“My mother was a Valium junkie and my father drank every day. They
both were subject to domestic violence. That drove me out to look for
solace. I found it in the street,” Lowry told The Post.
He cast his lot with a gang of kids in his neighborhood, a half-mile
or so from the Unisphere in Flushing Meadows Park, and they formed the
Family. One of the gang’s schemes was busting into the coin boxes of
apartment-building washing machines, which led to them stealing bags of
quarters from the car of the guy who collected the money. They wound up
with $3,000 or so, which took them into the world of grand larceny.
Life became increasingly perilous as the crew took to robbing rival
drug dealers and selling the purloined drugs themselves. Once, they
tried to take down a pot pusher with a Family member wielding both a
loaded gun and the toddler-nephew he was baby-sitting. The heist went
awry and, miraculously, no shots were fired.
Lowry once avoided arrest by swallowing a chunk of hashish he had in
his pocket. “It’s tough to say how high I got from it. I was probably
already high before I swallowed it,” he said.
When he finally decided to straighten up, Lowry realized it would
necessitate distancing himself from the Family. He convinced his parents
to move from Flushing — otherwise, he said, “I was doomed” — to
Bayside, Queens. It was just 10 minutes away, but far enough. “I never
saw my old gang friends again,” said Lowry, who was nearing 18 at the
time.
He took straight-and-narrow jobs that included elevator operator and
security guard while attending college, earning two degrees (a
bachelor’s in sociology from St. John’s University and a master’s in
criminal justice from C.W. Post). Against all odds, he decided to become
a cop. “There is romance and excitement to the street,” he said. “The
police department promised me those things and the opportunity to do
good. You have to be on the right side.”
Because of the positive changes he had made in his life, the Nassau
County Police Department chose to overlook his criminal record and, in
1982, Lowry became a patrol officer. Over the next 26 years, he worked
his way up to three-star chief of police and managed to get a law degree
attending night school at St. John’s.
Now retired from the force for 10 years, Lowry owns an Oceanside, LI,
company that collects auto-insurance claims for corporate clients.
He’s married and a father of two.
Lowry, who is donating proceeds
from his book to the Island Harvest Food Bank, told The Post he “owes a
great debt of gratitude to the Nassau County Police Department for
giving me an opportunity.”
He added, though, that his earlier life helped him to succeed as a
law enforcer: “I had the playbook. I knew what bad guys would do because
I had done many of those things myself. I knew how to squeeze a perp
and when to give people breaks. My story is all about second chances.
We need to celebrate people who take the initiative to turn their lives
around.”
2 comments:
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.
He sounds like the kind of guy Howie wouldn't want to be on parole.
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