- Lee P. Brown
Infobox Officeholder
name = Lee P. Brown
imagesize =
small
caption =
order = 3rd Director of National Drug Control Policy
term_start = January, 1993
term_end =December 12 ,1995
vicepresident =
viceprimeminister =
deputy =
president =Bill Clinton
primeminister =
predecessor =Bob Martinez
successor =Barry McCaffrey
order2 = 59th Mayor of Houston
term_start2 =January 2 1998
term_end2 =January 2 2004
vicepresident2 =
viceprimeminister2 =
deputy2 =
president2 =
primeminister2 =
predecessor2 = Bob Lanier
successor2 = Bill White
birth_date = Birth date and age|1937|10|3|mf=y
birth_place =Wewoka, Oklahoma
death_date =
death_place =
constituency =
party = Democratic
spouse = Frances Young
profession =Criminologist ,Educator ,Security Consultant
alma_mater =Fresno State University San José State University University of California, Berkeley
religion =
footnotes = Lee Patrick Brown (bornOctober 4 ,1937 ) had a groundbreakingcareer in law enforcement, leading police departments inAtlanta ,Houston andNew York for almost four decades. He implemented techniques in community policing that led to substantial decreases in crime. In 1997 Brown was the first African American to be elected mayor ofHouston, Texas . He was reelected twice to serve the maximum of threeterm s from 1998 to 2004.Background and education
His parents Andrew and Zelma Brown were share croppers in
Oklahoma , and Lee Brown was born in Wewoka. His family, including six brothers, moved toCalifornia in the second wave of theGreat Migration and his parents continued as farmers. A high school athlete, Brown earned a football scholarship toFresno State University , where he earned a B.S. incriminology in 1960. That year he started as a police officer inSan Jose, California .Brown went on to earn a
master's degree insociology fromSan José State University in 1964, and became an assistant professor there in 1968. At theUniversity of California, Berkeley , he earned a second master's in criminology in 1968, and became chairman and professor of the Department of Administration of Justice atPortland State University in the same year. He earned a doctorate incriminology from Berkeley in 1970.Career
In 1972, Brown was appointed associate director of the Institute of Urban Affairs and Research and professor of Public Administration and director of Criminal Justice programs at
Howard University . In 1974, Brown was named Sheriff ofMultnomah County, Oregon and in 1976 became director of the Department of Justice Services.In 1978 he was appointed Public Safety Commissioner of
Atlanta, Georgia and served to 1982. Brown and his staff solved theAtlanta Child Murders case.Brown was the first African American to be appointed Police Chief to the City of Houston, and served from 1982-1990. He was first appointed by Mayor
Kathy Whitmire . There he implemented methods of Community Policing.Brown next took his leadership to New York City as Police Commissioner where he implemented community policing citywide. After one year, crime went down in every category. That was the start of the most drastic reduction of crime in the history of that City. [ [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=950DE3D81739F93AA25751C1A96F948260&n=Top/Reference/Times%20Topics/People/B/Brown,%20Lee%20P Lee P. Brown] ] Brown is known through the law enforcement community as the Father of Community Policing.
In 1993 Brown moved to Washington, DC for a national appointment as the
Director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (or "Drug Czar") under PresidentBill Clinton . The Senate unanimously confirmed his appointment.In 1997, Brown was the first African American to be elected mayor in the City of Houston. Brown presided over what many say was the most prosperous six-year period in the history of Houston. Under his leadership, the city invested in extensive infrastructure: it started its first light-rail system and obtained voter approval for its extension, along with increases in bus service, park and ride, and HOV lanes; opened three new state-of-the-art professional sports facilities; revitalized the downtown area; constructed the City's first convention center hotel, and doubled the size of the convention center; and constructed the Hobby Center of the Performing Arts. In addition, it built and renovated new libraries, police and fire stations; undertook a $2.9 billion development program at the City's airport system that consisted of new terminals and runways; a consolidated car rental facility; in addition to renovating other terminals and runways; and built a new water treatment plant.
Brown also advanced the City's affirmative action program; installed programs in City libraries to provide access to the Internet; built the state-of-the-art Houston Emergency Communications Center; implemented e-government, and opened new parks. Many of the projects were planned or started by previous mayor Bob Lanier, who served until term limits. Brown led trade missions for the business community to other countries and promoted international trade. He increased the number of foreign consulates.
Brown is a member of
Alpha Phi Alpha , the first intercollegiate Greek-letter fraternity established by African Americans. He is also a member of Sigma Pi Phi, an African-American fraternity for those who have achieved distinction in their chosen profession.While in Houston, Dr. Brown was a
Professor atTexas Southern University and Director of the university's Black Male Initiative Program.Brown is a co-founder of the
National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE). Brown is chairman and CEO ofBrown Group International , which develops solutions to complex problems in public safety, home land security, crisis management, government relations, international trade, and other concerns.2001 Campaign
Brown undertook a massive program to reconstruct the downtown street system and replace the aging underground utility system. The heavy roadway reconstruction in Houston's downtown area and accompanying traffic problems was made a campaign issue by his opponent. In 2001 Brown narrowly survived a reelection challenge and runoff against city councilman
Orlando Sanchez , who campaigned against Brown's handling of Houston roadways. Sanchez' supporters made issue of poor street conditions, campaigning that the "P stands for Pothole," referencing Brown's middle initial. Sanchez himself used aHummer adorned with the banner "With Brown in Town it's the only way to get around" as his campaign vehicle.Sanchez used the media publicity where a Houston firefighter's death in the line of duty resulted in endorsements from the fire/emergency medical services sector. Brown was endorsed by the Houston Police Officers' Association.
