Bernie Betrayed? Joe Says No
March 24, 2008
So what’s up between Bernie Kerik and his former attorney Joe
Tacopina?
People who know the former police commissioner say Kerik feels Tacopina,
his former top bud and attorney, abandoned him last year as the feds
were preparing their 16-count indictment against him — which included
tax evasion, making false statements on a loan application, and lying
to the government during his Homeland Security nomination.
As a source put it: “Bernie feels Tacopina threw him under the
bus.”
Until then, the two were tight as ticks. After Kerik left the NYPD,
Tacopina served as Bernie’s spokesman and civil attorney. When
Kerik set up his international consultant business, he used Tacopina’s
office on Madison Avenue.
Tacopina even accompanied Kerik to the Harvard Club, where Kerik, a
recent graduate of Empire State College, lectured on foreign policy to
the Manhattan Institute. In his lecture, Kerik, who had just returned
from his three-month tour in Baghdad training the Iraqi police, praised
President Bush and the Iraq war, probably helping him to obtain his ultimately
doomed Homeland Security nomination.
Then in June, 2006 came Kerik’s indictment in the Bronx. He plea-bargained
to two misdemeanors, admitting he accepted $165,000 in renovations to
his Bronx apartment from an allegedly mob-linked company during his time
as Corrections Commissioner. As part of his plea, he admitted lobbying
city officials on behalf of the company, allowing it to use his office
for a meeting with the city’s Trade Waste Commission.
The feds then began their investigation. As they moved to indict Kerik,
Tacopina withdrew.
The feds say he bailed because Kerik lied to him during negotiations
for Kerik’s plea deal with Bronx prosecutors. Specifically, say
the feds, Tacopina passed on Kerik’s alleged lies to the prosecutors
and to the city’s Department of Investigation, which also probed
Kerik.
As Judge Stephen Robinson wrote, “According to the Government,
after the Defendant’s nomination for Secretary of the Department
of Homeland Security was withdrawn in December 2004, the Defendant’s
then-attorney, Joseph Tacopina, met with the Bronx County District Attorney’s
Office (“BCDAO”) to discuss its allegations against the Defendant.
“Mr. Tacopina told the BCDAO that Mr. Kerik paid for all of the
renovations to his Riverdale apartment himself, and that Mr. Kerik had
taken a loan from a Manhattan realtor in order to make a down-payment
on the same apartment, and had repaid the loan in 2003.
“The Government claims to have learned of these statements via
the Assistant District Attorneys to whom the statements were made, documentary
evidence and grand jury testimony. After the Defendant, Mr. Kerik, pled
guilty in the Bronx case, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern
District of New York, during its investigation of Mr. Kerik, questioned
Mr. Tacopina about the above statements. Mr. Tacopina confirmed that
he made those statements to the BCDAO and that the information he conveyed
was provided by the Defendant for the “express purpose” of
conveying it to the Bronx District Attorney’s Office.
“Also during the course of its investigation, the U.S. Attorney’s
Office met with the New York City Department of Investigation (NYCDOI).
NYCDOI informed the Government that, during a meeting with Mr. Tacopina,
the NYCDOI Deputy Commissioner was advised by Mr. Tacopina that the total
cost of the apartment renovations was between $30,000 and $50,000, and
that the Defendant and no one else paid for the renovation costs. Mr.
Tacopina confirmed making these statements, and again stated that he
conveyed information provided to him by the Defendant for the express
purpose of conveying it to personnel at NYCDOI.”
Because of Kerik’s alleged lies, the feds say they plan to call
Tacopina as a witness against him.
Tacopina said in an e-mail that he dropped from the case “because
the government said I had a conflict. I can’t help that I was conflicted
out of a case. I’ve spoken with him [Kerik] and know he has no
hard feelings.”