Assistant Chief Bill Martinez's first assignment with the St. Paul police department was so sensitive only the mayor, police chief and a few others knew he was on the city's payroll.
Hired in 1987 to broker undercover narcotics sales during the crack epidemic, Martinez rented and wired an apartment on the city's West Side for audio and video. He met in secret with a city staffer to receive his pay in cash in order to protect his identity. He became so proficient that undercover agents from Minneapolis and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency once followed him, suspecting he was the criminal.
Martinez, who is Mexican-American, retired Friday from the department after nearly three decades, rising to become one of Chief Thomas Smith's top three advisers and the highest-ranking Latino law enforcement officer in Minnesota, according to the Minnesota chapter of the National Latino Peace Officers Association (NLPOA).
"He represents so many things," said St. Paul police officer Francisco Ortiz, vice president of the Minnesota chapter of the NLPOA. "He represents the culture. He represents a city that's really diverse. And it's not just for the Latinos — it's for any officer of color and women in this profession — just seeing him and seeing that he's been able to succeed in this profession is very inspiring."
Martinez, 54, is also the only St. Paul police officer of color in a department of about 600 who qualifies to apply for the chief's job, which is up for grabs this year.
Although he's applied for the job previously, he said he's ready to retire and spend time with his daughter, son-in-law and two granddaughters. Also on his plate: training a yellow Labrador puppy, Ranger, who is destined to become his pheasant hunting partner.
"It's time to move on," Martinez said recently.
Humble roots
Martinez's career with St. Paul police was a dream for the 12th and last child of migrant farmworkers from south Texas who labored in the Montana potato fields, the sugar beet rows of the Fargo-Moorhead area and the cornfields of southern Minnesota.