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Donald Worden

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Donald Worden
Born
Other namesThe Big Man
Police career
CountryUnited States
DepartmentBaltimore Police Department
Service years1962–99
RankDetective
Badge no.145
Other workFormer B.C.P.D. H.Q. Homicide Big Man Case

Donald "Don" Worden is a retired Baltimore Police Department detective who was featured in David Simon's non-fiction book about the homicide unit, Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets (1991)[1] and provided the inspiration for the Homicide: Life on the Street television series character Stanley Bolander, played by Ned Beatty.[citation needed]

Biography

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Worden, a native of Baltimore's Hampden neighborhood,[2] joined the Baltimore Police Department in 1962,[3] and had worked in the department's Northwestern district[4] before becoming a Homicide Detective. Nicknamed, "The Big Man",[5] he was a veteran member of Sergeant Terry McLarney's Homicide squad working under Shift Lieutenant Gary D'Addario.

References

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  1. ^ Simon 2006
  2. ^ Simon 2006, p. 29: "I'm just a poor, dumb white boy from Hampden, trying to make his way through this world and into the next."
  3. ^ Simon 2006, p. 31: "the department had been his home since 1962."
  4. ^ Simon 2006, p. 31: "He had gone downtown after more than a decade in the Northwest district…"
  5. ^ Simon 2006, p. 23: "The Big Man sits…"

Bibliography

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  • Simon, David (2006) [1st. pub. Houghton Mifflin:1991]. Homicide: A Year on the Killing Streets (4th ed.). New York: Owl Books. ISBN 0-8050-8075-9.