Saturday, 2 May 2015

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : AFRICAN AMERICAN " PRENTICE E. SANDERS " WAS CHIEF OF POLICE OF THE SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA : GOES INTO THE " HALL OF BLACK HEROES "

            BLACK   SOCIAL   HISTORY                                                                                                                                                                                                      







Prentice E. Sanders


Prentice E. Sanders
BornOctober 12, 1937 (age 77)
Nacogdoches, Texas
Other namesEarl
Police career
DepartmentSan Francisco Police Department
Years of service1964–2003
RankChief (2002–2003)
Prentice Earl Sanders, also known as Earl Sanders, (born October 12, 1937) was Chief of Police of the San Francisco, California,USA Police Department for fourteen months in 2002 and 2003.[1] He was born in Texas and moved to San Francisco's Laurel Heights at the age of fourteen, attended George Washington High School, and served in the Army. He then received Bachelor's and Master's degrees from Golden Gate University. He joined the San Francisco Police Department in 1964. He is notable for becoming the forces' first African American police chief. In 1964 when Sanders joined the force, there were less than two dozen African American officers in the department.
He was among a group of top brass indicted for covering up the 2002 "Fajitagate" assault by off duty police officers over a bag of take-out. Later in 2003 and through 2004, most of the senior officers including then ex-Chief Sanders, pursued legal appeals to clear their name of the underlying factual claims regarding the obstruction. Sanders and several others were eventually cleared by courts. Sanders took early retirement due to stress from the investigation. In late October, 2007, the United States Supreme Court turned down an appeal from Saunders in his lawsuit arguing that he had been prosecuted maliciously in the Fajitagate scandal. [2]
Sanders' was instrumental in the 1973 Officers for Justice discrimination lawsuit. He and long-time partner Napoleon Hendrix were accused of alleged misconduct in the 1989 arrest and conviction of two young African-American men for a murder in the suppression of a confession from another person.[citation needed]
In 2006, Earl Sanders and coauthor Bennet Cohen, his former lawyer, published the Zebra Murders about Sanders' role in the investigation of racially motivated Zebra murders, killings in San Francisco in 1972 and 1973.

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