Walter E. Headley (May 11, 1905 – November 16, 1968) was the Chief of Police of Miami, Florida in the 1960s. Headley became famous for his use of the phrase "when the looting starts, the shooting starts".[1] During his tenure as police chief, he was regarded as a popular public figure by many, in spite of his heavy-handed policies.[2]
Headley was characterized in the 1969 Miami Report about the 1968 Miami riot for the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence as a "strong-minded, hardworking police chief" who "carried virtually unchanged into the late 1960s policies of dealing with minority groups which had been applied in Miami in the 1930s and even earlier".[3]: 2 This was an apparent reference to policies promulgated by Headley's predecessor, Chief H. Leslie Quigg.
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