Once a Cop: The Street, the Law, Two Worlds, One Man (2024)

Margaret

262 reviews1 follower

July 5, 2016

This book is the definition of two worlds; when Corey Pegues grows up on the streets of NY selling drugs, his life takes a dramatic turn when he's forced to decide what he wants out if it; a future in the world, or a future in prison? He takes us in depth between the world of drug selling, and what it takes to make it in the military, to the NYPD.

Byron

Author9 books104 followers

July 19, 2018

Pegues was a teen member of the infamous Supreme Team crack gang in the mid to late '80s and later joined the Army and the NYPD, two institutions arguably worse than the Supreme Team. A few years ago, after an appearance on the Combat Jack Show, the NYPD took away his guns and tried to strip him of his ridonkulously generous pension. The Combat episode is discussed in the book's epilogue.

It's weird to me that they'd give a shit that someone was a criminal before they became a cop, with the key word there being before. As Pegues points out in the book, he didn't lie on his application. To hear him tell it, he was one of the least crooked cops in the entire organization. He only kicked a handcuffed perp down a flight of stairs once!

The early parts, about his life growing up in the hood, are more detailed and more interesting than the later parts, about his time with the NYPD. The parts about broken windows, stop and frisk and what have you will be remedial to anyone who's read the paper in the past 20 years or so. But it's at least invaluable in that it confirms much of what you suspected about the police.

Eugenia

23 reviews1 follower

September 20, 2017

I do hope Officer Pegues won his lawsuit.

Michelle

164 reviews2 followers

February 3, 2017

Keeping in mind that this is a "tell-all", from one person's perspective, I heartily endorse this book. I believe his accounts of street life and police life to be accurate from the little I have experienced and learned from other accounts. Initially, I was annoyed at his choice to narrate his own book but soon realized it was a vital part of understanding some of the obstacles he would have faced. Particularly, when it came to stereotyping.

I recommend this, particularly, for anyone with no personal understanding of what it means to live in the "hood". For those of us that grew up in protected environments, this feels like a foreign world. It's a world that I never tried, or cared, to understand until recently. I don't believe we can truly bridge gaps between the cultures until we have crossed this border and looked at another's lifestyle from the inside out.

I recommend this book for those that grew up in similar conditions: the projects/hood/ghetto/barrio,... It's good to have role models that made something of their lives. And it's good to know that their are people fighting for you, each and every day.

Pegues is stirring up the status quo. To a traditionalist, he might seem rebellious, or disrespectful. Yet, actions such as his are important for keeping our leaders accountable for their actions. We need more people like him, willing to sacrifice themselves for the good of the community.

The audio book, kept my interest and was easy to follow while driving or otherwise distracted. There was only one particular aspect of this story on which I strongly disagreed, and yet, has caused me countless hours of reflection. Pegues claimed he couldn't leave his old life behind; his swagger, his friends, his accent, his style. My parents chose to leave their old lives completely behind to give their children to best opportunity for a better life. We were raised without the influence of our extended family. Was that the right decision? I'll never know. Regardless, we should have to right to retain our identities and be given equal opportunities. His book brings such controversial topics to the discussion table. They are important discussions to be had. I'm glad I "read" this one.

Ronald Williams

Author3 books

April 29, 2021

Growing up in the boogie-down Bronx and running them streets I can relate to the author and all the activities of the typical neighborhood. Every street’s the same street to the reader. This superb manuscript keeps it real about the streets, the workplace, and law enforcement. The author fully acknowledges the poor choices he made growing up in the New York streets. His service to the country in the U.S. Army, the city as a NYPD officer and leader put him on a commendable path to self-redemption.

Along the way his street knowledge was likely the best knowledge he could ever get outside the four walls of a schoolhouse on his rise to the upper ranks of the largest police force in the world. “…The thing that makes a great cop is the ability to deal with people, to understand them and empathize with them in the heat of tense, difficult situations.”

He describes the challenges that are found inside the NYPD workplace and you will likely find them to be the same in most organizations in and outside of police work. Everything boils down to leadership and like he said, “Change can come from the bottom, but it tends to take a long, long time. When change comes from the top…things happen fast.”

The author talks about the dysfunctional, disrespectful, and disruptive work culture inside the NYPD, and paints a picture for outsiders why citizens catch hell on the New York streets if they get in the path of untrained cops in what he references as real “police work.”

Read this book to get familiar with Stop, Question, and Frisk, the various demographics and crime stats that make up many areas of the borough of Brooklyn. “Scratch my book,” Mayor Dinkins, Rudy Giuliani, Ray Kelly, the Dirty Thirty, TNT, public housing as ground zero, the meaning of “Theft of Service,” and so much more.

