William B. Evans

William B. Evans
Born 1959
Other names Mouse[1]
Relatives Paul F. Evans (brother)

Police career

Department Boston Police Department
Years of service 1982–present
Rank

Commissioner

William B. Evans is the Commissioner of the Boston Police Department since January 2014.

Early life

William Evans was born in South Boston, to Paul and Catherine Evans, one of six brothers. His father was a truck driver and his mother was a housewife and homemaker. He grew up in a crowded triple-decker apartment in South Boston, where he shared a bed with two brothers. His mother died when he was one year old, and eight years later, the brother he was closest to was struck and killed by a car. When he was thirteen years old, his father died. He was raised by his four older brothers, the eldest of whom was Paul, who is the current Executive Vice President of Security and Compliance for Suffolk Downs.[1][2][3] They enrolled him in Saint Sebastian's School in Needham, Massachusetts. After graduation, Evans attended Chaminade University for one year before returning to Boston. Upon his return he enrolled at Suffolk University, graduating in 1982.[1]

Boston Police Department

Early years

In 1980, Evans joined the Boston Police Department cadet program. He worked in administrative positions in the Department's District Four in the South End at night and attended class at Suffolk University during the day. Evans joined the Boston Police Department in 1982. He spent five years as a patrolman, during which time he was awarded the BPD's Medal of Honor for his role in apprehending an armed robbery suspect following a high-speed chase. In 1987 he scored the highest grade in his class on the Sergeant's exam. Five years later he earned one of the highest grades on the Lieutenant's test and in 1997 he received the highest grade in his class on the Captain's exam.[1]

Captain

As a captain, Evans was first stationed in District 14, which consisted of the Allston–Brighton section of Boston. It was the BPD's most densely populated district and contained 75,000 residents. This district included Harvard Business School, Harvard Stadium, Boston College, and Boston University. He dealt with a number of issues involving college students, including public intoxication, noise complaints, and fighting. He pushed for stricter alcohol policies during tailgating for the Harvard–Yale football game, refused to sign off on a Snoop Dogg concert at Harvard, which he feared would attract "the wrong element", unless more officers were hired (which led to the concert being canceled).[2] To smooth over relations between the schools and the Police Department, Evans took college administrators on ride-alongs, addressed students during orientation week, and pressured landlords to pay closer attention to troublesome properties.[1] In 2006, he moved to District 4, which covered the South End and Fenway. In 2008, Evans graduated from Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government.[4]

Superintendent

In 2009, Evans was promoted to Superintendent in charge of the Bureau of Field Services. In this position he oversaw special events and the Department's patrol division. Evans played a role in the peaceful handling of Occupy Boston's 70-day occupation of Dewey Square. He served as a go-between for the protesters and the department and ensured that there were no violent confrontations between protesters and police like those that occurred at other camps.[1][5][6]

Boston Marathon bombings

Evans ran the 2013 Boston Marathon and was at the Boston Athletic Club when he was informed by an officer that two bombs went off. Evans returned home for his uniform and then went to the temporary command post at the Westin Hotel. There, he and Commissioner Edward F. Davis designed a plan of action, which Evans took to the streets to implement. Under Evans, the department secured a perimeter around a 20-block radius, swept the scene for secondary devices, and began processing the evidence.[7]

When President Barack Obama came to Boston to attend an interfaith service at the Cathedral of the Holy Cross, Evans and his team were responsible for securing the area. They developed a plan to get the President and First Lady in and out of the five different hospitals they visited.[7]

Evans also played a role in the manhunt and capture of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev. He helped secure the area of the Watertown shootout, process the crime scene, and evacuate nearby houses, as there were live explosives on the scene. He remained in Watertown during the manhunt and stayed even after Governor Deval Patrick lifted the shelter-in-place order. After the 911 call reporting Tsarnaev's location came in, Evans, two BPD Lieutenants, and a Watertown Police Officer were the first officers at the scene. Evans took control of the scene and was the incident commander during the standoff with Tsarnaev. Shots rang out at one point during the standoff and Evans commanded the officers to hold their fire, as he wanted to take Tsarnaev alive for information. After talking with an FBI negotiation team, Tsarnaev surrendered to authorities.[7]

Commissioner

On November 1, 2013, Mayor Thomas Menino named Evans Interim Commissioner of the Boston Police Department. In January 2014, Mayor Marty Walsh selected Evans to serve as Police Commissioner on a permanent basis.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Doyle, Patrick (Fall 2013). "Boston Strong". Suffolk Magazine. Retrieved April 19, 2014.
  2. 1 2 Yee, April H. N. (May 6, 2005). "Captain Confronts Drinking". The Harvard Crimson. Retrieved April 19, 2014.
  3. Cullen, Kevin (April 14, 1986). "Officers Impressed by Evans' Fairness". The Boston Globe.
  4. "Boston mayor appoints police commissioner, superintendent in chief". WickedLocal.com. January 9, 2014. Retrieved April 19, 2014.
  5. 1 2 Andersen, Travis (January 7, 2014). "William Evans to be named Boston police commissioner". The Boston Globe. Retrieved January 9, 2014.
  6. "Boston Mayor Martin Walsh to appoint William Evans police commissioner". MassLive. January 7, 2014. Retrieved April 19, 2014.
  7. 1 2 3 McCluskey, Jack (April 16, 2014). "Marathon that followed the Marathon". ESPN Boston. Retrieved April 19, 2014.
Police appointments
Preceded by
Edward F. Davis
Commissioner of the Boston Police Department
2013–present
Succeeded by
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