Terrorism’s Los Angeles Connection
January 29, 2007
The Manhattan Institute, the alleged think-tank of right-wing intellectuals,
has found a new police department to adore.
In the past, its chocolate and candy all went to the NYPD.
But now it’s flirting with another police department whose chief
is viewed by the NYPD’s commissioner Ray Kelly as a serious rival.
Specifically, the “MI,” as it refers to itself, is cozying
up to former NYPD Commissioner William Bratton, who now heads the Los
Angeles Police Department — and who Kelly has gone out of his way
to avoid, if not insult.
Ironically, the issue that has pulled the MI away from the NYPD is
the one dearest to Kelly’s heart, if not his reputation — counter-terrorism.
A letter to potential donors, describing the Institute’s 2006-07
program priorities, provides a hint of what’s afoot.
“Our old friend Chief William Bratton has asked MI to lend its
counter-terrorism expertise to the LAPD,” the letter says. Bratton “has
even agreed to become a national spokesman” for the Institute’s
Center for Tactical Counter-Terrorism, “putting his extensive professional
network and broad media exposure in the service of turning the [Center’s]
Los Angeles office into a model for nation-wide reform.”
Out in L.A., Bratton gushes about the Institute’s Counter-Terrorism
Center. “It’s a very impressive group, a dial-up service
for experts,” he says. “They network with some of the smartest
people in the world. They have academics and hands-on people coming in,
and match the two.”
O.K., so what’s up here? The Manhattan Institute is a New York-based
organization. It has a history with the NYPD, which is the model of nation-wide
counter-terrorism reform. Why would the Institute choose to ally itself
with Bratton and Los Angeles instead of with Kelly and the NYPD? Especially
when its Center for Tactical Counter-Terrorism was created exclusively
for the NYPD?
No one has offered a satisfactory explanation.
Far-fetched as it sounds, the Center’s director, Tim Connors,
says a catalyst for the split was former NYPD commissioner Bernard Kerik,
an Institute favorite.
In October 2003, for example, the MI sponsored a talk by Kerik at the
Harvard Club. Fresh from his three months in Iraq, where he had supposedly
trained Iraqi police officers, Kerik told the MI: “I don’t
care if they find them [weapons of mass destruction] or not. Saddam tortured
and killed one million people. Somebody had to go there.”
And: “Saddam didn’t do 9/11. But did Saddam fund and train
al-Qaeda? The answer is yes. Then ask yourself, who hit the towers?”
For these insights, the Institute’s intellectuals gave him a
prolonged ovation.
Connors adds, “There was a bit of caution” after what he
termed “the Kerik incident,” which Connors described as “misusing
things that were donated to the city, like his apartment.”
He referred, of course, to the penthouse apartment overlooking Ground
Zero that was loaned to Kerik by the Milstein brothers. Kerik was supposed
to use the apartment to recover from his supposed 18-hour work days after
9/11. Instead, he brought his girlfriends there.
“The NYPD said they didn’t want anyone to be able to question
their relationship with a private concern,” said Connors. “They
said we need to be careful about this relationship. They said it wasn’t
a trust issue but a perception issue. They asked us to go through an
audit to give them a level of comfort.”
Then came last September’s terrorism conference at the Roosevelt
Hotel to commemorate the fifth anniversary of 9/11, which the Institute
co-sponsored with the NYPD.
Included were Bratton and such Brattonites as John Timoney, the NYPD’s
former first deputy, and currently chief of the Miami PD; John Miller,
Bratton’s spokesman in New York and Los Angeles, currently the
chief spokesman for the FBI; and Dean Esserman, currently police chief
of Providence, R.I.