Corey breaks down the streets and the police in very short and comprehensive chapters. Check it out! Keep this reference in your professional development library for a handy reflection from the streets. It truly is an awakening from a cop’s perspective.

Great photos too!

Fred Leland

273 reviews20 followers

March 21, 2017

The good and bad of policing laid out in this book. The story about a cop who comes from a tough background of the inner city to a police Officer who climbed the ranks of the NYPD to fall via the internal politics of policing. It's obvious Corey Pegues took his knowledge of urban city life and applied it his policing career and from the story written by him excelled at it. His career ended with an accident that left him disabled but the internal politics of policing has him now labeled a disgraced cop with his youthful affiliation with gangs and drug dealing and the lifestyle associated with it used against him. Hard to grasp how only after he ticked off the higher ranks did all this comeback to haunt him??? Understanding policing and its politics I would just say read the book and decide for yourself as how his story ends.

Moe

19 reviews

December 23, 2016

I have to admit this book started a bit slow for me I felt like I'd heard this narrative before. But once the inner workings of the NYPD were laid bare I was enthralled. I can't honestly say that anything contained in this book shocked me but to have a first hand account of the callous disregard for the rights of people of color by those charged with the task of upholding the law is disheartening. I do however, have an enhanced appreciation for those in law enforcement who try to do the right thing sometimes to their own detriment. This is not poetic writing it's plain, frank, but ultimately powerful.

January 9, 2017

I read this book by listening. Some listeners have found the author's narration difficult; that was not my experience at all. I'm glad I got to hear Mr. Pegues' account in his own voice. He did a fine job - narrating and writing - and, I believe, serving his city.

I'm appalled at the prejudice that minorities still experience. Mr. Pergues was able to explain what he experienced and observed in a manner that was very calm, rational, and convincing.

I appreciated his view on events that took place in New York city.

Once a Cop is timely, informative, and fascinating. I highly recommend this book.

Bill Glose

Author11 books23 followers

November 18, 2021

Growing up a poor black child in Queens, NY, Corey Pegues escaped poverty by dealing drugs. Raking in thousands of dollars every week, he spent big and lived large. Once he became a father, he decided he’d rather live to see his children grow up than die a “street legend.” Eschewing his old life, he joined the police and rose through the ranks to deputy inspector. Along the way, he discovered the NYPD operated with its own version of gang mentality. Once a Cop is an eye-opening look at systemic problems built into law enforcement and how it impacts those they are meant to protect and serve.

Gail O'Connor

942 reviews8 followers

June 10, 2016

Picked this book up in the library. Never realized how wonderful and meaningful this book would become to me.

It grabs you immediately and never lets loose. Almost impossible to put down.
You always hear that a writer should write about what he knows and Corey Pegues does that in spades.

I think this is a must read for everyone.

Danny Molock

1 review

Read

July 19, 2016

I saw this gentleman on tv this morning and decided to watch and listen. What I heard captivated me. I believe that this book should be distributed to all law enforcement personnel and the like. I am buying it online and in a store because I want to add it to my collection to pass on to my granddaughter. Thank you in advance for the transparency. I'm extreeeemly excited to read this book!!!

John

11 reviews

June 18, 2017

I felt this book was almost like the black Hillbilly Elegy. A boy comes from nothing, grows up in poverty, and eventually sets his life straight to climb the ranks of the military and NYPD, never forgetting along the way where he came from and why so few others were able to make it out. An eye opening story of growing up poor in the hood.

Nicole

11 reviews

October 29, 2017

Fascinating and eye opening. Highly recommend.

Vincent Stoessel

612 reviews31 followers

June 1, 2021

Excellence!

Sam O'H

72 reviews

July 21, 2019

This is an interesting story about a young black man who eventually becomes a black cop. The author covers growing up as a black teen in a black community, and gives a pretty insightful look into being a black crack dealer in New York.

I keep saying "black" in my review, because the author won't stop saying it.

I honestly expected this book to be more about the police than race, especially since race isn't mentioned anywhere in the title. But make no mistake, this book is about race. Everything the author describes, he relates back to either his own race or the race of the people he interacts with. Which is fine, as long as you know in advance.

I did find it pretty entertaining to read along as the author talked out of both sides of his mouth. He manages to simultaneously complain about people receiving preferential treatment, while then describing the preferential treatment he himself received. He complains about people having racial biases, and then goes on to detail how differently he would treat people of certain races.

