Kelly and the CCRB: Can’t They Just Get Along?
May 15, 2006
The Civilian Complaint Review Board learned a harsh
lesson last week: if you dare to criticize police commissioner Ray Kelly,
you do so at your peril.
The feckless CCRB has already been so cowed by Kelly
it failed to speak out about his flouting the city charter for 16 months
by refusing to cooperate with its investigation into alleged police abuses
during the 2004 Republican National Convention.
So what did the CCRB expect when it sent a Kelly letter
last week criticizing two deputy chiefs, Terrence Monahan and Stephen
Paragallo, for ordering mass convention arrests of protestors?
The letter provoked an angry response not just from
Kelly but from the Amen corner at the Post’s editorial page, which
headlined it, “An Anti-Cop Outrage.”
“I’m writing to express my surprise and
dismay at the letter I received from you and Executive Director [Florence]
Finkle yesterday [Tuesday] afternoon after already having received inquiries
about it from the New York Times,” Kelly wrote back to CCRB chairman
Hector Gonzalez.
“It seems to be a remarkable coincidence that
your letter to me appeared in the press on the morning of the board’s
public meeting, in scarcely enough time for the ink to dry.”
Kelly’s response, which went on for nearly
1,000 words and which the Post printed in its entirety, ended with a charge
that the CCRB had exploited the RNC issue, “seemingly in an attempt
to get media attention.”
In between, Kelly stated, the CCRB had ignored “the
larger context,” an apparent reference to his assertion that the
convention went off largely without incident despite threats to disrupt
it; including an unspecified “very real risk of a major terrorist
attack.”
It is precisely this -- New Yorkers’ fear of
another major terrorist attack and Kelly’s well-publicized strategies
to prevent them -- that explains why he has become the most powerful and
popular police commissioner in modern history, accountable to no one,
with a 70 per cent public approval rating, amidst speculation he may run
for mayor to succeed Michael Bloomberg.
Yet despite Bloomberg’s 2001 campaign promise
of more transparency in the police department than existed under his predecessor,
Rudy Giuliani, the department under Kelly is more secretive than ever.
The public has literally no idea what goes on at One
Police Plaza. What, for example, is the status of Inspector Robert Wheeler,
who shot a robbery suspect in Washington, D.C., then fled and never reported
the shooting to D.C. police? Kelly failed to discipline him for three
weeks, then placed him on modified assignment, the least severe penalty
one can give.