For eight years in the 1980s, Chief Tony Bouza presided over the Minneapolis Police Department, a quotable, in-your-face police official with strong opinions who was brought here as a reformer by Mayor Don Fraser.
A former assistant chief in the New York Police Department, Bouza frequently butted heads with members of the Minneapolis force.
Since his retirement he has become even more irascible. For most of the past quarter century, he has been a witness for the defense across the country, testifying in lawsuits, some of them major cases, on behalf of people who have alleged wrongdoing by police officers.
Bouza, now in his 80s and still living in Minneapolis, has published a new book entitled "Expert Witness: Breaking the Policemen's Blue Code of Silence," which tells story after story of alleged deceit, misconduct and corruption by police.
A prolific writer of nine previous books, he said in an interview that his new tome is "my most important book," describing it as "my continuing and futile attempt to reform the police."
He calls police departments "secret institutions very much like the Vatican" who have "a great time exercising power." He says that while departments do a lot of good things, they are institutionally assigned "to control the underclass," most vividly reflected in their relationship to blacks, who he says are targets of stop-and-frisk and other abuses.
He said in most of the cases where he testified, it was on behalf of abused blacks "who screwed up their courage and sued."
In an epilogue, Bouza writes that he owes an apology to most cops because 98 percent of them are doing — or trying to do — their job, work ranging from mediocre to heroic and brilliant.