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Intro | American police chief | |
Places | United States of America | |
is | Police officer | |
Work field | Law | |
Gender |
| |
Birth | 22 July 1967 | |
Age | 57 years |
Biography
Cathy Lynn Lanier (born July 22, 1967) was the chief of the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia (MPDC). Lanier was appointed by Washington, D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty in January 2007, replacing outgoing Police Chief Charles H. Ramsey. She is the first woman to achieve the position. In May 2012, Mayor Vincent C. Gray agreed to retain Lanier as police chief under a new five-year contract. On August 16, 2016, it was announced that Lanier would retire from the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia in September 2016 to become Senior Vice President of Security for the National Football League. Her last day was September 15, 2016.
Early life and education
Lanier was raised in suburban Tuxedo, Maryland, on the northeast edge of the District of Columbia in Prince George's County, Maryland.
Lanier dropped out of junior high school after the ninth grade, and became a mother at the age of 15.
She has both Bachelor of Science and Master of Science degrees in management from Johns Hopkins University and holds a Master of Arts in national security studies from the Naval Postgraduate School in Monterey, California; her thesis was Preventing Terror Attacks in the Homeland: A New Mission for State and Local Police. She attended an executive education program at Harvard Kennedy School. She also performed part of her undergraduate studies at Prince George's Community College, and the University of the District of Columbia - where she also received her GED.
She now resides in the Fort Lincoln area of northeast Washington's Ward 5, close to her hometown.
Career
Lanier joined the Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia in 1990 as a foot patrolman. In 1994 she was promoted to Sergeant, and, two years later, a Lieutenant, before becoming a patrol supervisor. In 1999, she became a Captain and, later that year, was promoted to Inspector and placed in charge of the Department's Major Narcotics Branch/Gang Crime Unit. In August 2000, she was promoted to Commander-in-Charge of the Fourth District of the city. In April 2006, she became the Commander at the Office of Homeland Security and Counter-terrorism, Office of the Chief of Police in MPDC, overseeing, among other things, the bomb squad and the emergency response team.
Lanier came under fire in July 2009 after claiming that motorists who used GPS navigation and smartphones to avoid traffic cameras were employing a "cowardly tactic".
Lanier has defended the practice of arresting individuals reselling tickets to sporting events, even if the tickets were sold at face value. The tactic has led to the arrest of out of town visitors who had extra tickets to see the Washington Nationals.
She publicly criticized a plainclothes officer, Detective Michael Baylor, who drew his gun on a group of civilians during a Washington, D.C., Twitter-organized snowball fight as a response to snowballs hitting his vehicle on 19 December 2009. Video footage and eye-witness accounts have been used in the investigation. Baylor was placed on desk duty during the investigation but returned to active duty following the completion of the investigation.
She retired from the Metropolitan Police Department in September 2016 to become the head of security for the National Football League.