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Grady also won kudos for bolstering campus security earlier and for drawing up plans for crisis scenarios
-- including a shooting on the 25,000-student campus. For weeks after the tragedy, students applauded Grady when he walked by, some even hugging him. But his critics say that however good Grady may be in a crisis, he's less well-suited for the day-to-day grind of a campus police chief. Controversy has dogged Grady, who also is from Beloit, Wis., during his career. After becoming Wisconsin's first black police chief in the mostly white town of Bloomer in 1989, he created a stir by issuing nearly 300 tickets, including to himself, for violations of a snow-shoveling ordinance. When he became Santa Fe, N.M., chief in 1994, he ordered officers to stop accepting free cups of coffee on the job and banned bolo ties. Police responded with a 103-to-5 no-confidence vote in their boss. After digging in his heels for two years, Grady resigned, saying his reforms had encountered too much resistance. And at NIU, well before the shooting, staff of the student newspaper had already complained that he often withheld standard crime reports, requiring the paper to file Freedom of Information Act requests. He has failed so far to release an official report on the Valentine's Day shooting. Asked earlier this year why he hadn't done so, Grady said he would rather not hear the gunman's name again, that he didn't want to give Kazmierczak the notoriety he sought. He also said there's no dispute about what he deemed the most important facts. "You want to know who the suspect is? You know that. He's dead," said Grady, his stern, booming voice rising. "You want to know how many guns he had? You know that. You want to know how many victims there were? You know that. What else do you need to know?"
[Associated
Press;
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