Already, says a police official, there are indications the department
is attempting to downplay Marra’s case. “They want to deep-six
that letter,” said the official.
Marra
did not return messages left at his office and on his cell phone.
According to police sources, he recently filed for retirement.
The News’ Kisses. Last week,
noting that a Daily News editorial kissed Intelligence Division Deputy
Chief Thomas Galati for preventing the Iranian delegation from departing
Kennedy airport for the United Nations for 40 minutes, Your Humble Servant
asked: What’s between the News’ owner Mort Zuckerman and
the Deputy Commissioner of Intelligence David Cohen?
This week, noting a News editorial kissing the NYPD’s new alcohol
testing plan after police shootings, this column asks: What’s
between the News’ Pulitzer-Prize-winning and normally sane editorial
page editor Art Browne, Police Commissioner Kelly and Kelly’s
spokesman Paul Browne, known in this column as “Mr. Truth?”
On Friday, under the headline “Courage Under Fire,” a
News editorial praised the actions of police officers Daniel Rivera
and William Gonzalez, who were shot by a gunman they were trying to
arrest. The officers fired back, then arrested him.
The editorial continued: “After the incident, a new policy was
implemented — administration of a Breathalyzer test whenever an
officer wounds or kills a suspect.” The editorial noted that both
cops passed their tests, which were prompted by last year’s police
killing of Sean Bell, an unarmed civilian.
Then came the following: “Despite union opposition, the tests
do not violate cops’ rights. If anything, they instantly vindicate
cops’ actions. In other words, the tests are not an attack on
officers, but another weapon in their arsenal.”
Get a grip, Art. How does proof of sobriety “instantly vindicate
cops’ actions?“ Does merely the fact that cops are sober
justify whatever they do?
In fact, the NYPD’s new Breathalyzer policy is a red herring,
pandering to Commissioner Kelly’s mayoral ambitions, because of
outrage over the police’s 50-shot barrage that killed Bell and
wounded his companion.
If the policy is legit, why not test all cops who fire their guns,
period — whether or not they hit anyone?
In Bell’s shooting, one of those shooters was an undercover
who had been drinking at the club where Bell and his friends were hanging.
His drinking was within department guidelines as part of an undercover
operation.
If Bell’s shooting had occurred today, would the undercover
be penalized for performing his job?
Oh, and by the way, whatever happened to Commissioner Kelly’s
review of its drinking policy for undercover operations? Nearly a year
after the Bell shooting, we haven’t heard a word about that.