Home / Full timeline / The City Council of Houston, Texas, confirms Lee P. Brown as the city’s first Black police commissioner.
The City Council of Houston, Texas, confirms Lee P. Brown as the city’s first Black police commissioner.
1982 (Mar 23)
The City Council of Houston, Texas, confirmed Lee P. Brown as the city's first Black police commissioner. Brown, age forty-four, had recently been the second Black police commissioner in Atlanta, Georgia. During his tenure in Atlanta, the city was the site of the murders of twenty-eight young Black people over a period of twenty-two months. The murders were linked in 1980 and in the following year, Wayne Williams, a young Black man, was accused of the serial slayings. He was convicted and sentenced to two consecutive life terms in prison less than one month before Brown resigned from the police department. Although Brown was variously praised and criticized for his department's handling of the "Atlanta child murder cases," he denied that his resignation was connected with the infamous case. Brown, a former head of the police department in Portland, Oregon, said it was simply time for him to seek a new challenge. Brown was the first person chosen from outside the department to head Houston's police force. The department was frequently under criticism by some of the city's Blacks for alleged brutality.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.