In
Fond Memory Of
Sergeant
Zebulon Vance Casey III
Internal Affairs Division
Police Department, the City of Philadelphia, Retired
"There came a time when there were assignments that had to be
done right, and they would seek Zeb out. These assignments included
police shootings, civil-rights violations, and he tracked down
fugitives all over the country. He was not your average cop.
He was very, very professional."
Howard Lebofsky
Deputy Solicitor of Philadelphia
The
BADGE OF HONOR series and this Web site are respectfully dedicated
to Zeb Casey.
The
following is from an article by S. Joseph Hagenmayer, Inquirer
Correspondent, reprinted with permission of The Philadelphia
Inquirer, July 21, 1998.
Zebulon
Vance Casey III, fifty-six, a retired Philadelphia police sergeant
whose experiences provided many of the authentic details for a
series of best-selling novels about the city police department,
died in his sleep of a heart attack.
Born
in Petersburg, Va., Mr. Casey lived in Philadelphia for 26 years
before moving to Southampton in the late 1980s. A Vietnam War
Marine Corps veteran from the early 1960s, he settled in Philadelphia
after leaving the military.
Mr.
Casey was with the Philadelphia Police Department for twenty-two
years, retiring as a sergeant in Internal Affairs. He worked throughout
most of the 1970s as a detective and was promoted to sergeant
in 1981.
His
two decades of work in the city police led to an unusual honor.
Mr. Casey provided W.E.B. Griffin with details and color in the
best-selling BADGE OF HONOR series. His relationship with the
author continued to grow, and Mr. Casey designed the author's
first Web site from his sick bed.
Mr.
Casey was very serious about education. A 1977 graduate of La
Salle College, now La Salle University, Mr. Casey got his degree
in La Salle's evening division in two and a half years while working
fulltime as a police officer and raising a family. Not only did
he get his degree, he served as the evening school's student newspaper
managing editor and as assistant managing editor of the evening
school's yearbook.
Mr.
Casey believed so thoroughly in the value of education for police
that he encouraged other officers to continue their education
as well, said Howard Lebofsky, a deputy Philadelphia solicitor
who was a longtime friend of Mr. Casey and served with him on
the police force in the 1970s.
"He
just came up and took an interest in me and encouraged me to complete
my education," Mr. Lebofsky recalled, crediting Mr. Casey with
helping him advance his career. Mr. Casey encouraged other officers
and founded an organization to promote education in the department.
"It
was really far-sighted," Lebofsky said.
After
Mr. Casey received his bachelor's degree, he became an instructor
at La Salle's evening school, teaching an introduction to criminal
justice course and later an advanced police course from 1978 to
the mid-1980s.
Finn
Hornum, chairman of La Salle's department of sociology, social
work, and criminal justice, recalled knowing Mr. Casey as a student,
hiring him to teach, and being impressed by his dedication to
police work as a way of helping people.
Mr.
Casey received his master's degree from West Chester State College
and was working on his doctorate at Temple University when he
became too ill to continue.
He
was chairman for the Cub Scout Pack 160 in Philadelphia's Burlholme
section when his children were growing up.
He
is survived by his wife of thirty-five years, Sandra Rae Casey;
three sons, James N. Casey, Robert A. Casey, and David A. Casey;
a sister; and a sister-in-law.