- Reuben Greenberg
Reuben Greenberg, born in 1943, was the first Black police chief of
Charleston, South Carolina , and known for being an innovativecriminologist .He was police chief there from 1982 [http://www.oakridger.com/stories/062697/reuben.html] until his retirement in 2005 [http://www.nationalreview.com/ledeen/ledeen200508180822.asp] .
Childhood
Originally from
Texas , Greenberg is Black andJewish , the son of a JewishRussia nimmigrant father and anAfrican-American mother. He converted to Judaism at age 26.Education
Greenberg received his
bachelor's degree in anthropology fromSan Francisco State University in 1967, and earnedmaster's degree s inpublic administration and city planning fromUniversity of California, Berkeley in 1969 and 1975. He is also a graduate of theFBI Academy .Teaching career
He taught
sociology as an Assistant Professor atCalifornia State University ,political science at theUniversity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , andcriminal justice atFlorida International University .Law enforcement career
He served as the Undersheriff of the
San Francisco County Sheriff's Department. InSavannah, Georgia , and he was a major with the city's police department. In Florida, he was Chief of Police atOpa-Locka and Chief Deputy Sheriff of Orange County, rising to Deputy Director of theFlorida Department of Law Enforcement . He arrived in Charleston as Chief of Police in 1982.In the words of Charleston
Post and Courier reporter David Slade, he "turned the . . . Police Department into a national model. In the process, he became a celebrity and a source of pride for the city ...." [http://www.nationalreview.com/ledeen/ledeen200508180822.asp]Greenberg told his cops that their job was not to punish (that was up to the courts), but to make arrests, and in order to do that they had to be on good terms with the citizens. So he put his cops out on the streets, not in cars. They walked, rode bicycles and horses, and were accessible to "normal people," who might not want to call or visit headquarters.
He also required that every cop earn a bachelor’s degree, whereas when he arrived at the department not all had even graduated from high school. He added a K-9 bomb and drug-sniffing unit, a harbor patrol, and a crime lab to the police department. He had a team of officers remove graffiti the moment it appeared, sending a message that the city belonged to the police, not the vandals.
It worked, and Greenberg became a media celebrity. The
Los Angeles Times headlined its profile, "A Black, Jewish, Roller-Skating Cop Brings A New Way to Fight Crime to the Old South."Charleston's population increased 64% during the time Greenberg was chief, while crime decreased 11 percent. [http://www.officer.com/article/article.jsp?siteSection=4&id=25404]
Greenberg retired in 2005 after over 23 years. [http://www.joi.org/bloglinks/Reuben%20Greenberg%20article%20-%20NRO.htm] This followed a controversial 2005 incident in which a motorist charged that he hit her car door after she told him that she had called the police department to report his erratic driving. Health reasons, such as high blood pressure, were cited as the cause for his behavior for several years earlier, which included: poking a news reporter in the chest while on video in 2003 (he later apologized, saying "I'm not proud ... It was not my finest hour"), calling an anti-war demonstrator a "crazy fat lady" in 2003 (he later said: "I was wrong. She's not fat. She's obese. She's grossly obese. If she doesn't like that, she can do something about it, like the
Atkins diet that I was on."), and being involved in 5 traffic accidents while in his police vehicle over a 6-year period. During one of these accidents, in 2005 he hit a car while turning the wrong way down a one-way street. [http://72.14.209.104/search?q=cache:IzvO3nBAi0kJ:www.charleston.net/stories/default_pf.aspx%3FnewsID%3D35556+%22reuben+greenberg%22+%22wrong+way%22&hl=en&gl=us&ct=clnk&cd=8]Awards
Greenberg was named "Justice Professional of the Year" in 1991 by the Southern Criminal Justice Foundation, received the Foundation for Improvement of Justice 1989 Achievement Award and the "Free Spirit Award" from the
Freedom Forum in 1994 for distinguished success in fighting crime. [http://www.officer.com/article/article.jsp?siteSection=4&id=25404] .Author
Greenberg is the author of "Let's Take Back Our Streets," 1989, written with Arthur Gordon, a consulting editor of
Guideposts . In the book he tells what moves he made to take back the streets in his adopted city from criminals, and what he thinks other law officers can do to accomplish the same.He has also authored a number of police-related articles, and has appeared as a guest columnist for several newspapers, most notably the
Detroit News . [http://www.scafricanamericanhistory.com/currenthonoree.asp?month=7&year=1996]TV
Greenberg has explained his tactics ands strategies on television programs such as
60 Minutes ,Larry King Live ,The Phil Donahue Show , The Today Show,Both Sides withJesse Jackson , and theThe MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour . [http://www.scafricanamericanhistory.com/currenthonoree.asp?month=7&year=1996]Film
Greenberg appeared in
Shalom y'all , a 2002 documentary about Jews in the American South which also featured author and singerKinky Friedman .
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