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Deputy Chief Terry S. Hara
Spirit of Los Angeles
Deputy Chief Terry S. Hara is the Commanding Officer for
Operations West Bureau (OWB) and is responsible for
overseeing the geographic area operations of: Hollywood,
Wilshire, West Los Angeles, Pacific, Station #20, the LAX
Substation, and the West Traffic Divisions.
Deputy Chief Hara joined the Los Angeles Police Department
(LAPD) in February 1980. He is the highest ranking and the
first Asian American to achieve the rank of Deputy Chief on the
LAPD. He was first introduced to law enforcement as a Police
Explorer Scout with the Long Beach Police Department. As
a result of his continued interest in law enforcement, he
applied and was accepted to the LAPD. He has held
numerous positions and worked various assignments within
the Police Department. Some of these assignments included
undercover work as a narcotics officer, uniformed patrol,
traffic accident investigator, and motor officer. Additionally,
Deputy Chief Hara has worked as a staff writer for the Use of
Force Review Section and held the position of Uniform
Coordinator and Work Permit Coordinator. He has also
worked as a patrol supervisor, as a supervisor of academics
for recruit training, a personnel complaint investigator, and
lieutenant patrol watch commander. He has held the position
of Aide (Adjutant) to the Commander of Training Group,
Adjutant to the Commanding Officer, Human Resources
Bureau, and Adjutant to the Chief of Staff.
His previous command assignments include: Training
Group and Training Division, Southeast and Wilshire
Divisions, where he commanded Detectives, Patrol, Vice, Gang Units, and Community
Relations. Prior to Southeast Division he commanded Detective Support Division where he was
in charge of the Bomb Squad, Asian Crime Investigation Section, Fugitive Warrant Section,
Special Investigation Section, Criminal Conspiracy Section, FBI task force on violent crime,
Audit Section, Criminal Investigation Section on counter terrorism, and Career Criminal
Apprehension Section.
Deputy Chief Hara was previously the Department’s Employee Relations Administrator (ERA) for
the Chief of Police. As the ERA, he was responsible for serving as official liaison between
Department management and employee organizations. Additionally, he was responsible for
investigating and resolving grievance matters at the Chief of Police level of review. Reviewing
all requests for administrative transfers and providing a recommendation to the Chief of Police.
Deputy Chief Hara has worked at numerous assignments within the Police Department that include Personnel Division, Wilshire, Southeast, Southwest, Newton and Harbor Areas, South and Central Traffic Divisions, Detective Support Division, Internal Affairs Group, Training
Division, Training Group, Human Resources Bureau, Employee Relations Group and the Office of the Chief of Police.
Deputy Chief Hara holds a Bachelor of Science degree in
Criminal Justice from National University, and has attended
California State University, Long Beach, Department of Criminal
Justice, and the University of California Los Angeles Graduate
School of Education and Information Sciences and School of
Public Policy and Social Research. He is a graduate of the
Senior Management Institute for Police Program from the Police
Executive Research Forum at Boston University. He is also a
graduate from the FBI Explosives Unit-Bomb Data Center
Hazardous Devices School, Executive Management Course.
Deputy Chief Hara is a graduate of the Department’s West Point
Leadership and Command Program. He is a member of the
International Association of Chiefs of Police. He is Vice
Chairman of the Board for the Los Angeles Police Historical
Society. Deputy Chief Hara is past president of the Japanese
American Optimist Club of Los Angeles, a civic organization. He
is also a member of the Japanese Chamber of Commerce of
Southern California and President-Elect of the Nisei Week
Foundation. Deputy Chief Hara is married to his wife Gayle, a
Deputy City Attorney for the City of Los Angeles, and has two
children, a son Mark and a daughter Kimberly.
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Peter Woo
Dream of Los Angeles
Peter and Charlie Woo are brothers and co-founders of
Megatoys, a toy manufacturing company headquartered
in Los Angeles, with an office in Hong Kong and
manufacturing plant in China. They are also known as the
founders of the Los Angeles Toy District, credited with
turning the once blighted industrial area in Downtown
Los Angeles into a thriving international trade center, where
they helped hundreds of immigrant entrepreneurs start their
businesses and create thousands of jobs.
