Bernie Kerik: Tragedy Or Farce?
January 26, 2009
Facing about 150 years in the slammer for tax fraud and other crimes, Bernie Kerik seems caught in a time warp, in that sliver of renown when he served as police commissioner during that most terrible day for our nation — 9/11.
He still imagines himself a hero, the defender of liberty and patriotism. Perhaps this is his way of denying a painful truth — that his own government, which he professes to revere, accuses of him of being a tax cheat and a liar and of betraying the public trust to line his pocket. Make that plural — pockets.
On his website, he clings to his opinion — some might say his delusion. In a recent posting, he detailed his efforts to make a suburban store show proper respect for the American flag.
“Yesterday afternoon I had to run to the store for a few things and took my eight-year-old daughter Celine with me,” he wrote on January 18th. “As we pulled into the parking lot of a Sports Authority in Paramus, New Jersey, Celine quickly brought to my attention an American flag that was ripped to shreds, waving in the wind — literally in two separate pieces. She said, ‘That’s terrible, maybe we should tell someone to take it down.’”
The rest of Kerik’s post concerned his attempts to persuade Sports Authority officials to replace the tattered flag — what Kerik called “the shredded symbol of hope that was hoisted above their store.”
After — wrote Kerik — getting no satisfaction from a salesman, a cashier and the store’s apparel manager, he contacted the store manager, saying, “Sir, there is an American flag flying in the parking lot that is shredded to pieces that needs to be taken down. …
“As calmly as I could, not to upset Celine,” he continued, “I reminded him that leaving the flag as it is is disrespectful; it dishonors not only the flag, or the symbol it represents, but also our country and the hundreds of thousands of men and women that have died defending it and the principles of liberty and equality that that flag represent.”
He concluded his article as follows: “If you don’t have the common sense and patriotism to honor our flag, our country, and the men and women in our armed forces, past and present — you can’t have the benefit of my business.”
Kerik’s most recent posting, on Jan. 24th, about President Obama’s national security team, further indicates that he is stuck in the past, in the days before his fall from grace. In his mind, everything is 9/11.
“I didn’t watch the events of that day on television or hear about it on the radio. I witnessed first-hand, the sights and sounds of the second jet air liner slamming through Tower II of the World Trade Center. I remember the screams of witnesses stunned by the horror and the smells of the burning buildings. Even today, seven years later, I can close my eyes and replay the visuals of innocents jumping from the top floors of the buildings to their death. And by day’s end of what started out as a beautiful September morning, I re-live constantly the gut-wrenching walk into a conference room in New York City Police Headquarters to tell twenty-three different families that their loved ones were missing.”
Back then, nobody knew what corners Kerik was allegedly cutting, what rules and moral codes he was apparently breaking — from his sexual misadventures to his acceptance of free apartment renovations from a company with supposed mob ties that did business with the city, to the free use of an Upper East Side apartment that he never reported in his city financial disclosure form.
David Cardona, special agent in charge of the FBI’s New York Criminal Division, made it clear at Kerik’s 16-count indictment in 2007. “Moral relativism is not an appropriate yardstick for our public officials,” he said. “The only acceptable level of corruption in a trusted government office is zero. A beat cop accepting a free cup of coffee or a meal ‘on the arm’ is properly viewed by the public as wrongdoing. If the free cup of coffee is wrong, Kerik’s long list of alleged crimes is repugnant.”