A gun, a badge and a tie
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LOLITA HARPER
Oh sure, it’s always the firefighters who get asked to be models in
the community fashion shows, but retailers are missing out on the
real trendsetters: the Costa Mesa Police Department detectives.
That’s right. You need look no further than the corner of Fair
Drive and Fairview Road for the latest in white-collar style for the
blue-collar worker. Since Police Chief John Hensley took the lead, he
has mandated detectives -- who do not sport the traditional uniform
-- wear suits and ties everyday.
So what will the men of Costa Mesa PD be wearing this season?
“Most detectives will be sporting darker colors this season,” Det.
Mark Manley said. “I like the darker earth tones for the winter and
blues to match my eyes ... . We may traditionally be blue-collar
workers, but that doesn’t mean we can’t be fashionable and profess
our inner expression and personality.”
(Is it just me, or does Manley sound like he’s been moonlighting
for E! Fashion Channel?)
Manley, who investigates crimes against people, such as homicides,
is hip to looking good on the job, but he hasn’t gone Armani or
anything. Most of his suits are from discount retailers such as the
Men’s Warehouse, he said. He checked the tag on his suit Friday:
Nordstrom, it said.
“Ah man, it’s not like many of my suits are from Nordstrom,” he
said. “Most are from the Men’s Warehouse. Be sure you mention that,
because I don’t want to get a hard time. I’ll take so much heat from
people who will say, ‘Nordstrom? Yeah right. He always looks like
such a slob.’”
But even Manley -- his own worst critic -- knows he looks darn
good in a suit.
“As soon as I put on a suit and tie, my age went down five years
and my balding spot grew in a little,” Manley said. “It even makes me
look a bit thinner, which I prefer.”
Det. Sgt. Don Holford, who is in charge of property, economic and
street crimes, said he is used to being in suits. Before his
promotion to a leadership position in the detective bureau, he worked
in the Professional Standard Unit. And as the title suggests, the
dress code was professional: meaning suits and ties. Before that, in
the late 1980s and early ‘90s, suits were required of detectives,
which Holford was.
“I’m used to it,” Holford said. “I’ve got plenty of suits and ties
already.”
As his rank has been upgraded, he has upgraded his fashion sense.
“I have not continued with the polyester suit tradition,” Holford
said. “I don’t think they are Italian ... Wait.”
He looked at the label.
“Enrico Corsini,” he said.
It sounded Italian, but he wouldn’t dare assume.
“I wouldn’t want to participate in the ethnic profiling of suits,”
Holford said.
As every fashion aficionado knows, accessories make an outfit and
Costa Mesa detectives have not neglected that important detail.
Holford likes to sport “fun” ties. On Friday, he wore soccer balls,
and last week it was Winnie the Pooh. They are all “in good taste,”
he said.
Manley said he is “all about the stripes.” He likes color.
“Colorful, yet professional” is his motto.
Although Hensley’s fashion mandate was rumored to be widely
unpopular at first, Holford and Manley said they have no problem with
it.
“I think we have seen positive results from the way we look,”
Manley said. “The public seems to like it. It hasn’t been a bother or
an inconvenience. It gives a professional reflection.”
Oh, good answer. Did I mention Manley is up for a promotion? But
Holford backed him up.
“All the detectives look sharp,” Holford said. “It’s the softer,
gentler Costa Mesa Police Department.”
Soft and gentle, huh? What about this year’s must-have accessory,
Holford?
“I have all my men in Childer Rigs,” he said. “It looks really
impressive.”
(For those who are not in the know, Childer Rigs are the classic
over-the-shoulder-pistol- holders.)
This winter’s police department: Soft, gentle, and packing some
heat.
* LOLITA HARPER writes columns Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays.
She may be reached at (949) 574-4275 or by e-mail at
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