Charlie came to Los Angeles from Hong Kong at age 17 to
attend UCLA, majoring in Physics. He earned a bachelor of
science degree summa cum laude, in 1972, and his master’s
degree in 1975. Peter immigrated to Los Angeles with the
rest of the family a few years later. During the summer of
1979, the family started a small toy import/wholesale
business. They pulled together the family savings, and
could only afford to rent a 400 square feet storefront in the
rundown industrial part of Downtown Los Angeles. As the
business grew, they invested and refurbished many of the neighborhood warehouses and helped other Asian immigrants open wholesale toy businesses.
Hundreds of toy suppliers now cluster around a ten city block area that was once a deserted
warehouse district, creating an international wholesale trade center. Peter and Charlie Woo now
employ over three hundred local residents for their businesses.
Peter is currently the President of Megatoys and the Chief Executive Officer of California
Costume Collections, Inc., a sister company that manufactures Halloween costumes.
Additionally, he is the past Chairman of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce of Los Angeles.
Peter has a long history of promoting Los Angeles in the international arena to attract business
and investments. Most recently, he was part of Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa’s Asian trade
delegation in 2006. Previously, he co-chaired the "Los Angeles Week in Hong Kong" event for Mayor Bradley in 1991. He served as Mayor Riordan’s advisor on international trade and
traveled with him to Israel in 1996 and to China, Hong Kong, and Taiwan in 1998. He was also
a member of Mayor Hahn’s Asia trade mission in 2002.
Peter is active with numerous community groups. He was the founding president of the
Los Angeles Historic Cultural Neighborhood Council and the Chair of the Hollywood
Beautification Team. He also served on the Boards of the United Way of Greater Los Angeles
and Friends of Chinese American Museum. |
Charlie Woo
Dream of Los Angeles
Charlie is currently the CEO of Megatoys and chairs the Workforce Investment Board for the City
of Los Angeles. Originally appointed by Mayor Bradley to this body to oversee the nation’s second largest workforce development system, he has been
reappointed by the three subsequent mayors as its chair. He
is a member of the California Commission on Asian and
Pacific Islander American Affairs and a former member of
the State Commission for Economic Development. He is a
former Chairman of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of
Commerce and has been the only Asian American to head
the 119-year old business organization.
Passionate about political involvement, Charlie helped found
CAUSE, Center for Asian Americans United for Self
Empowerment in 1993, and has served as its chair since
1996. Additionally, Charlie currently serves on the boards of
the LA Police Foundation, LA Inc., KPCC Public Radio, Pitzer
College, and UCLA School of Public Affairs. He previously
served as chair of the Asian Rehabilitation Services, Inc.,
and was on the boards of LA Library Foundation, Town Hall
Los Angeles, LA’s Best, American Red Cross LA Chapter, and
YMCA Metropolitan Los Angeles.
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Takashi Saito
Hope of Los Angeles
Takashi Saito is the Los Angeles Dodgers’ Japan-born
All-Star closer, who registered 24 saves in his rookie year of
2006 and 39 saves during the 2007 season. The 38-year-old
was a 2007 National League All-Star, and one of 10 finalists
for the "DHL Presents the Major League Baseball Delivery
Man of the Year Award.”
Saito signed a minor league deal with the Dodgers in 2006
as a 36-year-old rookie, and surprised fans by converting 24
of 26 save opportunities, posting a 2.07 ERA, and striking
out a Major League-best 107 hitters among relievers. He
made his Major League debut on April 9, 2006 against the
Philadelphia Phillies, pitching a two-thirds scoreless inning.
He recorded his first Major League save on May 15, 2006
against the Colorado Rockies.
Saito was born on February 14, 1970 in Miyagi Prefecture, Japan. He pitched for the Yokohama
BayStars of the Japanese Central League, compiling a record of 87-80 over 13 seasons from
1992-96 and 1998-2005. Like former Mariners closer Kaz Sasaki, Saito attended Tohoku
Fukushi University in Sendai. Saito was originally a position player, but he became a pitcher in
his second year of college. He was drafted in the first round by the Yokohama Taiyo Whales in
1991, and went on to earn Japanese Professional Baseball League All-Star honors a total of four
times (1994, 1996, 1999, 2001). |
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