Michael Hennessey

Michael Hennessey
Michael Hennessey
Sheriff of the City and County of San Francisco
Incumbent
Assumed office
1980
Preceded by Eugene A. Brown
Succeeded by Ross Mirkarimi (elect)
Personal details
Born c. 1948 (age 62–63)
Alma mater Saint John’s University (Minnesota),
University of San Francisco School of Law

Michael Hennessey (born c. 1948) is the longest serving Sheriff in the history of San Francisco and is currently the longest tenured Sheriff in the State of California. Hennessey was elected in a run-off election in December of 1979 and has been reelected in seven subsequent elections. At the end of the current term (January 2012), he will have served as San Francisco’s Sheriff for 32 years and has received more than one million votes as Sheriff. [1][2][3] No other San Francisco Sheriff has served for more than sixteen years.[4] On February 18, 2011, he announced that he would not run for a ninth term of office.[5]

Sheriff Hennessey’s tenure has been notable for the development of prisoner education and rehabilitation programs, by construction of three major jail facilities and by expansion of powers of the Office of Sheriff.

Contents

Early life

Michael Hennessey grew up in Manilla, Iowa, a town of 900 people in western Iowa. Hennessey graduated with a degree in History from St. John’s University (Collegeville, Minnesota) in 1970 and then moved to San Francisco to attend law school. He graduated with Honors from the University of San Francisco School of Law in 1973, where he helped found the school rugby team and served as an editor of the Law Review.[6]

Following graduation from law school, Hennessey took a temporary job in the San Francisco Sheriff's Department as Legal Counsel to Sheriff Richard Hongisto (December 1973 – June 1974) and then joined the newly created University Year for Action (UYA) program providing a variety of social services to prisoners in the San Francisco county jail. UYA was a Volunteers In Service to America program (VISTA), a domestic version of the Peace Corp. In this capacity, Hennessey created a legal services program for county jail inmates. After a year as a UYA participant, Hennessey attracted the support of the San Francisco Bar Association, who served as his sponsor for the next several years.[7]

Election as sheriff

Sheriff Hongisto was reelected for a second term in November 1975, but left the office midway through the term (December 1977) after Cleveland, Ohio Mayor Dennis Kucinich offered him the position of Chief of Police. In early February 1978, Mayor George Moscone appointed Eugene Brown to replace Hongisto. With a non-elected Sheriff facing the voters in November 1979, Hennessey and five other challengers ran against Sheriff Brown. Hennessey garnered the most votes in the November election, but not the 50% required to win the post. In a December runoff election, Hennessey easily beat the incumbent and took office in January 1980.[8] Dianne Feinstein was elected Mayor in this same runoff, after having been appointed Mayor in November 1978 to serve out the balance of George Moscone’s term.

Until 1986 there were no “qualifications” to run for the elected office of county sheriff. The fact that there were no limits on who could run for sheriff resulted in some interesting challenges to sheriffs in the state, frequently from other elected officials and even the wives of prisoners. The California State Sheriff’s Association lobbied heavily to create “qualifications” for eligibility standards to seek the office and in 1986 Governor George Deukmejian signed a bill into law limiting candidates to current and former peace officers. The law also grandfathered in “those already in office at the time this law goes into effect.” Sheriff Hennessey was the only person to whom this last provision applied.[9]

Sheriff of San Francisco

Six weeks after taking office, four federal bank robbers escaped from the City’s oldest jail, though they were all captured within 24 hours.[10] A few weeks later the San Francisco jail suffered the largest jail break in City history. A gun was smuggled into the jail’s high security unit and thirteen dangerous prisoners escaped from the downtown Hall of Justice.[11] A year later, one of the Department’s own deputies helped a leader of the Hells Angels escape by hiding him in a laundry cart and pushing him out to freedom via the jail’s freight elevator.[12]

More controversy followed the Sheriff when he hired an ex-offender to run the jail’s rehabilitation programs. The ex-con, Michael Marcum, had been a UYA social worker when Hennessey was part of the UYA program. Marcum had served seven years in California prisons for the murder of his father in the 1960’s. Hennessey and Marcum became life long friends and their friendship resulted in many controversies, including a vote of no confidence by the Deputy Sheriff’s Association and a demonstration by deputies when, in 1993, Hennessey promoted Marcum to the position of Assistant Sheriff, the third highest position in the Department.

In spite of these controversies, Hennessey remained popular with San Francisco’s voters and was regularly returned to office every election. He rarely faced serious opposition, twice running unopposed. His popularity is largely attributed to his progressive leadership in introducing innovative rehabilitation programs in the jails, aggressive hiring within San Francisco’s minority communities, and improving the professionalism of the Department.[13][14]

Hennessey is considered a visionary in bringing rehabilitation and education programs into the jails.[15] Most of the programs that Hennessey initiated were ahead of their time, but are now not uncommon in jails and prisons: substance abuse counseling, alternatives to incarceration, education and anti-violence counseling. This last effort resulted in a program called Resolve to Stop the Violence Program (RSVP) which received the national Innovations in Government Award from the Kennedy School of Government (2004).[16] Hennessey frequently has been asked to speak on his violence prevention program.[17] He is a vocal critic of the federal Secure Communities deportation program.

