On Victor Clay’s twenty-first birthday, in 1984, came a knock at the door. “You want to be a deputy sheriff? Be downtown in two hours.” The Olympics were coming to Los Angeles, his future wife had taken a corporate job, and this was how Clay, who’d been street racing by night just months before, learned that he had passed the test to become a sheriff. The day he was sworn in, he recalls, he was given a cardboard box containing a badge for his uniform, one for his wallet, a revolver, and six bullets. So began a 35-year career in law enforcement, including campus chief positions at Occidental College and Caltech, before Clay became Harvard’s police chief in July 2021. When applying for the job, he was asked to share in one page his perspectives on diversity, inclusion, and belonging. He took nearly five: these topics are “way too important to limit to one page,” he says. In the same vein, “community policing” to him doesn’t mean having officers take one course—it means changing a culture he perceives as outdated and ineffective. Harvard police officers are “part of this community,” he says. “And if we do a really good job, and we’re thoughtful, and we receive critique, and improve after that critique, we’ll get more respect.” Clay is already a presence around campus, often seen walking a dog he rescued from the streets in California. When he first brought her home, he told his wife, Teree (like him, a fan of old movies), they would turn the pup into a princess, and name her Eliza Doolittle, after the character in Pygmalion. Improvement is always possible, he believes, and seems to include himself: he is learning French, and hopes to pursue a degree from Harvard, “because I’m walking across that stage.”
Victor Clay
The new police chief introduces a new policing culture.

Victor Clay
Photograph by Jim Harrison
You might also like
Veteran MIT Administrator Named University Secretary
Suzanne Glassburn will manage the work of the Corporation and Board of Overseers.
The 2025 Pulitzer Prizes Announced
Winners across five categories, from commentary on Gaza to criticism on public architecture
Harvard Medalists
Four people honored for exceptional service to the University
Most popular
Explore More From Current Issue
Biology's "Mirror Organisms"—And Their Dangers
Life forms built from left-handed DNA and RNA could threaten Earth’s plants, animals, and insects.
Lawrence Bacow on the Auschwitz Memorial
President Lawrence S. Bacow reflects on the liberation of Auschwitz