Bashing the Bureau
November 19, 2007
Ever since the World Trade Center attack, the FBI has allowed itself
to be kicked around by the media and rival law enforcement agencies.
Under Director Robert Mueller, the Bureau doesn’t respond to
attacks, even if unfair.
No one has kicked the bureau around more than Police Commissioner Ray
Kelly and Deputy Commissioner for Intelligence David Cohen.
Kelly has called the Bureau “incompetent,” among other
choice adjectives. He has repeatedly stated the FBI failed to protect
the city from 9/11.
Cohen has made such sport of the Bureau that when retired FBI agent
Dan Coleman signed on to work with him, Coleman, the New York office’s
Bin Laden expert, quit the first day because Cohen made more disparaging
comments about the Bureau.
Kelly has sent NYPD detectives outside the city’s jurisdiction
where the FBI is the major law enforcement player. The NYPD conducted
a bizarre sting of scuba diving shop owners along the Jersey shore. It
fruitlessly sent detectives to search for stolen explosives in Pennsylvania.
It infiltrated a protest group in Massachusetts, where the NYPD detectives
were nearly arrested. The FBI never went public with its complaints of
useless NYPD meddling.
After Kelly began his overseas spy service -- stationing NYPD detectives
abroad to rival the Bureau -- the FBI embraced it. Getting along with
Kelly became the first priority of Mark Mershon, the Bureau’s head
of the New York office, per orders from Mueller.
Meanwhile, the FBI’s Assistant Director and former star spokesman,
John Miller, remains silent. The knowledgeable and once garrulous mouthpiece
for former NYPD commissioner Bill Bratton, Miller has become the Bureau’s
stealth spokesman. Two weeks ago, another city official thought he could
get away with bashing the bureau. Apparently seeking to deflect criticism
after his prize case against former FBI agent Lindley DeVecchio went
south, Brooklyn District Attorney Joe Hynes decided to play the FBI card.
Instead of acknowledging his incompetence after evidence surfaced that
star witness, mob moll Linda Schiro, had contradicted her sworn testimony
years before, Hynes blamed the FBI.
After DeVecchio’s case was dismissed, the Post quoted Hynes’ underlings
as saying the FBI paid DeVecchio’s bills. Hynes’ former investigator
Tommy Dades stated that Bureau agents followed him and staked out his
house.
Hynes spokesman, Jerry Schmetterer, said the FBI had withheld documents,
turning them over only at the last minute. “It was a struggle,” the
Post quoted Schmetterer, “but they made it very difficult.”
While Bureau officials in Washington remained silent, one person spoke
up. He was James M. Margolin, a spokesman for the FBI’s New York
office, a middle level official and anything but a star.
“If he [Dades] is talking about on-board agents [following him],” Margolin
said. “it is categorically false.” Responding to Schmetterer,
Margolin said, “We turned over everything we could legally give
them. We gave it to them as expeditiously as possible.”
Then Margolin added the following: "As a rule, I think the FBI's
usual policy of taking the high road and declining to respond to criticism
is the best policy. But when the criticism is so without factual merit,
silence doesn't serve our mission to the truth. To suggest that the FBI
failed to cooperate fully with the Brooklyn DA's investigation is disingenuous.
To accuse the FBI of willful foot-dragging or interference is worse than
disingenuous. It's a statement they know or ought to know is patently
false.”