On the road

On the road

Monday, August 11, 2014

September 2014 Dallas Police Shield


 

On October 11, 1977 the Dallas Morning News had an article about the consolidation of the Dallas city jail and the Dallas county jail. County Commissioner Jim Jackson was against the merger and said in an interview that “It’s the wrong thing to do it. It could get us into a box.”

Then Sheriff Carl Thomas and Dallas Police Chief Don Bird however were already in agreement that the project should go through. There was to be a trial period of consolidation beginning November 1, 1977. On that date Dallas police will begin bringing directly to the county jail persons arrested for warrants from the DSO and for all out-of-county and out-of-state warrants.

The second step comes on January 5, 1978 when the county jail begins accepting suspects arrested by Dallas police. The only exception will be those held for additional investigation.

The concern among some county commissioners was that there was the possibility of a space shortage in the county jail. Sherriff’s department officials tried to put the commissioner’s fears at ease by saying that the agreement with the DPD could be suspended at any time.

I was trying to remember a time when as a young patrol officer we would take prisoners to the old county jail. This was before Lew Sterritt was built. What I seem to remember is that when we had a prisoner that would qualify as being able to be taken to the county, we would have to ask, or the dispatcher would occasionally during the night say “The County jail is open, or the County Jail was closed.” I seem to also remember that it was closed most of the time, which was okay to us I seem to remember. For some reason we didn’t want to go THEIR jail, or something like that.

It’s hard for officers to believe, but at one time not all patrol officers would hit the streets without a radio or as we called them a “Handy talkie.” I remember being at the old barn that was used as Central Divisions headquarters. As a young rookie, I never had the chance to carry one of the radios, there was not enough to go around. I’m sure that I waited for the trainers and more experienced officers to grab a radio, which were really big, like a brick, and if there was one left over (which there never was) I would grab one.

It was a dangerous situation that almost any officer now would cringe to not have that safety net connected to his or her Sam Browne. The Dallas City council however approved $116,000 to buy 220 4-watt radios instead of the 1-watt radios currently being issued. The purchase would allow almost every squad in the city to have a portable radio and the transmitting range would be significantly improved.

In the year 1977 Chief Don Byrd had set a series of goals for the department to meet and a few already had been accomplished. For instance the department tried to keep the number of police traffic accidents to 20 per million miles driven. Through the first nine months of 1977 the figure stood at 15.61 per million.

Chief Byrd wanted to also hold to 500 days the amount of time lost to police personnel injured in accidents; so far it was 302 man-days have been lost. Through the first nine months of 1977 the number of the (all important) preventable accidents stood at 34.9%, just below the goal of 35%.

On November 27th there was an anti-brutality rally put on by several minority and poverty activist groups in downtown Dallas. The rally was put on ‘to honor the memory of police brutality victims.”

Organizers said it would also be a memorial to 12-year old Santo Rodriguez who was shot to death in 1973 while sitting in the back seat of a patrol car while being questioned about a burglary.

Police officials in Dallas were concerned because a few days after the death of Rodriquez, there was a massive riot in downtown Dallas where windows were broken out in downtown businesses and a police motorcycle was burned. Organizers of this rally expected the march to be peaceful.

Juan Perez of the Brown Berets had said earlier that there had been two or three marches since the 1973 slaying and that had been all peaceful.

Perez went on to say that “The police department has taken care of the marches and has done a good job. With the cooperation of the police and ourselves, we will have a peaceful march.

As Perez had predicted, the march which another organizer Joe Landin said would be “solemn” went off without a hitch.

In other news on November 10, 1977 an article reported that the suspect in Dallas police officer Donald Tucker’s death, Doyle Glenn Boulware was sentenced to die Wednesday in criminal district court. His attorney however said that he planned another appeal to have the sentence set aside. Boulware, 48, was sentenced by Judge John Mead of Criminal District Court No. 4 to die December 19,1977 by lethal injection in Huntsville. He had been scheduled to be executed on December 27, 1976 but that was stayed pending an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court on constitutional grounds.

Boulware was found guilty of killing Officer Tucker in 1973 after 18 years of service by shooting the officer in the head with a .357 magnum pistol when Tucker answered a disturbance call at the home of Boulware’s ex-wife.

The new attorney Tom McCorkle said that he would ask the state appeals court to stay the second execution on the grounds that the new state law requiring execution by injection is not valid because it does not specify the substance to be contained in the injection.

Boulware had been in and out of jail all his life and had previously served prison terms in three different penal institutions. He had been released in 1970 after serving seven of an eighteen-year sentence for armed robbery.

This bad seed and generally a menace to society had the advantage of a bunch of lawyers who wanted to make a name for themselves during the turmoil following the ruling on August 29, 1977 that lethal injection would replace the electric chair as this state’s method of execution.

Unfortunately the death sentence was later commuted to life imprisonment for the killing of Officer Tucker.

I’m not sure whatever happened to the killer Boulware. But since he was judged here and he skated the death penalty on technicalities to spend the rest of his life on the public dole, hopefully he was judged in the hereafter more harshly.                       

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