IVIV (12): LAPolice Reserves

rich richard.romeo at gmail.com
Thu Oct 29 13:11:39 CDT 2009


In Venice he worked Front Desk, Patrol, Vice, Narcotics, Special
Problems, Community Relations and the Juvenile Car.
_____
special problems? Juvenile Car (resurrection of the body no doubt) but
what might those special problems be? for the LAPD to use the lingo of
the time was pbly along the lines of How to talk to a Negro so forth

On 10/29/09, kelber at mindspring.com <kelber at mindspring.com> wrote:
> [Sorry I've been kind of AWOL - the week's been a little more complicated
> that I thought it would be.]
>
> Fritz has looked up the plate numbers of some of the cars seen in Spike's
> film footage of the Wolfmann abduction.  They turn out to belong to members
> of the LA police reserves, "like a little private militia the LAPD uses
> whenever they don't want to look bad in the papers."
>
> Here's the officially sanctioned history of the reserves:
>
> http://www.joinlapdreserves.com/history.html
>
> The LAPD site doesn't give any specific dates.  Basically, the reserves
> started up during WWII as kind of a civilian defense thing - people were
> pretty jumpy about a west coast Japanese invasion (could Japonica be a very
> very veiled reference to this?).  The volunteers had to be pretty affluent
> because, over time, they acted like regular cops, were even paired with
> working cops, but were unpaid and supplied all of their own equipment (read:
> guns).
>
> As Fritz points out, the Watts riots were a great recruiting tool for the
> reserves, which is confirmed a few pages down, when Doc pays a call on Art
> Tweedle [the Tweedle Dum to the LAPD's Tweedle Dee?)
>
> Browsing around, though, I found a real-life counterpart to Art [yeah, yeah,
> I know, life imitates ...].  Note what it was that drew him to the reserves:
>
> http://www.loans4officers.com/noel.htm
>
> Laura
>



More information about the Pynchon-l mailing list