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Standing Tall : San Francisco Police
Chief Fred Lau
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In 1970, Fred
Lau was measured at 5-foot-7 inches tall. Exactly. To get
into the San Francisco Police Department, you had to be
5-foot-8.
The 21-year-old San Francisco State University student
had dreamed of becoming a cop while growing up in Chinatown
and had already passed the tough written exam, yet he was
rejected outright. Like most other Chinese Americans of his
generation, he didn’t measure up.
The competitive young man with a compact and powerful
body took to hanging by his legs at the gym, strapped into
stirrups and weighted down with a 50-pound barbell, hoping
against hope to stretch himself into the police department.
He reasoned that even after a night’s sleep, some people are
a half to three-quarters of an inch taller, so maybe, just
maybe . . .
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Today, at
48-still eager, still athletic-Fred Lau is San Francisco’s
police chief, believed to be the first Asian American to
head a major city’s police force on the U.S. mainland. Ever
since the San Francisco Civil Service Commission reduced its
height requirements in late 1970 to let in the idealistic
and superbly qualified young recruit, Lau has been a proud
crusader for affirmative action and a diversified police
force. “We’ve got to be realistic,” he says. “The playing
field is not level yet, and the opportunities are not
equal.”
Affirmative action, he says, has been “the kick in the
ass that people needed” to equalize opportunities for all
segments of the population.
The grandson of an immigrant, Chief Lau has seen the
necessity for affirmative action from the bottom looking up.
Now he is making sure that the same philosophy shapes the
department, from the top down. He views it as part of his
commitment to the many ethnic and other minority communities
in San Francisco, an extension of the support that Chinese
for Affirmative Action and other community groups gave him
when he was first rejected as a cop despite a high ranking
on the written entrance exam.
What the young would-be cop and his allies had to battle
was historical practice that had hardened into stereotypes,
some of them overtly racist, others simply ignorant. They
were told that a 5-foot-7¬ man couldn’t be a police
officer because his baton would drag on the ground. They
heard that short Chinese officers wouldn’t be able to
protect themselves or their partners, although Lau’s
supporters suggested that they seemed to be able to keep the
peace in Hong Kong and China.
Other opponents said that “because we were Asians we had
relatives that were criminals or illegal immigrants,” Lau
recalls, continuing the litany of stereotypes. “That we have
relatives that were involved in gambling. We didn’t speak
English properly.” And, Lau says, there was the familiar old
chestnut, “Where were our loyalties? Was it to the United
States? Or was it to our mother country?” He interrupts
himself to exclaim, “I was born and raised here! Third
generation here.”
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The head of the
Police Officers Association at the time opposed any
reduction of standards or qualifications for the department. “Why not just do away with height requirements altogether,”
he testified, “and allow midgets in the department?”
The then-police chief and the Police Commission urged in
late 1970, soon after Lau’s initial rejection, that the
Civil Service Commission bend its rules in special cases but
put a “quota” of 5 percent on officers under 5-foot-8. The
irony will not be lost on those who are accused of
establishing “quotas” when they try to break down
discriminatory barriers such as those that Lau and other
Asian Americans faced at the time.
Underlying the highly charged debate, says Lau, was an
unspoken image of the ideal cop: “The six-foot white male.
You had to be strong, you had to be tough, and you had to
look the part.”
He gives an analogy, which he says may sound “goofy” but
is nevertheless appropriate:
“You don’t use poodles as police dogs, although poodles
are probably the smartest, the most agile dogs. It doesn’t
fit the image.…Think about it. If you’re
walking down the street and you see a poodle and a German
shepherd, what’s a police dog? If you see me or
somebody my size walking next to a six-foot white male
police officer who had prior military experience, maybe
belonged to an athletic team, what is your image of
a police officer? But if you’re walking down a
street in Hong Kong, what is your image of a police
officer? If you’re in Vietnam, what is your image
of a police officer? If you’re in Tuscaloosa,
Ala. . . ?”
