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IN COMMAND: Wilson is the first
alum and first woman to hold the top post.
Linda Cicero
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as director of public safety, Laura
Wilson, ’91, oversees
a staff of 32 deputies and 20 community service officers
who made 417 arrests and issued 42,000 parking tickets last
year.
The 36-year-old triathlete is the first alum to serve as
campus police chief and the first woman in the job. Wilson
reports
to Stanford CFO Randy Livingston, ’75, MBA ’79,
and she and her officers receive their police powers through
a memorandum of understanding with the Santa Clara County
sheriff. “In
essence,” she says, “I answer to two people—Randy
and the sheriff.”
So she always wanted to be a police
officer? “Absolutely
not,” Wilson told deputy Nick Brunot 11 years ago. Brunot
was responding to a building alarm Wilson had inadvertently
set off while working odd hours in the athletic department,
and told her he thought she’d make a good cop. Several
alarms and several conversations later, she reconsidered.
Standing
tall at 5-foot-2. “I was probably prouder of
finishing Police Academy than I was of graduating from
Stanford,” the
former human biology major says. “I was intimidated by
the paramilitary, law-enforcement, snap-to-attention atmosphere,
and I wasn’t
sure how, being a petite female, it would work.” But
Wilson scaled the six-foot walls at boot camp and was appointed
a deputy sheriff in 1992. She was promoted to sergeant,
then lieutenant in the investigations division, and in
May 2002
was named to succeed Marvin Moore, who died suddenly of
a heart attack.
Multitasking required. One minute Wilson will
be working
on bioterrorism threats, and the next it’s parking issues
or personnel or a fire department contract. She is required
to make campus crime statistics public under one piece
of federal legislation, but another restricts the kinds
of information
that can be released—even to parents. “I am sufficiently
challenged and would like a dull day once in a while.”
The
citizens have opinions. Lots of opinions. “One thing
about Stanford: you get feedback,” the chief says. “People
are more than willing to call you and tell you about a
car stop. We teach our officers that they need to be on
their toes
and need to be able to speak with someone who’s homeless
or with someone who’s won a Nobel Prize.”
How to
tell the officers apart. Those would be (unarmed) community
services officers in the light blue shirts and
dark blue pants, and sworn deputies in the tan shirts
and green pants. The one in jeans and a turtleneck is probably
Chief
Wilson. “When I’m meeting with students, I like
to dress down because it’s maybe a little less
intimidating.”
Cops make good dining companions. Wilson
asks each of her deputies to have lunch or dinner with
a group of students
each month. “I want to remind my staff that the vast
majority of students don’t get in trouble, and I want
students to know that people have lives outside of being
police officers.”
The department’s two new BMW motorcycles
will be freed from the garage. Someday. “I won’t
let anyone go to the academy and learn to ride them right now
because
we’re
short-staffed and I can’t afford to have anyone get hurt
[there],” Wilson says. “I sent a really good rider
to a bicycle training class and he broke three ribs.”
Oh,
and Lake Lag is not a parking lot. Many of last year’s
89 vehicular burglaries involved golf carts, some of which
ended up in the lake’s reedy shallows. “Usually,
it’s a joyriding situation,” Wilson says. “But
often the cart is someone’s transportation, especially
someone who’s disabled, and bright students are out there
having fun at someone else’s expense.”
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