John F. Stokes
John F. Stokes was an American law enforcement officer. He was involved with many high-profile cases as a detective with the Massachusetts State Police and later served as Massachusetts' Commissioner of Public Safety and Director of Civil Defense.
Early life
Stokes was born on January 7, 1889, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He left school at the age of sixteen to become a steamfitter.Law enforcement
Cambridge Police Department and military service
In 1911, Stokes joined the Cambridge Police Department as a patrolman. He left the force in September 1917 to enlist in the United States Army. He quickly rose to the rank of sergeant and was sent to officers' training school. He was then commissioned as a second lieutenant. Stokes was stationed at Camp Devens with an infantry division when World War I ended. After the war, Stokes returned to the Cambridge Police Department.Massachusetts State Police
In the fall of 1920, Stokes became a detective with the Massachusetts State Police. He helped solve the murder of Grayce M. Asquith, the Millen-Faber Case, the kidnapping of Peggy McMath, and the Kennedy Jewel robberies. In 1937, he and Attorney General Paul A. Dever conducted one of the largest racketeering investigations in the state's history following the murder of Louis Gaeta. Stokes was once described by Leverett Saltonstall as the "greatest detective in the east".In September 1934, Public Safety Commissioner Daniel Needham promoted Stokes to chief of detectives.