Richard Neal (police officer)
Richard Neal (born March 11,1940) served as Police Commissioner of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania from 1992 to 1998.[1][2]
Biography
After serving 36 years on the Philadelphia police force (including six years as Commissioner), Neal resigned under political pressure.[1] He was replaced by John Timoney, former first deputy commissioner in New York City. Neal was subsequently hired as a security consultant by Drexel University and the Penn's Landing Corporation, a Philadelphia development group.[2]
gollark: Because it's a monolithic system image thing, you can't use it while it updates and it takes ages.
gollark: Exactly. Even when you do, it's bad.
gollark: I'm mostly complaining about Android here because OH POTATOS IS ITS UPDATE PROCESS SO AWFUL.
gollark: Unlike certain other OSes.
gollark: Alternatively, convert potatOS to a series of QR codes and display them all on a website in series.
References
- "National News Briefs; Police Commissioner In Philadelphia Resigns". The New York Times. 1998-02-13. Retrieved 2009-10-24.
- Ayres, Jr., B. Drummond (1998-02-19). "Former New York Official To Lead Philadelphia Police Force". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-10-24.
Police appointments | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by Willie L. Williams |
Commissioner of Philadelphia Police Department 1992–1998 |
Succeeded by John Timoney |
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