Posts Tagged ‘Fred Lockwood’
In the early 1900s, few jobs were more tenuous than Chief of the San Diego Police Department. The pressures of city politics kept careers short, averaging eleven months between 1927 and 1934. The tenure of Chief Harry J. Raymond was briefer than most, and maybe the strangest.
Raymond became chief on June 5, 1933. With more than twenty years of police experience, largely as an investigator for the Los Angeles district attorney’s office, he brought to the job “a reputation for efficiency in force management,” according to the Los Angeles Times.
But his appointment to the $300 per month job by City Manager Fred Lockwood was instantly questioned . . .
Read the complete story of the rise and fall of Harry Raymond.