Word: cincinnatis
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Seated behind his 8-ft. desk, Stanley Russell Schrotel looks like a corporation executive and talks like a university professor. But Stan Schrotel (rhymes with motel) is, in fact, a cop, a man who makes his living as Cincinnati's chief of police. And at a time when the rising wave of crime has become a major national problem, Police Chief Schrotel, 47, has earned the reputation of being just about the best...
Like most big U.S. cities, Cincinnati has crime-breeding slums and shifting, often antagonistic population groups. Since Schrotel took office in 1951, U.S. crime has increased nearly 100%, but Cincinnati's has risen only 21.8%. On a per capita basis, Cincinnati last year had 46.2% less larceny and 61.4% less robbery than the average of major U.S. cities; this year's figures, still being compiled, run much the same. Juvenile delinquency last year climbed 9% in the asphalt jungles across the U.S., but Cincinnati's rate actually decreased by 1.4%. With impressive unanimity, the citizens of Cincinnati...
Fighting to get ahead, Schrotel read every police book in sight, won a law degree at night from the Salmon P. Chase College at the local Y.M.C.A. He was a captain in 1948 when the Cincinnati civil service commission made a ruling which allowed him and 16 other young captains to take the competitive exams that would pick the successor to retiring Chief Eugene T. Weatherly, an old-style cop who used to sharpen his shooting eye by blazing away at the rats in his dingy office. Schrotel passed the exams with the record score of 99.33% and became Cincinnati...
Tough Realism. Chief Schrotel set about remaking Cincinnati's white-hatted police force with an approach that was-and still is-tough and realistic. "The reins," he says, "are real tight." Overweight cops are suspended by Schrotel, himself a trim handballer. Men who show up in sloppy uniforms risk being sent home-and docked a day's pay. Schrotel lost his fight in the city council against moonlighting by his men, but did get approval of his strict code for outside work, including the requirement that the pay be at least $3 an hour...
Schrotel has won the backing of solid Cincinnati for his force of 979 with a shrewd public relations campaign. Every person who makes a complaint gets a visit from an officer and a letter from Schrotel. Anyone who is arrested may be interviewed by the inspection bureau and invited to sound off about the treatment he received from the police and in court. Cincinnati cops are forbidden to argue with citizens. Says Schrotel: "I don't care if a cop wins the argument. He's lost our battle...