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  3. He passed away today about 4:40PM.

He passed away today about 4:40PM.

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    Archived from the IMDb Discussion Forums — Beverly Hills Cop


    Minorda920 — 10 years ago(February 29, 2016 03:38 PM)

    He passed away today about 4:40PM.

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      tsrts — 10 years ago(February 29, 2016 09:49 PM)

      Former Detroit City Council president and Detroit police official Gil Hill has died today.
      Hill passed away at 4:51 p.m. at Sinai Grace Hospital, said hospital spokeswoman Bree Glenn. He was 84. The cause of death was respiratory illness he had been battling respiratory issues for the last two years, and was admitted to Sinai Grace about two weeks ago, said a family spokesman, Chris Jackson.
      He was known in political circles and by voters who would support him in his political life by his rhyming first and last names.
      Gil Hill loved the city of Detroit, said Wayne County Sheriff Benny Napoleon, who knew Hill for more than four decades. We have lost a true, true champion of the people."
      To many people, in Detroit and around the world, Hill was known as Inspector Todd in the Beverly Hills Cop films. In those movies, he played the irascible boss of Eddie Murphys wise-cracking Axel Foley, a Detroit detective obliged to go to Beverly Hills to solve a murder or two. But in fact, hed become nationally famous long before.
      Hills life began November 6, 1931, in Birmingham, Ala. His mother, Mary Lee Hill, raised him and his sister, Toni Patricia Hill, on the pittance she earned as a domestic worker. Sometime in the 1940s, she moved the family to Washington, D.C., where Hill attended Cardozo High School and graduated in 1949.
      His original ambition was to go to Howard University in Washington, D.C. But lack of money made it an impossible dream, he would later tell the Free Press. So in 1950, he joined the Air Force. During an unsuccessful run for mayor in 2001, Hill gave the Free Press an interview in which he fondly reminisced, I still remember my serial number: AF13340004.
      Hill had been stationed at Selfridge National Guard Air Base and fell in love with Detroit. He would return to Detroit in 1953, following his discharge from the Air Force. Hed tried and failed at several jobs before joining the Wayne County Sheriffs Department in 1957. Two years before then, he married Delores Hooks, who sang in a local church choir.
      Hill remained with the sheriffs department two years, before he grew tired of hanging up political posters and hawking fund-raising tickets for politicians, he said.
      In 1959, he joined the Detroit Police Department.
      'Super Cop'
      Ten years later, in 1969, Hill was promoted to detective. The following year, he was assigned to the homicide division.
      "I loved being a detective; there was just something about it," Hill said with a puzzled look during the 2001 interview. "I was good at it. At one time, I would have rated myself among any of the best homicide detectives in the world."
      Hill earned the reputation of being the city's top detective, capable of charming confessions out of the most notorious killers. In 1980, Hills previous involvement in solving the Browning Gang Murders, which involved 15 victims, made him one of the super cops selected from around the country to go to Atlanta to help solve the Atlanta Child Murders.
      The case brought Hill to national prominence. The murders of over two dozen black children, teenagers, and adults began in the summer of 1979 and continued into 1981. In 1982, Wayne Williams was convicted of the murders. By then, Hill had returned to Detroit, where he was promoted to inspector and took over the citys homicide unit.
      Napoleon, who spent more than a decade with Hill in the Detroit Police Department, said Hills real-life persona as an investigator was much quieter and more reserved than the character he played in the movies. But on the rare occasions Hill got angry, he was very much like the person you saw in the movie, Napoleon said with a laugh.
      Lights, camera, action
      In 1984, Hollywood brought Hill international fame when Hill got the role of the f-bomb-dropping Inspector Todd in Beverly Hills Cop, a role he came back for in two sequels.
      But by 1985, Detroit had the dubious distinction of Murder Capital of America, and within a few years Hill would be reassigned to a small east-side office in the patrol division, where he was in charge of traffic, aviation, mounted police and the harbormaster section.
      In 2001, unnamed police officers blamed Hills downswing on his poor relationship with supervisors and his letting his fame go to his head. Hill, however, blamed jealousy.
      Hill retired in 1989, and was elected to the Detroit City Council.
      The Rev. Nicholas Hood served with Hill on the city council from 1994-2001 and said he was the only councilman who joined him on a regular basis for prayers before council meetings.
      We would pray for a good day, but never about an issue, he said. He was a really decent person and quite respectful of the public.
      He was also respectful of his fellow city council members, Hood said.
      He was remarkably sensitive and kind to members who didnt understand an issue or had discomfort with it, Hood recalled Monday. He exhibited a civility in government that we dont often see now. I think it was partly because of his human nature, but he recognized

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        snelling — 10 years ago(March 01, 2016 03:00 PM)

        I just heard. That sucks.
        "I will not go down in history as the greatest mass-murderer since Adolf Hitler!" - Merkin Muffley

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          Premmie — 6 years ago(September 28, 2019 04:58 AM)

          Woah! Inspecta T was really the policemans, hana

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