After passing his physical exam with flying colors and
joining the department, Lau became a vigorous advocate for
opening the doors to other unrepresented and
underrepresented groups, including women. “They found other
ways to dissuade or reject other people of color and women,”
he says, but his personal experience helped him to recognize
the fallacy of standards applied to others that did not
reflect a person’s ability to perform effectively as a
police officer.
Since 1979, the San Francisco Police Department has been
diversifying under a federal court-supervised consent
decree. For the city’s chief of two years, the program has
been a source of great pride and not a grudging obligation.
He follows the department’s monthly personnel “stat report”
with intense interest, simultaneously recruiting
aggressively in minority communities and devising new
programs like physical conditioning regimens to help young
women meet the department’s physical requirements-all in the
interests of assuring that the department will look like the
city it polices.
The stat report, which charts his 2100 officers by race
and gender, is a tool for effective affirmative action. The
first step, he says, is to be aware of the problem. “Just
keeping track. Just like domestic violence. You know, we
never used to track domestic violence cases, but all it took
was creating a little box in the incident report, and if it
was a domestic violence case, you track it. You don’t get
resources and grants and attention unless you are able to
count the number of incidents.”
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Lau now can
foresee the time when the department’s consent decree will
be dissolved, with its objectives met. “Our goal is 50
percent minorities and 20 percent women,” he says, reaching
into his desk drawer for the ever-handy stat report. As of
September 1997, the department was 9.62 percent African
American, 13.71 percent Hispanic, 11.42 percent Asian, 2.74
percent Filipino and .6 percent Native American-38 percent
total, 12 points shy of the goal. Women constitute 15.1
percent of the force, 5 points below the goal.
The Asian American figure translates to 229 officers.
There were five when Lau applied to join the
department-one-third of one percent of the force at that
time.
The chief’s commitment to a diversified police force
started even before his initial rejection as a recruit. He
was interested in social work and had been working with
Youth for Service, an organization that focused on black
gangs but also worked with some Asian gang members. Lau got
to know two Chinese police officers. He was impressed with
their dedication. But they were two of only four Chinese
police officers, in a department that at the time numbered
1900-all of them men.
After he joined the force, his special value became
apparent to his superiors. As an intermediary between the
department and demonstrators supporting Taiwan and others
supporting mainland China, he helped avert a potential riot. “I was like a United Nations ambassador talking to three
different countries.” Because of his cultural awareness, he
could dispel the misunderstandings that each faction had of
the others’ intentions and prevent violence.
After a 1977 gangland-style assassination of five people
at Chinatown’s Golden Dragon restaurant, Lau was on a task
force that identified and successfully prosecuted the
murderers. He served as a liaison with residents. “We
developed such a good relationship with the community, we
were able to break the case. We couldn’t have broken the
case without the community.”
On one occasion, Lau had to arrest some of the people
that he had had roamed the streets with as a youth. “But we
did it right. We didn’t beat them up, we didn’t abuse them,
we didn’t abuse the powers. That’s the difference. That’s
what affirmative action brings too. It brings a tremendous
amount of understanding, of history. It brings a tremendous
amount of compassion and patience, because we’ve been there.
We know, we feel, and we exist with those people that we’re
serving. It gives us that opportunity to really provide
better service.”
He is also very aware of his and other minority officers’
effect, as role models, on young people marginalized by
their lack of self-esteem.
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He believes
deeply that better service through a diversified police
force does not entail any lowering of legitimate standards,
nor does it bring any diminution of the rights of the
majority. At every step of his rapid rise up the
departmental ladder-from recruit to officer to
inspector/sergeant and lieutenant, captain, commander,
deputy chief, chief of inspectors and finally chief-Lau got
there on ability…once the door was pried open. Even
with equal opportunity, there are no gifts, he says. “You
gotta earn it.”
The chief believes with an almost palpable passion that
his department’s outreach to women and minorities will allow
others to earn it as he has, on their own merits. And he is
convinced that the ultimate beneficiaries will not be
individual members of previously underrepresented minorities
but the public:
“Call it a dream, call it a philosophy, call it principle, but
the people deserve the best law enforcement and public
safety that they can get. And the best is public safety
that looks like, acts like and comes from them. Otherwise
you might as well bring in the army.”
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