The Brown-Sanchez election produced heated rhetoric and involvement from several national political figures. Brown received the endorsement of former president
Bill Clinton while Sanchez was endorsed by presidentGeorge W. Bush , former president and Mrs Bush,Rudy Giuliani and a host of other republicans. Some members of the President's cabinet campaigned for Sanchez in Houston. The contest also produced racial undertones as Sanchez, aCuban American vying to become the first Hispanic mayor of Houston, challenged Brown, the city's first African American mayor. Brown's campaign drafted family members of murder victimJames Byrd Jr. for taped political ads accusing Sanchez of racial insensitivity towards Blacks for failing to support ahate crimes law. Sanchez, in turn, accused Brown of playing therace card against Hispanic voters.Voting split heavily on racial lines with a majority of Hispanic and Anglo voters supporting Sanchez and a majority of African Americans and Asians supporting Brown. Brown narrowly won reelection by a margin of three percentage point following heavy voter turnout in predominantly Black precincts, compared to relatively light turnout in Hispanic precincts.
Brown's 2001 reelection was one of the last major political campaigns supported by the Houston-based
Enron Corporation, which collapsed in a financial scandal only days after Brown's reelection.Electoral History
1997
Election box candidate no party with winner
winner = ✓
candidate = Lee P. Brown
votes = 132,324
percentage = 42.26%
change = Election box candidate no party with winner
winner = ✓
candidate = Rob Mosbacher
votes = 90,320
percentage = 28.84%
change = Election box candidate no party with winner
winner =
candidate = George Greanias
votes = 53,115
percentage = 16.96%
change = Election box candidate no party with winner
winner =
candidate = Gracie Saenz
votes = 21,950
percentage = 7.01%
change = Election box candidate no party with winner
winner = ✓
candidate = Lee P. Brown
votes = 156,307
percentage = 52.67%
change = Election box candidate no party with winner
winner =
candidate = Rob Mosbacher
votes = 140,449
percentage = 47.33%
change =1999
Election box candidate no party with winner
winner = ✓
candidate = Lee P. Brown
votes = 139,150
percentage = 67.29%
change = +25.03Election box candidate no party with winner
winner =
candidate = Jack Terence
votes = 47,887
percentage = 23.16%
change = Election box candidate no party with winner
winner =
candidate = Outlaw Josey Wales, IV
votes = 19,741
percentage = 9.55%
change =2001
Election box candidate no party with winner
winner = ✓
candidate = Lee P. Brown
votes = 125,282
percentage = 43.46%
change = -23.83Election box candidate no party with winner
winner = ✓
candidate = Orlando Sanchez
votes = 115,967
percentage = 40.23%
change = Election box candidate no party with winner
winner =
candidate = Chris Bell
votes = 45,739
percentage = 15.87%
change = Election box candidate no party with winner
winner = ✓
candidate = Lee P. Brown
votes = 165,866
percentage = 51.67%
change = Election box candidate no party with winner
winner =
candidate = Orlando Sanchez
votes = 155,164
percentage = 48.33%
change =Marriage and family
Brown was married twice and has four grown children. His second wife is Frances Young, a
teacher in theHouston Independent School District .Career timeline
* 1960
patrolman inSan Jose, California .
* 1968 Established the Department of Administration of Justice atPortland State University inPortland, Oregon
*1972Associate Director of theInstitute for Urban Affairs and Research atHoward University inWashington, D.C. (held theacademic rank of Professor ofPublic Administration and Director ofCriminal Justice Programs)
*1975Sheriff ,Multnomah County
*1976 Director of Justice Services for Multnomah County, Oregon
*1978 - 1982Public Safety Commissioner ,Atlanta, Georgia
*1982 - 1990 Chief of Police,Houston, Texas
*1990 - 1992Police Commissioner ,New York City
*1993 Director of theWhite House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP).
*1998 - 2004 Mayor ofHouston, Texas
*2005 - present Chairman and CEO, Brown Group InternationalAwards
*1993 -
Gallup Hall of Fame byGallup, Inc .
*1992 -Cartier Pasha Award fromCartier International
*1991 -Father of the Year by theNational Father's Day Committee Education
*
Doctorate inCriminology from theUniversity of California, Berkeley in 1970
*Masters inCriminology from theUniversity of California, Berkeley in 1968
*Masters inSociology fromSan José State University in 1964
*Bachelors inCriminology fromCalifornia State University, Fresno in 1961.Publications
*Many articles and papers on
police management ,community policing ,crime and thecriminal justice system
*co-author of "Police and Society; An Environment for Collaboration and Confrontation"References
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.