In 1970, Saundra Brown was the first black woman accepted into the Oakland Police Department’s Recruits Academy.
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“I’m kind of optimistic”
Saundra Brown December 1970
Born and raised in Oakland. She felt she knew the problems of the young here. She said, “in a city like Oakland, with its Black Panthers and militant groups, there is a special need for minority police officers.” She worked with teens during her college days.
Saundra graduated from Fresno College with a sociology degree. She had always wanted to work with juveniles and considered law enforcement a possible field. She applied to OPD immediately after her June 1969 graduation, but no opening existed.
She was working as a claims adjuster when she heard that OPD was looking for a “black policewomen.”
Police Academy
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At that time, a MALE recruit needed only a high school diploma or a score 262 on a GED course. WOMEN must have a four-year college degree or four years of experience in law enforcement. She had that.
She attended the same 15 weeks of Police Academy as the 22 males in her class and was expected to compete with them.
She took courses in criminal law and report writing, first aid traffic investigation, and the Oakland penal code. There were also defensive tactics involving strenuous activities such as calisthenics, some judo, and a little karate.
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“Oh, I did alright I guess” she laughed. I can throw the biggest guy in the class.“
Saundra Brown – December 17, 1970
During the course, she learned, for the first time in her life, to handle firearms.
“I used to be scared of guns,” she laughed,. “but now I feel safer with a gun in possession because I know how to use it”
Oakland Tribune Dec 14, 1970
Graduation
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On December 18, 1970, she accepted her star and adulations from Police Chief Charles Gain as the only woman in the police academy of 24.
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She finished at the top of her class. She hoped to be assigned to the juvenile division.
However, there were differences between policemen and women. Saundra didn’t wear a uniform when assigned to community relations and the youth department.
At that time, there were 710 men in the force and only seven women. They made the same money as at the start, but there was quite a contrast in recruitment qualifications and future advancement. Women were not allowed to compete with men for advancement then; they would always hold the rank of policewomen.
Fascinated by the legal issues she encountered as a policewoman, Saundra attended law school while continuing to serve her hometown of Oakland as a police officer until 1977.
She served with OPD from 1970-77
Life after the OPD
She then received a Juris Doctor from the University of San Francisco School of Law in 1977.
She was a judicial extern at the California Court of Appeals in 1977 and a deputy district attorney in Alameda County, California, from 1978 to 1979, 1980 to 1982. From 1979 to 1980, she was a senior consultant to the California Assembly Committee on Criminal Justice.
She was a trial attorney of the United States Department of Justice Public Integrity Section from 1982 to 1983. She then served as a Commissioner on the Consumer Product Safety Commission from 1983 to 1986 and the United States Parole Commission from 1986 to 1989.
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She was a judge at the Alameda Superior Court, California, from 1989 to 1991.
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On April 25, 1991, President George H. W. Bush nominated Armstrong to a seat on the United States District Court for the Northern District of California vacated by William Austin Ingram. She was confirmed by the United States Senate on June 14, 1991, and received her commission on June 18, 1991.
She earned a Master of Divinity (M.Div.) from the Pacific School of Religion in 2012, and she assumed senior status on March 23, 2012
More Info:
- OPD’s First African American Policewoman (1970) – Saundra Brown
- Saundra Scores A Police First – Oakland Tribune December 14, 1970
- An Arresting First – SF Examine December 18, 1970
- Coolidge Brown – Oakland Tribune June 6, 1971
- Saundra Brown Armstrong – Biography
- Saundra Brown, the first – Rare Historical Photos
- Senate Confirmation – SF Examiner June 14, 1991
- Judicial Profile – Saundra Brown Armstrong
- Senior District Judge Saundra Brown Armstrong – US Courts