francisco,
Milwaukee and Portland --are headed by women. All five women became
chief since 2003.

"What really did it more than anything else was the push toward
community policing," said Penny Harrington, who became the first woman
to lead a major U.S. police agency when she took over the Portland
Police Bureau in 1985. Harrington is now a consultant in Morro Bay,
Calif.

Community policing, rather than focusing on arrest counts, emphasizes
working with citizens to find long-term solutions to crime.

"That's the type of policing women do naturally," Harrington said.

Margaret Moore, director of the National Center for Women & Policing,
said female police chiefs tend to bring a different style of
leadership.

"On the whole they're doing well," Moore said. "They try to be more
inclusive and work with community groups."

Sizer holds the title of chief temporarily. On Tuesday, Mayor Tom
Potter elevated Sizer from a precinct command into the chief's office
after placing Chief Derrick Foxworth on paid administrative leave. The
city is investigating allegations of misconduct leveled by a female
desk clerk with whom Foxworth had a relationship several years ago.

Whether Sizer keeps the job permanently won't be clear until after the
investigation is completed. But if the mayor wants to see how other
women have fared in the high-pressure job of police chief in a major
city, he'll have several examples.

When Ella Bully-Cummings took over the Detroit job in November 2003,
she inherited a department struggling under federal oversight of its
use of force and the condition of its jails.

Her predecessor, who was unpopular with the troops because of his tough
disciplinary sanctions, resigned less than two years into the job after
being caught with a loaded gun in his bag at an airport.

Bully-Cummings, who rose through the ranks after joining the force in
1977, proposed major layoffs in the face of budget cuts. In addition,
the city's homicide rate has grown to about one a day.

But she also agreed to have police videotape interrogations of murder
suspects as part of a proposed settlement of a lawsuit by a man who was
cleared by DNA evidence after 17 years in prison.

And after a 25 percent jump in juvenile crime in 2005, she pledged to
begin enforcing a little-known law that allows fines and jail terms for
parents whose children repeatedly break the law.

San Francisco

Heather Fong joined the San Francisco Police Department the same year
as Bully-Cummings started in Detroit.

And like Bully-Cummings, Fong took the job in the wake of a scandal
--accusations of a cover-up of a drunken off-duty police brawl.

After being appointed acting chief in January 2004, she won the
permanent job a few months later.

Fong streamlined the department's hierarchy and won plaudits for her
planning. But her city's homicide rate also has risen.

And late last year, she faced a scandal involving officers who made a
video depicting an officer running over a homeless woman and an officer
pulling over a female motorist and ogling her.

Fong publicly described the skits in the video as "shameful and
despicable."

Boston

Like the other women chiefs, Boston Police Commissioner Kathleen M.
O'Toole started as a patrol officer in the 1970s. But she worked in a
number of different law enforcement positions and capacities in the
following 25 years, including a stint with a commission to reform the
police in Northern Ireland.

O'Toole won the job in February 2004 over several inside candidates.
She is described as having a hands-off style that gives her time to
serve as the department's public ambassador, meeting frequently with
businesses and community groups.

She overhauled the department's fingerprint lab, created a regional
intelligence center and reformed the witness identification procedures
to protect against wrongful convictions.

But diversity has increased only slightly since she became chief, and a
statewide advocacy group for minority law enforcement officers gave her
a vote of "no confidence" last year.

In addition, the homicide rate in Boston surged.

Milwaukee

Nannette Hegerty was one of the first women to join the Milwaukee
Police Department in 1976. She rose to captain before becoming U.S.
marshal in the Eastern District of Wisconsin in 1994.

Hegerty was appointed chief in November 2003. She brought back the gang
unit, reached out to unions and overhauled the discipline system.

Last year, she punished more than a dozen officers --firing several
--after the off-duty beating of a man.

And crime has dropped on her watch.

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Masculist

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Apr 17, 2006, 2:43:38 PM4/17/06
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Oh great, now we have to deal with SOW's too.

Smitty

Hyerdahl

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Apr 17, 2006, 2:51:03 PM4/17/06
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Yes, no matter what you call women or think of them you must DEAL with
them; they are everywhere.

Ben

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Apr 17, 2006, 2:56:58 PM4/17/06
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According to some of the police magazines, the officers in those
departments are guardedly optimistic, which is the general reaction to
any new chief being appointed, male or female. Personally, I wish them
success. As far as crime rates go, police departments should neither
take full credit or blame for crime rate fluctations. Even during the
Giuliani era in NYC, when he was touting the new enforcement as the
reason why the crime rate fell as rapidly as it did, the media
neglected to take notice that the same thing was happening in other
major cities that were either doing business as usual or trying
programs different from that in NYC.

As it turns out, crime rates fell dramatically as the incarceration
rates rose dramatically. Who woulda thunk it? Which, of course, led
to such stupid headlines in the NY Times as "Despite rising
incarceration rates, crime continues to fall."

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