My two big take-aways of the book:
1. It's a book primarily about race. Law enforcement is just an aspect of the setting.
2. Take the stories with a grain of salt and a healthy skepticism, as you witness the author regale himself with glory and praise. It's hard to believe someone who doesn't cite any sources or provide any evidence for their claims, especially when you consider (SPOILER ALERT) the end of the book when the author announces there is any open lawsuit for defamation related to his story.

It's a fine story. But for my liking, this book came too close to reminding me of why I don't read fiction novels.

Tabitha Rohm

118 reviews3 followers

March 22, 2024

I had a hard time reading this book. Most of it was racist. He whines about how people treated him differently because he was black. He would complain that even people in higher positions than him that were black treated him differently, because they sold out to the white. I have a different opinion of people that are black and treat other blacks differently. Maybe these blacks have realized they are a part of our society and therefore aren’t different so they don’t want to be treated differently. as long as you use your race as a crutch, you are going to stay in the same dump that you’ve always been in. I don’t recommend this book. The first part of it is very interesting when he’s talking about how I grew up on the streets, but then he uses that as a crutch, the rest of the way through the book. He thinks he should be treated different because he grew up on the street. I personally don’t think somebody that used to sell drugs should’ve been a cop, but he wasn’t brave enough to tell his superiors that that’s what he done. Then as a cop, he wasn’t willing to arrest the ones that were out there selling drugs, and that he knew was selling drugs. so maybe the blacks that were superior to him that was down in him from getting promoted might have been doing their job. They didn’t play favorites to the people who grew up on the streets. They came in as a cop and planned to serve as a cop. I read this book during Black History Month, and only in that regards with this be a good book to read.

Amy C

47 reviews1 follower

May 29, 2024

I watch Mr Pegues on Court TV (which I watch everyday), and I usually agree with all of his commentaries. I find him to be very relatable and intelligent. This led me to read his book.

Incredible life this man has had, but the biggest takeaway…this man has integrity. I’m assuming Ma had a lot to do with that. Mr Pegues was even a moral crack dealer.

“Fair” is the word that comes to mind - Mr Pegues will call “balls” for the opposing team and “strikes” on his team, if it’s the right thing to do. He is a leader in every sense of the word and an example to be followed.

Thanks for a fantastic read!

    autobiography-biography-memoir nonfiction-not-not-real rated

Simon Strzepek

3 reviews

September 25, 2018

Once a Cop: The Street, the Law, two Worlds, one man. Written by Corey Pegues in 2016, this is the story of a young man who grows up in crime infested New York City. Set in the 1970s and onward, this non-fiction book demonstrates central themes of right and wrong, crime and justice, illegal and legal activities. I liked this book because it was a no nonsense, unfiltered look at life in NYC slums. It shows life the way it really was back then.

Rob

202 reviews4 followers

June 25, 2022

There is some really compelling stuff in Corey Pegues’s biography. His start as a street hustler. Running with a major drug gang. His eventual lifestyle change and then becoming a highly decorated New York Police officer. My only major problem is not really with the book, it’s with the presentation. Corey, my man, I wish you could have got some decent editing for your memoir. You did a lot of amazing things. I just felt that some of the story was cheapened because there were some poor segue ways from one point to the next.

    audio-books auto-biography non-fiction

Gary Myers

Author5 books1 follower

July 8, 2022

I skimmed nearly all of the first section of this because I dislike foul language. It covers the things a young black experiences on the street. The rest of the book was much more readable for me (tho still with some of the same language) and very interesting when the author became a police officer. It was enlightening to me because I had never before seen that much detail about the racism that blacks experience.

Tim McLean

86 reviews2 followers

August 28, 2022

This is a truly amazing story! It’s a testament to how hard work, a focused commitment, continuing education, and assistance/ mentorship from the right people can yield incredible results. I am definitely impressed and inspired by Corey’s journey. He made the most out of every opportunity he was given, and he created opportunities when they weren’t given. This is one of the best books I’ve read in a long time!

Juan Williams

5 reviews

December 20, 2022

This dynamic read is “rife” with real time “players” and street hustle slayers! Cory gets to the point in detail, taking us deep into his metaphorical transformation to become a leader as an American police officer. The 80’s were a time for serious money and people who were ready with there “gunny.” Mr. Pegues himself became part of that equation when confronted with street justice.

Jay

13 reviews

December 3, 2017

Interesting

Maura

6 reviews

February 16, 2019

The chip on the author's shoulder in regards to the NYPD is so palpable in the language he uses when describing his time with them. A fascinating read nonetheless.

Elisa R.

45 reviews14 followers

Read

October 21, 2020

Good, interesting. Facts that any well-informed person would know, amidst an insider's perspective backdrop.

