Call Me Director Audiobook By E. Winslow Chapman, David Wayne Brown cover art

Call Me Director

Memoir of a Police Reformer

Virtual Voice Sample

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Call Me Director

By: E. Winslow Chapman, David Wayne Brown
Narrated by: Virtual Voice
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This title uses virtual voice narration

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E. Winslow (Buddy) Chapman, the 39-year-old executive assistant to the Mayor of Memphis, Tennessee, became the first, and so far, only civilian to hold the top job at the Memphis Police Department. It was 1977. For decades Insurance companies have labeled Memphis the “Murder Capital of America.” The MPD was a police force that had been in crisis for more than a decade and was in dire need of leadership and reform.

Chapman took charge as the new Memphis Police Director facing entrenched police corruption, multiple federal civil rights investigations and judicial consent decrees, an unhappy police union wanting more pay and promotions, and a long public record of police abuse, especially against black citizens.

He also took office under the resentful gaze of a city police chief – a man protected by civil service rules, and who could have been a model for any good old boy anywhere. The chief fought Chapman’s every move and even attempted to force him from office through a ham-handed attempt at extortion.

Chapman, who thrived under such circumstances and who believed he could change the MPD one reform after another, outlasted his enemies – even when his Mayor grew doubtful of his tactics - and gradually brought about meaningful change. He did so despite external obstacles and internal attempts to trip him up.

Over five difficult years, he rebuilt the police department into a model force. Before he was finished, his ideas about police reform and leadership were sought by Congressional leaders, and President Ronald Reagan appointed him to a presidential task force on effective local policing.

His reforming spirit speaks to contemporary times.
Biographies & Memoirs Memoir Civil rights Crime
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The memoir is an excellent portrayal of a highly dedicated and principled man, tackling entrenched police culture, community tension, and political vacillation. While the story is well written and organized, the computer generated narration is a distraction. It's clear that the system used is not ready for "publication."

Great Insights of a Change Agent during a Difficult Time at Memphis PD and in US Policing

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