Early life and education A third-generation San Franciscan and
Cantonese speaker, Lau was born at
San Francisco Chinese Hospital in
Chinatown, San Francisco; he grew up in and around his family's business (Wing Duck Import/Export) on
Grant Avenue in Chinatown. He attended Garfield Elementary and Francisco Middle schools, graduating from
Galileo High School. As a teenager, he participated in the American Friends Service Committee anti-gang Youth for Service program. He attended and graduated from
City College of San Francisco, and eventually obtained a
Bachelor of Arts in 1997 from
San Francisco State University.
San Francisco Police After successfully challenging a 5'8" height requirement in 1970, Lau entered the SF Police Academy in 1971 and joined the
San Francisco Police Department following graduation, becoming the fifth Chinese-American member of the SFPD. He became an inspector-sergeant, eventually rising to head the SFPD Bureau of Inspectors. As a lieutenant, he headed the sniper unit. In 1977, he was assigned to the SFPD Gang Task Force after the
Golden Dragon Massacre. Lau served on the SFPD Discharge Review Board until 1995; this panel came under severe scrutiny in
San Francisco Examiner articles for failing to hold officers accountable in police-involved shootings.
Police Chief In 1996, as one of new Mayor
Willie Brown's first official moves, Lau was appointed as the first Asian-American chief of the 2,300-man department; possibly as a result of lobbying by
AsianWeek publishers who supported Brown and
Terrence Hallinan during the elections. Chinatown activist
Rose Pak threatened to withdraw support for the
S.F. Giants' proposed
Pac Bell Park if Mayor Brown didn't fire a political consultant hostile to Lau. Lau served six years as chief from 1996–2002. Among Lau's successes as chief have been mentioned the implementation of domestic violence and hate-crimes units, as well as a crackdown on extortion in Chinatown. He appointed fellow Gang Task Force member (and future SFPD chief)
Heather Fong to be captain of SFPD Central Station.
San Francisco Chronicle ran a series of articles criticizing the SFPD and Lau's leadership for nationally worst performance in solving violent crimes; at the time Lau claimed that contractual seniority-based work rules and lack of off-hours justice solutions were key factors for the poor results. Lau was also associated with initiating and promulgating the politically SFPD policy of arresting participants in the
Critical Mass (cycling) demonstrations.
TSA After leaving the SFPD in July 2002, he was sworn as Federal Security Director with the
TSA, overseeing staff at Oakland, Stockton, Sonoma County, and Modesto airports. He oversaw implementation of security screening at Oakland in 2002, and explosive detection for checked-baggage in 2006. In July 2013, he became Federal Security Director for
SFO.
Associations Lau serves on the Advisory Board of the DHS Asian American Pacific Islander Network (DHS AAPIN), and is a senior advisor to the National Association of Asian American Law Enforcement Commanders. ==References==