By E. Winslow (Buddy) Chapman
and David Wayne Brown
Call Me Director
Memoir of a Police Reformer
Some big-city police departments today face calls for change, and some no doubt could stand revision and improvement. This book tells about a crusading police director in Memphis who accomplished major reforms at one of the nation’s largest police departments. E. Winslow (Buddy) Chapman’s record in Memphis could show today’s reform-minded leaders where to start and how to do it.
Chapman, the 39-year-old executive assistant to the Mayor of Memphis, Tennessee, became the first, and so far, only civilian to hold the top job at the Memphis Police Department. It was 1977. For decades Insurance companies have labeled Memphis the “Murder Capital of America.” The MPD was a police force that had been in crisis for more than a decade and was in dire need of leadership and reform.
Chapman took charge as the new Memphis Police Director facing entrenched police corruption, multiple federal civil rights investigations and judicial consent decrees, an unhappy police union wanting more pay and promotions, and a long public record of police abuse, especially against black citizens. He also took office under the resentful gaze of a city police chief – a man protected by civil service rules, and who could have been a model for any good old boy anywhere. The chief fought Chapman’s every move and even attempted to force him from office through a ham-handed attempt at extortion.
Chapman’s reforming spirit speaks to contemporary times.
The two operative words to describe E. Winslow “Buddy” Chapman’s tenure as head of the Memphis Police Department are leader and reformer. From his relentless effort to rid the department of its longstanding history of brutality to his work improving police-community relations, Chapman was arguably the most effective police director in the city’s history. His memoir, “Call Me Director,” is a highly readable account spanning Chapman’s humble beginnings as a farm boy to his taking the helm of the police force at a crucial time for the city. His methods were at times unorthodox. But Chapman got the job done. And he has earned a place as a Memphis legend.
– Otis Sanford, Professor Emeritus in Journalism, The University of Memphis.
Buddy Chapman was an outsider who was determined to shake up the status quo within the Memphis Police Department when he became director. Call Me Director is an honest, straight-forward account of the obstacles he faced and his determination to overcome them and carry out needed reforms. Chapman doesn’t hold back and provides a gripping behind the scenes, candid account. His tenure as police director shows how one person can make a big difference.
– Bill Gibbons, president, Memphis Shelby Crime Commission; executive director, University of Memphis Public Safety Institute.
Call Me Director is an exciting historical account of the reformation of the Memphis Police Department at a critical time in the history of the City of Memphis: deep reforms followed the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr. and crippling police and fire strikes. Most Memphians in the mid-20th Century knew the MPD was a hard-nosed police agency with a reputation for abuse, but few understood the inside story as told by Chapman and Brown. Nor did they see how long-term poor policing was so detrimental and destructive to all law enforcement in the city and how much internal reform was needed. This timely book does all that and keeps the reader’s attention the entire way.
– David Martello, Ret. Deputy Police Chief, Memphis Police Department.
Other Books by This Author
At Road’s End
By David Wayne Brown At Road's End Robert Lee's Extraordinary Journey to Forgiving a Heinous MurderIn 1999 Barbara Ann Lee, a beloved West Tennessee horsewoman, and her dog are kidnapped in her own SUV while having lunch at a fast-food drive-in. Subsequently, she was...