The NYPD’s black family tradition 
 Patrolman David Richard Siley, on duty in the 32 Precinct in Harlem in the early 1950s. 
 Police Benevolent Association  
 125 Broad Street, 11th Floor, New York, NY 10004  •  212-233-5531 Patrick J. Lynch, President 
 of the City of New York, Inc. 
 www.nycpba.org 
 COURIER LIFE, FEBRUARY 7-13, 2020 5  
 BLAC K   H I STORY MONTH 2 0 2 0 
 One of the most enduring strengths of the NYPD and its officers is that, with many 
 of them, the policing profession is a matter of family legacy. In Black History Month, we 
 salute the black NYPD officers family tradition that began almost 130 years ago – ever 
 since  Moses  P.  Cobb  became  one  of  the  first  two  black  New  Yorkers  to  enter  the 
 Brooklyn Police Department in 1892 before it consolidated with the NYPD in 1898. Cobb 
 encouraged his brother-in-law, Samuel J. Battle, to become a cop, and Battle joined the 
 NYPD in 1911, became its first black sergeant in 1926, its first lieutenant in 1935 and the 
 city’s first black parole commissioner in 1941. 
 A more recent example is Mark D. Siley, a Transit cop, who partnered with retired 
 PBA Second Vice-President Mubarak Abdul-Jabbar to patrol the subways in the 1980s. 
 Siley was the son of a New York City patrolman, David Richard Siley, who joined the 
 department in 1949, retiring in 1972 as a second grade detective. 
 “I grew up in a police family and always wanted to be a police officer, ever since I 
 was a kid,” says Siley, who was a detective 
 sergeant in the Organized Crime Control 
 Bureau  when  he  retired  in  2015.  “My 
 father  approved  of  my  choice,  but  he 
 advised me that what I could make of a 
 police career would be entirely up to me 
 and  how  I  would  motivate  myself.  And 
 ‘watch your back,’ he would always add.” 
 Unfortunately,  David  Richard  Siley 
 died two months before his son entered 
 the  police  academy  in  1984,  but  Mark 
 Siley never forgot his father’s wise words, 
 and  went  on  to  continue  the  NYPD’s 
 family tradition. 
 Retired  Detective  Sergeant  Mark  D.  Siley  (right)  and  his 
 former partner, retired PBA Second Vice-President Mubarak 
 Abdul-Jabbar, pose next to the photo of Siley’s patrolman 
 father David Richard Siley in the PBA office. 
 
				
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