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Hagopian rose through police ranks: Shot in 1967 riots, ...

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  • Hagopian rose through police ranks: Shot in 1967 riots, ...

    The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (Wisconsin)
    Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News
    February 25, 2008 Monday


    Hagopian rose through police ranks: Shot in 1967 riots, he later led
    detectives

    Meg Kissinger and Amy Rabideau Silvers, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel


    Feb. 25--For years, Kenneth J. Hagopian hung a photo in his office at
    the Milwaukee Police Department.

    It showed his face just after he was struck by a blast from a
    shotgun. Then a Milwaukee police captain, Hagopian was shot in 1967
    during the riots in the central city.

    "I was unconscious for almost two weeks," Hagopian later told William
    Janz, Milwaukee Sentinel columnist. "I couldn't walk. Blood clots in
    the lung, had to have emergency surgery. The doctor kept saying,
    'You're lucky to be alive.' One-hundred-twenty-six pieces of lead in
    the face, neck and shoulder."

    And so the photo hung until Hagopian retired in 1987 as the
    department's inspector of detectives. It meant that officers should
    be careful out there.

    Beneath the photo were the words of another message: "I came back."

    "He loved police work," said Mary Hagopian, his wife of nearly 35
    years.

    Kenneth Hagopian died of pneumonia on Feb. 18 at a hospital near his
    winter home in Fort Myers, Fla. He was 81.

    He grew up in Cudahy, graduating from Cudahy High School, where he
    was captain of the football team. His mother's family was from
    Poland; his father was from Armenia. Kenneth Hagopian served in the
    Army Air Forces during the final months of World War II.

    In 1951, Hagopian joined the Police Department, then one of only two
    officers who had a college degree. He had graduated from the
    University of Wisconsin in Madison with a degree in sociology.

    Hagopian learned one unexpected lesson as a young officer. Confronted
    with a huge armed suspect -- 6-foot-10 as the story goes -- he was
    nearly strangled with his own necktie. Hagopian managed to knock a
    gun from the suspect's hand and then began to chase him.

    "I'm thinking I'm going to shoot the s.o.b., but I can't," Hagopian
    recalled. "He's unarmed."

    He did, however, give up knotted ties for clip-ons.

    No. 4 ranking officer

    He later served a stint on what was then called the safe-cracking
    squad and ultimately became the department's fourth-highest ranking
    officer as head of the detective bureau, later renamed the criminal
    investigation unit.

    "Hagopian was probably in the vanguard of the new police officer,"
    said Victor Manian, a retired Milwaukee County Circuit chief judge
    who was earlier a police officer and one of Hagopian's partners. He
    made the remark when Hagopian retired in 1987.

    "He has demonstrated over the years the classic police personality,"
    Manian then said. "He is a classic mixture of intelligence,
    compassion and courage. Historically, that's what the Milwaukee
    Police Department is known for."

    Hagopian later talked about the shooting, but realized that the
    events were not just about him.

    It happened as Hagopian responded to a report of a shooting. He got
    out of the unmarked squad car with a pen and note cards in his hand.
    Then he saw a man with a shotgun.

    "I yell, 'Hey, mister, I'm a police officer,' " Hagopian told Janz.
    "Boom. That was it. He hit me and then he hit the car. Knocked us
    down, one by one.

    "One officer was killed, didn't find his body until the next day
    after a fire in the house," he said. "Other officers were shot. John
    Carter was blinded."

    Nor did the shooting change the man that Hagopian was.

    Praise for Hagopian

    "He was able to put his shooting in perspective," Manian said in
    1987. "He was close to death for a long time. But he came back with
    the same extraordinary balance of judgment that he had before.

    "Some people were going to organize some real support for him to be
    chief, but he asked people not to do that," he said. That was
    discussed as Chief Harold A. Breier retired in 1984.

    "His idea of the best job in the Police Department was chief of
    detectives," Manian said. "He didn't like the politics in the chief's
    office. He wanted to be a crime buster."

    After retirement, Hagopian set up a private investigation firm doing
    background checks for employers.

    "The only thing I'm going to miss is the guys," Hagopian said. "I
    used to hate to be off on Friday and Saturday because I might miss
    something, but now that feeling's gone."

    Hagopian loved vegetable gardening, Mary Hagopian said.

    "He used to tell me, 'You can't eat flowers,' " she said.

    He also enjoyed bike riding and rode a three-wheeler the week before
    he died.

    In addition to his wife, he is survived by three daughters from his
    first marriage; Katherine (Bruce) Binder, Diane (John) Reid and
    Marjorie Bessette; and two grandsons, Michael Reid and Jacob
    Bessette.

    A private service will be held later.
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