In late 1973, Murphy became president of the
Police Foundation, which the
Ford Foundation established in 1970 with a $30 million commitment. The purpose was to foster innovation and improvement in American policing. Under Murphy's watch, the foundation published more than 30 books and reports on matters ranging from police corruption to firearm abuse to policewomen on patrol to domestic violence and the police. A study on the police use of deadly force found that in the mid-1970s police agencies differed widely in their policies governing the use of deadly force, but that there appeared to be increased restraint in police use of firearms. Perhaps the most notable of its publications was the report of a foundation experiment set in
Kansas City, Missouri, that concluded that the accepted police strategy of routine preventive patrol in cars had no significant effect on crime rates, citizen fear of crime, or citizen satisfaction with police service. These results "suggested that it is not sufficient to merely assign uniformed officers to random patrol and that more sophisticated means of deploying personnel may be necessary," according to Police Administration. Not all of the foundation's resources went to research. In 1975, Murphy enlisted the help of ten police chiefs from large jurisdictions around the country to help him create the
Police Executive Research Forum. The foundation provided generous start-up funding, and the forum was formally incorporated in 1977. Murphy envisioned an organization the forum has become – in its words on its web site, "a national membership organization of progressive police executives from the largest city, county, and state law enforcement agencies … dedicated to improving policing and advancing professionalism through research and involvement in public policy debate." The forum now has 1,500 general and subscribing members. During Murphy's tenure, the foundation also assisted in the development of the
National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE) and assembled the
National Advisory Commission on Higher Education for Police Officers. The commission's 300-page report issued 43 recommendations designed to upgrade the quality of police higher education. At the 1980 conference of the
International Association of Chiefs of Police, delegates rejected by a 4–1 margin a resolution introduced by Murphy calling for departmental restrictions on the use of deadly force. Instead, the delegates affirmed the traditional fleeing felon rule. Murphy continued to speak out on the matter and in 1982 the IACP leadership censured him "for his ongoing criticism of traditional police practices," Epp writes. "The issue was widely covered in terms unfavorable to the IACP. The New York Times gave front-page coverage to the story on July 8, 1982." About 150 similar stories, "all unfavorable to the IACP, appeared in other newspaper and magazines." Several large-city police chiefs opposed the IACP's censure of Murphy and the executive directors of the
National League of Cities, the
International City Management Association, and the
United States Conference of Mayors issued a letter criticizing the action. In 1985, the Supreme Court in
Tennessee v. Garner decreed that it was reasonable "for the police to use deadly force to defend life or to apprehend armed and dangerous felony suspects, but shooting nonviolent fleeing property crime suspects was a form of unreasonable seizure that violated the Fourth Amendment and that therefore must be forbidden." This was in line with the shooting policy Murphy introduced to NYPD in 1972. Murphy retired from the foundation in 1985. He taught at
John Jay College of Criminal Justice from 1985 to 1987 and was director of the police policy board of the United States Conference of Mayors from 1985 to 1998. ==Death and legacy==