{"id":31336,"date":"2017-11-08T11:42:00","date_gmt":"2017-11-08T19:42:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.kentreporter.com\/news\/kent-to-add-chief-to-robert-e-lee-police-station-name\/"},"modified":"2017-11-08T11:44:07","modified_gmt":"2017-11-08T19:44:07","slug":"kent-to-add-chief-to-robert-e-lee-police-station-name","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.kentreporter.com\/news\/kent-to-add-chief-to-robert-e-lee-police-station-name\/","title":{"rendered":"Kent to add ‘Chief’ to Robert E. Lee police station name"},"content":{"rendered":"
Residents can attend a rededication of the Kent Police Department building in honor of former Police Chief Robert E. Lee.<\/p>\n
The ceremony is at 11:30 a.m. on Thursday, Nov. 30, at the police station, 220 Fourth Ave. S.<\/p>\n
“Chief” will be added in front of Lee’s name to help calm any controversy about whether the building is named after Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee.<\/p>\n
Chief “Bob” Lee served the city of Kent from 1948 to June 1966 as its police chief, and from 1968 through 1972, as a Kent City Council member. In the 1980s, he worked as the membership salesman for the Kent Chamber of Commerce where he met Suzette Cooke in 1981, when she was hired as the chamber’s executive director.<\/p>\n
“Chief Lee was a great ambassador for the Chamber of Commerce,” Mayor Cooke said in a city media release. “The business people respected his knowledge and integrity. When combined with Bob’s people skills and soft sense of humor, he proved very successful in sales.”<\/p>\n
In the early 1990s, City Hall expanded to the south, into what was then the King County Library. The old library was remodeled to accommodate the police department. The city dedicated the police headquarters in memory of Lee on Sept. 18, 1992.<\/p>\n