Richard H. Sylvester

Richard H. Sylvester (1860 – December 11, 1930) was the Chief of Police for Washington, District of Columbia, USA for 17 years from July in 1898 to April in 1915. He is one of the people credited with coining the term third degree for police interrogation. Sylvester an early president of the International Association of Chiefs of Police (IACP), and "was widely regarded as the father of police professionalism. He advocated a citizen-soldier model, and was responsible for development of the many paramilitary aspects of policing." He divided police procedures into the arrest as the first degree, transportation to jail as the second degree and interrogation as the third degree.

Personal facts

Richard H. Sylvester
Birth dateJanuary 01, 1860
Birth place
Iowa
Date of deathDecember 11, 1930
Place of death
Wilmington Delaware , Bowman-Biltmore Hotels
Parents
Richard H. Sylvester (writer)
TitleChief of Police of Washington DC

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