Hennessey also was an early proponent of a new technique for jail management, called Direct Supervision.[18] This method of creating a dialogue with prisoners in the jails was also accompanied by the construction of two new San Francisco jails that were designed to maximize visual supervision and to eliminate “blind spots” from staff observation. The result has been safer jails almost completely eliminating escapes, sexual assaults and other inmate misconduct.

Another controversial effort by Hennessey was to introduce AIDS education to both inmates and staff in the jails. Hennessey began this program very early in the AIDS crisis which hit San Francisco’s large gay population especially hard. As a result of his efforts in this field, Law Enforcement News, a publication of the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York, named Hennessey “Law Enforcement Man of the Year”.[19] These and other efforts led to Hennessey being called “The Best Sheriff in America” by Salon.com.[20]

Hennessey also greatly expanded the duties of the San Francisco Sheriff’s Department to include helping provide security for visiting dignitaries, including sitting Presidents, heads of state and Pope John Paul II. During Sheriff Hennessey’s tenure, the Department also was tasked with providing building security in San Francisco’s historic City Hall, in San Francisco General Hospital and several other public buildings.

Hennessey’s other interests of note are researching and writing about the history of the San Francisco Sheriff’s Department [21], riding a horse in local parades with a group called the San Francisco Sheriff’s Mounted Posse, and a quirky interest in San Francisco’s punk rock culture. He is widely quoted in a recent history of the local punk rock scene, Gimme Something Better, by Jack Boulware and Spike Tudor.[22]

Among the rehabilitation programs started by Sheriff Hennessey are:

  • Prisoner Legal Services (1974)[23]
  • Eviction Assistance (1980)[24]
  • SWAP (Sheriff’s Work Alternative Program) and other alternatives to incarceration (1984)[25]
  • SISTERS (A therapeutic community approach to substance abuse for women)
  • Roads to Recovery (A therapeutic community substance abuse program for male prisoners)[26]
  • RSVP (A therapeutic community program for violent offenders)[27]
  • The Garden Project / Earth Stewards[28][29]
  • PREP (A Post Release Education and Employment Program)
  • Medea Project (Rhodessa Jones) (A Women’s theater/therapy program)[30]
  • Collaboration with Community Works, Arts Programs[31]
  • HIV/AIDS Training[32]
  • Condoms in jails[33]
  • New San Bruno Facility (Closed the oldest jail in California)[34]
  • 5 Keys Charter High School[35]
  • Women’s Reentry Center[36]
  • RSVP Day with The Giants[37]
  • Veteran’s Program (COVER)[38]

References

  1. ^ SFGate
  2. ^ SFGate
  3. ^ Forbes
  4. ^ SFGOV
  5. ^ SFGate
  6. ^ USFCA
  7. ^ SFGOV
  8. ^ San Francisco Chronicle, December 13, 1979
  9. ^ California Government Code Section 24004.3
  10. ^ San Francisco Chronicle, December 15, 1980
  11. ^ San Francisco Examiner, April 25, 1980
  12. ^ San Francisco Examiner, May 29, 1981
  13. ^ San Francisco Chronicle, Editorial, "Re-Elect Hennessey," November 5, 2007
  14. ^ San Francisco Examiner, Editorial, "Harris for DA; Hennessey for Sheriff," October 26, 2007
  15. ^ "Visionaries, with Sam Waterston," Season 11, "Resolve to Stop the Violence"
  16. ^ Harvard University Kennedy School of Government
  17. ^ Drum Major Institute for Public Policy
  18. ^ Florida Department of Law Enforcement
  19. ^ Law Enforcement News, January 26, 1987
  20. ^ Salon.com
  21. ^ The History of the San Francisco Sheriff's Department
  22. ^ Gimme Something Better: The Profound, Progressive, and Occasionally Pointless History of Bay Area Punk from Dead Kennedys to Green Day
  23. ^ Sheriff's Department - Prisoner Legal Services - San Francisco Homeless Resource
  24. ^ CCSF Sheriff's Department: Civil & Courts
  25. ^ CCSF Sheriff's Department: Programs/Jail Alternative Programs
  26. ^ Roads to Recovery
  27. ^ RESOLVE TO STOP THE VIOLENCE PROJECT - San Francisco Sheriff's Department
  28. ^ http://www.gardenproject.org/thegardenproject.htm
  29. ^ http://www.gardenproject.org/theearthstewardsprogram.htm
  30. ^ the medea project - about
  31. ^ Programs
  32. ^ Abstract: Forensic AIDS Project (FAP): San Francisco's Two-Model Approach to Condom Distribution in the Jails (2010 National STD Prevention Conference)
  33. ^ Spotlight: Condoms in Correctional Settings - The Body
  34. ^ SAN BRUNO / New jail to open this weekend / State-of-the-art S.F. lockup is result of inmates' lawsuit - SFGate
  35. ^ Five Keys Charter School
  36. ^ http://www.sfsheriff.com/WRCbrochure.pdf
  37. ^ Violence Prevention Programs | SFGiants.com: Community
  38. ^ Veterans Must Prove COVER Project Works | HyperVocal
Police appointments
Preceded by
Eugene A. Brown
Sheriff of the City and County of San Francisco
1980-present
Succeeded by
Incumbent

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