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Roy E. Steckel
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Roy E. Steckel : ウィキペディア英語版
Roy E. Steckel
Roy Edmund Steckel (October 17, 1887 – November 14, 1950) served as Los Angeles Police Department Chief of Police from December 30, 1929 to August 9, 1933. He succeeded and was succeeded as chief by James E. "Two-Guns" Davis. During Steckel's reign as Chief of Police, Los Angeles hosted the 1932 Summer Olympic Games. The L.A.P.D. employed 800 duly sworn police officers. According to the L.A.P.D.'s official site, crime was very low during the Olympics, with there being only "two robberies, eight burglaries, 39 thefts, and 10 auto thefts."
Steckel was dismissed as chief by incoming mayor Frank L. Shaw, who had run on a platform that included a plank calling for Steckel's dismissal. Under Steckel's regime, Mayor John Clinton Porter appointed a former detective with the L.A.P.D. to head up an intelligence operation aimed at both the police department itself and city officials. L.A.P.D. intelligence operatives were bolstered with private investigators, who were given captain's badges. The L.A. City Council eventually disbanded the intelligence operation after three years. The incident led ''Time Magazine'' to term the L.A.P.D. "super-snoopers".
==Innovations==
During Steckel's term as Police Chief, radio dispatching was first implemented.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=KMA367: An Unofficial History of the Los Angeles Police Department's Communications Division )〕 Called "the most modern municipal police radio system in the world", the radio network transmitted from a transmitter located in Elysian park and utilized eight switchboards at City Hall. Forty-four patrol cars were equipped with radio communications, though two-way broadcasting did not come until 1938. The radio network reduced police response times to less than three minutes.
Under Steckel, L.A.P.D.'s first "air patrol", consisting of 10 police officers assigned to a fixed wing squadron, was implemented in 1931.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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