Established in 1970 www.portlandobserver.com > ¡jinriianh Volume XXXX, Number 9 Wednesday • March 3, 2010 bserüer Scammers go after troubled mortgages making matters worse see story on page 4 Committed to Cultural Diversity •/community service Legacy Unmatched TV anchor, councilman and police officer broke barriers Dick Bogle, a trail-blazing Portland jo u r­ nalist and city com m issioner, died last week at the age of 79, leaving behind a legacy for breaking color lines. Dick Bogle serving as a Portland Police Officer in the 1960s. Bogle served as one of the c ity ’s few black police officers in the 1950s and 60s; he was the first black reporter and televi­ sion anchor for K ATU news, and was only the second African Am erican to be elected to the Portland City Council. Dick Bogle a former television news anchor, city councilman and police officer, A fter attending Oregon State U niver­ died last week at the age o f 79. sity and Portland State U niversity, Bogle joined the police force as a patrolm an ing Charles Jordan, the first African Ameri­ 1992. can elected to City Council. working in the detectives and intelligence With more time on his hands, he turned divisions during the 1950s. In an interview After running into some troubles after his attention to a long-standing interest: with the Portland Observer last year, Bogle a form er aide filed a sexual harassm ent jazz music. said his reason for joining the force was claim against him, and allegations he didn’t Bogle frequently wrote about jazz mu- sim ple: he w anted to help others. account for all of his travel expenses continued on page 4 The spirit to serve the public rem ained em erged, he lost his bid for re-election in with him throughout his prodigious career that spanned several professions before bringing him back to the Police Bureau where he worked part-tim e during his re­ tirem ent on cold cases. “That spirit of w anting to help never leaves you, no m atter how old you get,” Bogle told the Portland O bserver at the time. B ogle’s fam ily roots in Oregon extend back to the 1840s and 1850s, when his fam ily first m igrated to the territory. He grew up in southeast Portland. W hile a police officer, he worked part- tim e as a reporter and jazz critic for the Portland C hallenger and Portland Re­ porter, both which are now defunct. He was befriended by Bruce Baer, a highly respected Portland reporter, whom Bogle would later describe as “color blind.” Baer would later help Bogle become the first black reporter at a television news station. “T h ey ’re not going to think about hir­ ing m e,” Bogle told the Portland O bserver last fall while recalling the rigorous hiring process that ended with Bogle turning in his badge to work at the station in 1968. He later took a jo b as an aide to City Com m issioner M ildred Schwab in 1982, which he used to make his own bid for City In 1 9 85 , Dick Bogle takes the oath o f office as a m em ber o f the Portland City Council two years later to replace the retir- Council.