Monday, December 21, 2020

FROM PAROLE TO 3-STAR COP

‘Thief to Chief’: How a teen gang member became a respected police officer

 

By Michael Kaplan

 

New York Post

December 19, 2020

 

It was 1974. Roaches crawled around the basement of a government-subsidized apartment building in Flushing, Queens, where six young men — members of a local gang called the Family — were “probably” high on weed. Six guns were laid out. Each person was expected to choose one and join the hunt to shoot rivals thought to have messed with a member’s cousin.

One of the teenage hoods, Kevin Lowry, was already on parole and on a path of drug dealing and petty crime — but he was about to get lucky. “Weather had driven the ­unsuspecting young men underground,” he writes of the gang’s prey, in his memoir “From Thief to Chief: A Self-Portrait of Juvenile Delinquency and Rehabilitation” (BookBaby), out Thursday. “We called it off [as the sun came up} . . . That’s when  I knew I had to get out.”

Dangerous acts dominated the life of then-17-year-old Lowry. But he recognized that murder was one step beyond the pale. “I was struggling with self-esteem and trying to be something I was not,” Lowry, now 63, told The Post. Still, the twice-arrested kid didn’t think his life would take the turn that it did, with him becoming a top uniformed cop in Nassau County, LI.

 

2 comments:

Trey said...

He was lucky to get out of the life. I took several young crooks down to the Army recruiter rather than tag them with a felony. Most of them had to get their parents to sign for them. Some parents refused because the young criminal was an earner for them.

Gary said...

He sounds like the kind of guy Howie wouldn't want to be on parole.