Clueless Joe, Time To Go
November 5, 2007
It’s time for Brooklyn District Attorney Joe Hynes to do the
right thing — resign.
After two decades in office Hynes still loves looking at himself in
the mirror, so he probably won’t step down. But maybe he’ll
do the next best thing: announce he will not seek re-election in 2009.
It’s not merely that the D.A. blew one of the biggest cases of
his career, following revelations that his star witness, mob moll Linda
Schiro, gave a contradictory version of events to reporters Tom Robbins
and Jerry Capeci.
It is that Hynes knew what he was dealing with in Schiro. Her stories
changed with the wind.
"There's no way we would have brought a prosecution if we had
that information," Hynes said after dropping his case against ex-FBI
agent Lindley DeVecchio.
Largely on Schiro’s testimony, Hynes had charged DeVecchio with
leaking law enforcement secrets to the mob that led to four murders.
But a decade ago Schiro told Robbins and Capeci that DeVecchio had
played no role in at least three of them. Robbins had the tape to prove
it.
The Post reported Saturday that two months before Hynes indicted DeVecchio,
writer Sandy Harmon had alerted Hynes’ office in an email about
Schiro’s interviews with Robbins and Capeci.
And Hynes’ own detective, Thomas Dades, told the Daily News yesterday
that Schiro had also told him about her contradictory versions
of events.
“So for anyone to say they are surprised now that she had inconsistent
stories, they aren’t being truthful,” Dades was quoted as
saying.
Don’t think for a moment that Hynes was taken in, as he would
like you to believe. He may be lots of things but an ingénue he
is not.
In fact Hynes is a consummate pro, when he chooses to be. That’s
what makes his indictment of DeVecchio, in light of all he knew about
Schiro, so disturbing.
When DeVecchio’s indictment was announced a year and half ago,
Hynes held a news conference, with maps, diagrams, flow charts, timelines
and pictures of the victims.
He called DeVeccho’s actions in leaking information to Scarpa “the
most stunning example of official corruption I have ever seen.”
Such sincerity characterized Hynes in his salad days as a prosecutor.
After his election as Brooklyn D.A. in 1989, his first spokesman, Pat
Clark was quoted as saying when he departed the News to work for him, “I
believe in Joe Hynes.”