Past and Present Meet in Queens
December 4, 2006
A top official investigating the fatal police
shooting of Sean Bell is the same man who blew the whistle on Al Sharpton
two decades ago in the case that brought him to national prominence — the “rape” of
Tawana Brawley, supposedly by six white men.
The official is Jack Ryan, chief assistant
to Queens District Attorney Richard Brown, who is heading the investigation
into Bell’s shooting.
Five cops, mistakenly believing there was a gun inside Bell’s car,
fired 50 shots, killing him and seriously wounding two of his friends.
Ryan sat with Brown last week in a key meeting
in his office with Bell’s
relatives, fiancée, and 50 black officials, including Sharpton,
who has taken a prominent role in the Bell case.
“It was odd that the two of us were in the same room,” said
Ryan. “We have encountered each other over the years. Our relationship
is not exactly warm and cuddly, but professional.”
Eighteen years ago, Ryan, then working for
Attorney General Robert Abrams, led a state grand jury investigation
that determined Brawley’s
so-called rape was a "hoax.”
Rather, the grand jury concluded, she had made up the story, fearing
her aggressive step-father.
Sharpton and attorneys C. Vernon Mason and Alton Maddox had defended
her, accusing Steven Pagones, a local, white assistant district attorney,
of raping her.
In 1998, a civil court jury supported Ryan’s
findings, ruling the three had defamed Pagones, and ordering them to
pay him hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Sharpton paid his share of the money but has never apologized to Pagones
for his role in the Brawley hoax. Attempts to reach him for this column
were unsuccessful.
Of last week’s meeting in Brown’s office, Ryan said of
Sharpton, “The two of us acknowledged each other but never said
a word.”
Amadou's Echo. Some called it a warning. Others called it a “caution.” Whatever
you call it, District Attorney Brown told black leaders last week that,
if they went overboard in protesting Bell’s police shooting, they
risked a potential change of venue should the case go to trial.
“Let me remind you of Amadou Diallo,” Brown
reportedly told the group in his office last week, referring to the
unarmed African immigrant shot 41 times by four police officers in
the Bronx in 1999.
“I am not, nor should any of you be
drawn into that trap.”
In the Diallo case, Bronx prosecutor Robert
Johnson — one
of the few, if not the only, black district attorneys in New York State — quickly
convened a grand jury — some felt too quickly — leading
to what many felt was an over-reaching indictment that charged the four
cops with second degree murder.
Meanwhile, Sharpton led daily demonstrations
outside Police Plaza. An appellate court — the same bench Brown had sat on before becoming
Queens D.A. — cited excess prejudicial publicity and moved the
trial from the Bronx to Albany.
There, a jury acquitted the cops. The night
of their acquittal, the presiding judge attended the officers’ celebration.
So far in the Bell shooting, the demonstrations
have been relatively mild, and Sharpton — who appears to have more authority than any
elected black official — has been relatively restrained.
He has met with Mayor Michael Bloomberg, albeit
briefly, and has rejected calls for Police Commissioner Ray Kelly’s
dismissal.
The future, however, remains unclear. Jesse
Jackson, Sharpton’s
rival for attention, turned up in town last week. Bell’s fiancée
is to appear on the Larry King show. There is also talk of a citywide
boycott.
And given the police department’s inclination to strike out like
a wounded animal at any black person suspected to be, or to have information
about, the so-called “fourth man” with a gun, who can say
in what direction Sharpton — hardly a reliable partner in the
past — will turn?
Old-Fashioned Ray. Police Commissioner Kelly may be creative
and proactive when it comes to terrorism. But when it comes to ordinary
crime, Kelly responds in the old-fashioned way.
That is to say he doesn’t merely wait
until something goes wrong. He waits until people are screaming that
something went wrong.
Take his announcement of a blue-ribbon task force to investigate undercover
operations following the fatal shooting of Sean Bell.
Contrary to what you’ve read in the media [The Post’s Saturday
editorial said Kelly moved “swiftly”], Kelly undertook no
investigation — at least publicly — after Ousmane Zongo,
an unarmed African immigrant, was shot and killed by an undercover cop
in a Chelsea warehouse in 2003.