- Leonard Hamm
Infobox police officer
name = Leonard Hamm
caption =
born =
badgenumber =
placeofbirth =
nickname =
department =Baltimore Police Department
service = United States
serviceyears = 1974-2007
rank = Commissioner
awards =
relations =
laterwork =Leonard Hamm is a former police commissioner of Baltimore, Maryland who served as the head of the department from 2004-2007. [cite web | title="Bealefeld urges more effort to fight violent crime"| url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/crime/bal-md.ci.bealefeld19nov19,0,6027326.story]
Biography
Hamm grew up in Baltimore's Cherry Hill neighborhood, attended
Baltimore City College and joined the department in 1974.cite web | title="Brass Tacks:An Interview With Police Commissioner Leonard Hamm" | url=http://www.citypaper.com/news/story.asp?id=13595] He would eventually rise to the rank of Lieutenant and then Major under former commissioner Thomas Frazier becoming the Baltimore Police Department's firstAfrican American officer to command the Central District. With a rising Homicide rate, Departmental personnel problems and a Mayoral election approaching, Hamm was asked to resign by MayorSheila Dixon in the summer of 2007. [cite web | title="Mayor To Announce Hamm's Resignation" | url=http://www.wbaltv.com/news/13707552/detail.html] Hamm was succeeded by Deputy Commissioner for OperationsFrederick H. Bealefeld III , a 26 year veteran of the force. [cite web | title="The Police Commissioner" | url=http://www.baltimorepolice.org/about-us/officers/police-commissioner]Family
In June 2008, it was discovered that Hamm's 39 year old stepdaughter Nicole Sesker was found murdered in Northwest Baltimore. [cite web | title="Wounds show that Sesker was strangled" | url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/local/baltimore_city/bal-md.briefs290jun29,0,6875851.story?track=rss] Hamm currently works as the Chief of Campus Police at
Coppin State University . [cite web | title="Leonard Hamm's Stepdaughter Murdered" | url=http://www.abc2news.com/news/local/story.aspx?content_id=098a880b-e9de-4fcf-ae74-1fe9617e6460&rss=702] At the time of her death, she struggled with addiction and had also traded sex for housing, food, drugs and money. Sesker was a former volunteer and employee ofPower Inside , a local women's group that assists women on the streets. Sesker used her experiences to inspire and educate others through media advocacy and public speaking. In 2004 she wrote, "I left prison with a made-up mind that I wouldn't be one of the ones that said something needs to be changed. I would help the changes be made. I would be, and am, a voice the public can't ignore." [ [http://www.powerinside.org Power Inside ] ]References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.