Daryl Gates
Daryl Gates | |
---|---|
Los Angeles Police Department | |
August 30, 1926–April 16, 2010 (aged 83) | |
Place of birth | Glendale, California[1] |
Place of death | Dana Point, California[2] |
Service branch | United States |
Year of service | 1949 – 1992 |
Rank | Sworn in as an Officer – 1949 – Commander – 1965 Chief of Police – 1978 |
Awards | – Police Meritorious Unit Citation – Police Meritorious Service Medal – 1984 Summer Olympics Ribbon – 1987 Papal Visit Ribbon – 1992 Civil Disturbance Ribbon |
Other work | Businessman/entrepreneur, talk-show host, radio commentator |
Contents[show] |
[edit] Early life
[edit] LAPD career
[edit] SWAT
[edit] PDID
[edit] DARE
[edit] CRASH
[edit] Force enlargement
- " ... [I]f you don't have all of those quotas, you can't hire all the people you need. So you've got to make all of those quotas. And when that happens, you get somebody who is on the borderline, you'd say "Yes, he's black, or he's Hispanic, or it's a female, but we want to bring in these additional people when we have the opportunity. So we'll err on the side of, 'We'll take them and hope it works out.'" And we made some mistakes. No question about it, we have made some mistakes."[citation needed]
[edit] Special Order 40
[edit] Administrative style and personality
[edit] Operation Hammer
“ | Sure. The good people did all the time. But the community activists? No. Absolutely not. We were out there oppressing whatever the community had to be, whether it was blacks, or Hispanics. We were oppressing them. Nonsense. We're out there trying to save their communities, trying to upgrade the quality of life of people... | ” |
[edit] Rodney King and the Los Angeles riots
[edit] Controversial rhetoric
- his testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee that infrequent or casual drug users "ought to be taken out and shot" because "we're in a war" and even casual drug use is "treason."[13] He later said the testimony was calculated hyperbole.[14]
- his dismissive response to concerns about excessive force by police employing "choke holds." Gates attributed several deaths of people held in choke holds to the theory that "blacks might be more likely to die from chokeholds because their arteries do not open as fast as they do on 'normal people.'"[15] (In his autobiography, Gates explained that he had been misquoted, saying that black people were more predisposed to vascular conditions and therefore less likely to have normally-functioning arteries.)