The Doddering Times
June 30, 2008
As a lifetime New York Times reader, it’s sad to see the paper failing in its mission to cover the NYPD vigorously.
The latest example of its lame journalism: last week’s editorial, “The Police and Tasers.”
“New York Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly is eager to make the use of firearms a last resort for his officers,” it begins. Hey, big insight here. Is there a police commissioner on the planet who doesn’t want to make the use of firearms a last resort for his officers?
The editorial then tells us that Kelly “and his top lieutenants” are considering arming more police officers with Tasers, based on a recommendation from the Rand Corporation, which Kelly commissioned to study the 50-bullet police shooting of Sean Bell.
First, there are no “top lieutenants” in the NYPD. When it comes to making decisions, there is only the police commissioner.
Second, nowhere does the editorial mention that Tasers are being considered for sergeants, not for cops, and that sergeants already have them, locked safely in the trunks of their cars where they cause no harm.
Third, where is there even a hint of the question the editorial should have asked? What do Tasers have to do with the Bell shooting?
Besides his considerable skills as an administrator, Commissioner Kelly has shown he is a master of public relations. Only now, after six years, is the media down at One Police Plaza catching on.
For the past year or so, the formerly slavish Post has been unearthing all sorts of department scandals. Just this month, it broke news of alleged bid-rigging involving the Mounted Unit and of an investigation into a Queens narcotics unit in which three undercover cops allegedly framed four men in a drug bust.
The News has also been whacking the department pretty hard. First, there was its exposé of Chief John Colgan of the Counter Intelligence Bureau flopping in his Brooklyn office, while claiming he was living in his parents’ place in Brooklyn. His real residence appears to be way upstate.
More recently, the News exposed the hanky-panky of hapless Douglas Zeigler, the department’s highest-ranking black officer. When two young white cops approached him while he sat in his department car, idling at a fire hydrant on a Queens Street, their confrontation became a short-lived cause célèbre, a supposed display of police racism.
Now, according to the News, it turns out the married Zeigler [his wife Nelda is Deputy Commissioner of Equal Employment Opportunity] was out there in Queens to meet his girlfriend.
The Times, meanwhile, continues to serve as Kelly’s mouthpiece. Referring to the Rand Corporation study, which Kelly used to divert attention from the department’s still unexplained tactical failures in the Bell shooting, the Times’ Taser editorial stated: “The [Rand] study, released earlier this month, made several suggestions, including training police to avoid indiscriminate firings. The Taser proposal has attracted the most attention.”