Christine Geddes

6 reviews1 follower

March 3, 2021

Thank you Corey for shedding light where there is so much dark

Stacie

84 reviews2 followers

July 9, 2016

4.5 stars. I don't like to read too much about a book's plot because I prefer to let things unravel for me as I'm reading. I love biographies & memoirs, and my guess is that I simply added to my tbr list once I saw that it was a highly rated memoir. As a consequence, I truly did not know what to expect from this extremely readable memoir.

Based on the way it opened, I first thought the author was a cop who became corrupt, was working for a gang, got caught, and was writing the memoir from prison. The title fit with that scenario. As I began to get into the book, which proved so impossible to put down that I read 75% in one sitting, I just let it unfold without anymore guessing once my initial impression was quickly disproved as the section about drug dealing began.

I'm so glad I hadn't already known the gist of Mr Pegues' life story. It allowed me to really absorb how very amazing a life he's lived this far, from becoming a drug dealer to a top cop in the NYPD. Who'd have thunk it?

He made some very salient points about the inevitability of criminal activity in communities rife with poverty and racism, things that really made me think. The background into the NYPD and some of the now-common policies fascinating to me as someone who's not from and has never lived in New York.

I found Mr Pegues' personal opinions and beliefs to be put forth in a candid but commonsense manner that was disarming and nonoffensive. he didn't just throw an opinion out there and expect the reader to accept it as fact; he explained quite clearly in each case what led him to a particular opinion. I also found it quite appealing that he resisted the temptation to give the reader a lot of braggadocio; considering his remarkable ascent from crack dealer to an NYPD leader, he might have been quite the braggart in this book. This is a captivating memoir written in a straightforward manner that should appeal to both avid readers and people who rarely read (I do not like the term "non-readers" one little bit!").

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.

    2016 5-stars bios-or-memoirs

Jacob Ahn

5 reviews

October 31, 2016

Pegus says, “Ma, I’ll never disappoint you again.”
“Once a Cop: The Street, The Law, Two Worlds, One man”, is an impeccable story about revival. In this autobiography, Corey Pegues recalls countless times of struggle and disadvantage and his accounts of overcoming those scenarios. He did not back down from anything no matter what was thrown at him. His ability to persevere makes his story a true success story. In order to portray his ideas and perspectives, the author is very straightforward and upfront about his situations and how what they are like; he does not add any fluff to his writing. He is able to do this because of the diction he uses to compose his writing. The story is also organized so that all of his life events are in chronological order. His ability to combine the use of his very real diction and organization of events allows the reader to connect and feel exactly what Corey Pegues was going through in almost real time.

I would recommend for any mature teens, young adults and above that enjoy any type of style of writing. Even if they do not like nonfiction writing, the message Corey Pegues conveys is strong they are bound to enjoy and feel inspired. There are mature topics and words used in this book which is why I feel it would not be suitable the younger age, though it is not a hard read.

Maria

4,268 reviews111 followers

June 24, 2024

Reality is stranger than fiction... which is why Corey Pegues's life as a drug dealer selling pot and then crack, the Army soldier and then a New York City cop. Blunt, even and stark Pegues recounts the harsh economic, social and political realities that target minority communities. He has the ability to explain his story and highlight the larger social trends that contributed to it.

Why I started this book: Audible recommended it based on my other purchases and bonus it was on sale.

Why I finished it: This was a difficult book to read, but powerful. I would recommend reading it with The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference as they both draw different conclusions from the broken windows campaign effects. Gladwell argued that it is the little things that make a big difference. Pegues pointed out that NYC was so under-policed in the 1970s-1980s that a little change resulted in huge dividends. But then the pendulum swung the other way and now minority communities are over-policed.

    audio-books biography contemporary

Danielle

28 reviews4 followers

June 21, 2016

Cory Pegues, formerly an NYPD Deputy Inspector, takes a hard, uncompromising look at the toxic culture of racism that undermines the efficacy of the police. Despite the specific nature of this book to detail the NYPD's shortcomings, it's a lesson that can undoubtedly be carried out to other departments everywhere.

Pegues details his early beginnings from an impoverished child who grew up drug dealing, but by the time he turned 18 knew he had to turn his life around and do something different. After enlisting in the Army, Pegues becomes a police officer and soon is a rising star in the department. By the end, what should have been an American success story and happy ending turns into a nightmare as Pegues is singled out for his outspoken opinions and made an example of. This account by an insider is gripping, frustrating and thoughtful all at once.

This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.

Once a Cop: The Street, the Law, Two Worlds, One Man (2024)

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