The Police Foundation: Captured by the Kellys
December 14, 2009
Police Commissioner Ray Kelly and his wife Veronica must be feeling pretty smug. They have forced out the Police Foundation’s longtime and conscientious executive director Pamela Delaney.
Kelly had groused that Delaney was earning too much money, smarting that her $214,680 salary topped his by almost $2,000.
Veronica Kelly told Delaney she could do her job, no doubt emboldened after volunteering for the foundation’s last fundraiser and helping to select the dinner menu, entertainment and table floral arrangements.
In forcing Delaney to resign after 26 years, during which time she vastly expanded the foundation’s resources and donor base, the Kellys have taken control of an organization that is supposed to be independent of the police department. A legacy of the 1970s Knapp Commission, the foundation was established as an anti-corruption measure to provide funds for the department as the police commissioner saw fit.
Instead, at times, the foundation has metamorphosed into a legal slush fund for misguided vanity projects of the commissioners.
In 1994, Bill Bratton wheedled $137,000 from the foundation for his image consultant John Linder, to prepare what Linder called a “cultural diagnostic.” Linder defined this as an “analytic tool that determines the cultural factors impeding performance and the corrective values that must be employed as principles for organizational change.”
Perhaps, like Linder, one needs a degree from Columbia University to understand such gibberish.
Seven years later, the foundation paid several thousand dollars for 30 plaster-of-Paris busts of then commissioner Bernie Kerik that he could give to friends when he left office. Delaney was so embarrassed when Newsday uncovered this that she hid the remainder of the busts that Kerik hadn’t given away.
In perhaps her finest hour, Delaney refused to fund Howard Safir’s brainstorm that it pay for a newspaper advertisement to counter a no-confidence vote by the Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association.
More than any other commissioner, Kelly has inserted himself into the foundation’s daily affairs.
Last year, the foundation began funding his vanity project — “The Raymond W. Kelly Graduate Scholarship,” which grants a $15,000 stipend and a 10 ½ month leave of absence to obtain a graduate degree in governmental administration or a police-related program at Harvard, Yale, Princeton or Columbia. [It is not specified that the degree requirement includes an understanding of Linder’s cultural diagnostic.]
The foundation also paid for an image consultant to promote Kelly as the face of the foundation for its fundraising among potential high-end contributors.
The hiring of the consultant — a former Ralph Lauren PR guy, Hamilton South — coincided with Kelly’s interest in running for mayor.
Since 9/11, the foundation has raised double the amount of money it had in the past, collecting $6 million last year.
Much of that money has paid the $75,000 in annual expenses for each NYPD detective that Kelly has stationed in about a dozen terrorism hotspots overseas.
Since the department has no legal authority outside New York City, and since the detectives’ deployment is beyond the city charter, the money to run these overseas efforts cannot come from the city budget.
Except for exacerbating tensions with the FBI, as occurred after the Madrid train bombing in 2004 when both agencies rushed to be the first to interview the Spanish National police, it is not clear what those postings have accomplished.
More than one police official has questioned whether Kelly’s stationing detectives overseas is another vanity project.
Foundation house-mouse Gregg Roberts, who did not return a phone call last week, is Delaney’s temporary replacement.
A person who answered the phone at the foundation on Friday refused to provide a phone number for its current chairwoman, Valerie Salembier.
The most interesting post-Delaney question is this: With Kelly in control of the foundation, will wife Veronica have an expanded role?
Will Kelly act like Safir who, a decade ago, installed his wife Carol as chairwoman of the Police Museum? She and Howard then attempted, unsuccessfully, to fund the museum by strong-arming Wall Street executives.
PROFILE IN COWARDICE. What kind of newspaper can have the respect of New Yorkers if it doesn’t support its own reporters, as the Daily News has failed to do with police reporter Wil Cruz?
Last month, a police sergeant threatened and cursed Cruz in front of half a dozen witnesses inside the NYPD’s Office of Public Information.