Stranger things do tend to happen in Schenectady--once a booming
metropolis nicknamed the "City That Lights and Hauls the World" thanks
to the dominating presence of General Electric and the American
Locomotive Company, though those days are ancient history. GE has nearly
abandoned the city, and ALCO closed up shot over fifty years ago. Hence,
the title of this book: Forget It, Jake, It's Schenectady: A Police
Department Under Siege, and the Man Who Led It, a nod to the bleak
conclusion of the classic film Chinatown, one of cinema's most
devastating expressions of abject resignation and defeat. A chance
meeting between onetime Schenectady Police Chief Gregory Kaczmarek and
author David Bushman in a Lyft car that Kaczmarek was driving was the
genesis of this book, originally intended to track the rise and fall of
a veteran cop with what appear to be two defining traits--an almost
inhuman capacity for perseverance and a truly remarkable ability to
attract notoriety and criticism. However, as the author's
research--including interviews with over two dozen people who lived
through the events depicted in these pages.