According to sources in the Intelligence Division, before Bush’s
arrival, Cohen personally inspected the firehouse and announced to
the Secret Service that it was unsafe for Bush to visit. After a call
from Washington [said to be from the White House] to Mayor Bloomberg,
Cohen was summoned to Kelly’s office and forced to apologize
to the Secret Service. Bush visited the firehouse, although he did
so the evening before the anniversary on Sept. 10. Press accounts at
the time described his visit as “unscheduled.”
Two weeks ago, this column reported how Cohen, through newly appointed
Intelligence Deputy Chief Thomas Galati, detained the Iranian delegation
accompanying its president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at Kennedy airport.
The police delayed the Iranians for 40 minutes after Galati demanded
a weapons check of the delegation. He backed off after the Secret Service,
the State Department and the Diplomatic Security Service protested,
maintaining this would violate diplomatic protocol.
While the Intelligence Division under Cohen appears to be running
amuck [more on that next week], Cohen was honored last week by the
Anti-Defamation League, an organization that appears to have outlived
its usefulness..
Cohen, a 35-year veteran of the CIA who became the first civilian
to head the Intelligence Division after the September 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks, became the first recipient of an award named after an Italian
police chief who saved more than 3,500 lives during the Holocaust.
Giovanni Palatucci, the police chief of Fiurme, forged documents and
visas that allowed thousands of Jews to escape death in concentration
camps during World War II. He was caught and died in the Dachau concentration
camp in 1944.
ADL president, Abraham Foxman, said Cohen was feted because of his
anti-terrorism efforts.
"Commissioner Cohen works against forces of hatred and extremism
to make New York City safe for people of all backgrounds to live, work,
and worship," Foxman said at the ceremony, according to the New
York Sun.
In his acceptance speech, Cohen spoke of the NYPD's fight against
anti-Semitism in New York after recent vandalism against some Brooklyn
synagogues.
Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly, who appointed Cohen, also spoke,
citing Cohen's intelligence work during the 2004 Republican National
Convention. He praised Cohen for preventing protesters from disrupting
the convention.
The ADL was founded in 1913 following the lynching of Leo Frank,
a Jewish factory worker in Georgia falsely accused of raping a white
woman.
Since then, the ADL’s stated mission has been to fight anti-Semitism
and all forms of bigotry.
But in recent years it has catered more to concerns of wealthy Jews.
In 2000, for example, Foxman wrote to President Bill Clinton, supporting
a pardon for Marc Rich, a millionaire thief who had fled the country.
Last week it was quick to scold right-wing iconoclast/nutcase Ann
Coulter for saying something like Jews could get to heaven faster if
they converted to Christianity.
But when an undeniable act of anti-Semitism occurred in New York
City, the ADL remained silent for weeks.
In 1991, Yankel Rosenbaum was fatally stabbed in Brooklyn during
what has come to be called the Crown Heights Riot. Hasidics, with their
18th century dress and old-fashioned ways, are considered an embarrassment
to many assimilated Jews who support the ADL.