Showing posts with label Hall of Justice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hall of Justice. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

San Francisco Loses A Great Reporter: Malcolm "Scoop" Glover

Malcolm Glover was a kid in McCloud, Siskiyou County, when he opened the screen door of a local grocery for a well-dressed gent who had come to town. The older man turned out to be William Randolph Hearst, then summering at the Hearst family's Wyntoon estate nearby, and after dropping out of high school Malcolm found himself in the big city with a job as a "box man," a photographer, for the San Francisco Examiner.

Of such chance encounters great careers are made.

But as a shooter "Mal," well, was not so good. He enlisted and after he was finished with Hitler and Tojo he went back to work for the Examiner - and Hearst - as a police reporter. An editor thought "the beat" would toughen the kid up, get him ready for a real assignment. He stayed "on the job" for 56 years.

Photo: Malcolm on the job at Fifth and Minna, 1949, third from the right..

Say the number again, slowly, and think about it. He was very good at his work.

There are a lot of stories out there about Mal, or "Scoop" as he was known around the Hall of Justice. Most of them are true. He kept a drawer full of Kit Kats and a jellybean jar on his desk as "cop bait," and always responded the same way when a fresh-faced dispatcher who hadn't yet met him took an early morning beat call: "Yeah, honey, that's right... Glover. 'Glove' with an 'r' or 'Lover' with a 'g.'"

They remembered him after that.

He would get surreptitious calls from sources - either cops or b-girls or someone down at City Hall - and listen, eyes shifting and mouth barely moving, looking like an alligator in a pond waiting for the gazelle to come closer. Then he would get up, slowly, so as not to tip the Chronicle ace and dean of the press room, Bob Popp, and mosie off to meet his contact while Bob and Katherine from BCN and the Tribune man and everyone else started hitting the phones - knowing he was going to come in with an exclusive that was going to make them all look very, very bad.

Cop shop stories are almost universally black. You have to work the Hall and environs awhile to appreciate them. They are filled with irony and pathos and sadness and unbelievable pain. It does something to you.

After a year there I found myself angling for the "gunfighter's seat" at a local cop hangout, a chair with a good view of the door. Malcolm saw me do it.

"What's the matter, kid?" he growled. "You wanna see it comin'?"

He loved his wife and kids and would coo to them over the old, heavy black phones we used into the 90s, then switch over and take the details of the most disturbingly grisly atrocity du jour, switching back to his wife again without missing a beat.

He had access to the Hall like no one I've ever seen, hanging around Records or Homicide until the crush of TV cameras and other reporters had gone and then quietly sidling back to pull a mugshot or arrest record. After awhile his editors stopped trying to bring him back into the "cubicle farm" at Fifth and Mission, begrudgingly admitting he was too valuable a resource.

Mal left the paper in 2002 and died last Monday at 83.

He was my rabbi, the cop shop guy who brought me into the newspaper game and taught me a helluva lot.

I'll miss him.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Silver "Buzzers" Come Home, Press Badges Stir Memories

I was young and dumb and ready for action, thought I'd seen a thing or two. My editor all those years ago sent me down to the Hall of Justice in San Francisco and told me to look up someone named "Scoop" and "The Baron."

It was a madhouse, with all the "personalities" that come with an urban city - and magnified by ten because it was San Francisco. A Disneyland for adults. There was a card game in progress when I made it to the third floor press room - a gorgeous blond, some TV people, cops. They said they were playing for candy bars.

"Siddown, kid, more the merrier."

One of the players was a Superior Court Judge. Everyone, it turned out, was armed. I began to lose.

"You're going to go far down here," the Examiner man - Malcolm "Scoop" Glover, said approvingly. He brightened when a good looking guy in a dapper suit walked in, the press room ringing with "Hey, Baron!"

Baron Muller was a legend around the city and the Hall of Justice. He'd covered everything that moved in town for years and had a string of exclusives on his belt. I tried not to look too impressed. They got around to asking for my press card, a laminated piece of junk with a sorry looking photo and some words that were supposed to get me past police lines when things were exploding.

"What's the matter with you guys?" The Baron asked the cops in attendance while looking at my press card with a look a new dad reserves for a recently soiled diaper. "You used to have a little class." And with that he threw down his police reporter's "star" the one with his number "9" in hard-fired enamel, in a leather holder and gleaming.

It sounded cool. I looked at it with envy.

"Yeah," Scoop said, throwing his lapel shield on the table. "Those were the days."

I started to drool.

I put in a few years with the paper and left, never getting anything nicer to wear than a lanyard and that crappy laminated card. A few months ago The Baron's badge and buzzer turned up on the antiques market, he's not with us any longer, and I pounced.

Had to have it. And proud to have known the man and shared time with them all.

They had class.