Chicago Sun-Times

Gritty police chief served from streets

- Kevin Johnson @ bykevinj USA TODAY Johnson covers the Justice Department and law enforcemen­t for USA TODAY.

If a television clip or two were all you saw and heard of John Timoney, the temptation would be to dismiss him as a law enforcemen­t throwback.

He spoke in the clipped brogue that affirmed his Irish upbringing. The pinched eyes and flat nose were those of a journeyman prizefight­er who led with his face.

He appeared, former New York police commission­er Ray Kelly once observed, to be a Damon Runyon character come to life.

It would be a grievous error to allow the caricature to define the man who rocketed to the top ranks of the New York Police Department before going on to lead police forces in Philadelph­ia and Miami.

Timoney, 68, died last week after a months- long battle with lung cancer, prompting a stream of eulogies that rightly highlighte­d an improbable life journey — from his arrival in the Bronx as a 12- year- old boy from Dublin to the executive suites of local government.

As American policing struggles to maintain or regain the confidence of communitie­s, the strong bonds Timoney quickly built in some of the most racially and ethnically mixed cities in the country may serve as his most instructiv­e legacy.

“I was just blown away,” former Philadelph­ia mayor Ed Rendell said, recently recounting his first meeting with the then- candidate for the police commission­er’s job amid pressure that the position go to an African American.

Rendell said Timoney confidentl­y laid out a plan to attack violent crime as murders were soaring, understand­ing that the quickest way to win public trust, regardless of a community’s makeup, was to produce results.

Immediatel­y after his appointmen­t, the former mayor said, Rendell’s highprofil­e hire burrowed into a city where face time in countless church basements and community centers was an investment worth far more than any evening on the dinner circuit. Though the man wore the map of Ireland on his expressive face and held two master’s degrees, he was at ease in any setting.

In Philadelph­ia, and later in Miami, he was a ubiquitous presence on the street. He rode with the bike patrol, walked the neighborho­ods and always turned up when it mattered, and often when it didn’t. Fresh into his Philly tenure, he personally ran down a purse snatcher in a gritty display that melted the hardest of hearts in a city famous for its hard- boiled nature.

Then, true to the plan he initially outlined for Rendell, the killings started to decline. When concerns emerged that the Police Department was under- counting sexual assault complaints, Timoney did the unpreceden­ted: He invited the Women’s Law Project in to review the department’s files.

Timoney’s popularity rarely wavered, even after he and the department were harshly criticized for the heavy police response to protests at the 2000 Republican National Convention. Hundreds were arrested, an ugly scene city leaders vowed to avoid — and did — last month during the Democratic National Convention.

“The truth is,” Rendell said, “John could have been elected mayor in a walk.”

The solid résumé is what drove newly elected Miami Mayor Manny Diaz in 2003 to pursue Timoney to take command of a department staggered by a series of deadly police shootings. “Miami cops were shooting at everything that moved,” Diaz said.

In their first meeting, Diaz and the career cop found a common bond in their immigrant pasts. Diaz arrived in the USA in 1961 with his Cuban mother, the same year a young Timoney landed in New York with his Irish family.

“We talked about how we, both immigrants to this country, had found ourselves in positions where we could change the course of major cities,” the former mayor said. “He didn’t speak a word of Spanish. In fact, I could barely understand his English.”

As in Philadelph­ia, the partnershi­p quickly produced extraordin­ary results. A strict training regimen and close oversight resulted in a stunning string of more than 20 months when Miami police never fired a shot.

Diaz said Timoney’s mantra on deadly force as “an absolute last resort was pounded and pounded into the ranks” and now steers law enforcemen­t policy nationwide.

Chuck Wexler, who heads the thinktank Police Executive Research Forum, described Timoney as “a man ahead of his time” on issues of deadly force and race.

In Miami, too, Timoney’s methods were not unanimousl­y welcomed. He battled with the American Civil Liberties Union over police tactics in dealing with demonstrat­ions related to the Free Trade Area of the Americas meetings in 2003 in downtown Miami.

Despite his frequent disputes with the hard- nosed police chief, Howard Simon, the ACLU’s executive director in Miami, said his respect for the man never faltered.

When Timoney announced his intention to retire in 2009, I called him while reporting an article chroniclin­g the exodus of other police chiefs from major U. S. cities.

Why was he stepping down? Timoney, whom Esquire once dubbed “America’s Best Cop,” said simply that he had “fulfilled my mission.”

 ?? JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES ?? John Timoney stands near a Miami home raided by police in 2006, when he served as the city’s police chief. The man dubbed “America’s Best Cop” by Esquire died last week.
JOE RAEDLE, GETTY IMAGES John Timoney stands near a Miami home raided by police in 2006, when he served as the city’s police chief. The man dubbed “America’s Best Cop” by Esquire died last week.
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