Did Intel Recruit a Criminal?
April 26, 2010
In its rush to recruit an undercover officer to spy on terrorists, the NYPD failed to properly vet a cop now accused in the million-dollar New Jersey perfume heist.
Officer Kelvin Jones, 28, did not undergo a vigorous background check and never attended the Police Academy before he was sent out to infiltrate the suspect group, sources say.
And although he quickly failed in his mission because, as a source put it, “He could not be trusted,” the NYPD kept him on the force.
The Intelligence Division had recruited Jones, who worked at a Footlocker shoe store — literally off the street due to pressure from the top — i.e., Deputy Commissioner of Intelligence David Cohen — to find an African-American to infiltrate the group, sources say.
Jones may have looked the part, but he lasted only a few months as a spy.
It was unclear which problem within his secret unit, known as the Special Security Unit, led to his dismissal.
In Intel’s customary manner, it sought a scapegoat and settled on a lower-level official — Jones’s handler — transferring him from the unit. The handler, a military veteran and decorated undercover, took the fall and kept his mouth shut, and was later reinstated.
As for Jones, instead of dismissing him from the department altogether, Intel bounced him to the 46th precinct in the Bronx, supposedly with the knowledge of the Internal Affairs Bureau, which was to keep an eye on him, sources said.
God only know what other shenanigans Jones has engaged since leaving Intel and working in the 46th precinct.
But last month he was arrested for the Feb. 9 botched hold-up of a perfume warehouse in Carlstadt, New Jersey, along with eight others — two of whom were police officers from the 34th precinct. A retired NYPD cop was also arrested.
According to news reports, Jones had used a database from the precinct to obtain the names, addresses, and license numbers of company employees.
He and the other officers allegedly led the band of thieves, which included 16 day laborers at the warehouse, displaying badges and identifying themselves as police officers to company employees, saying they were conducting a routine inspection.
They then loaded hundreds of boxes of expensive perfumes into five rented trucks, according to the charges.
Jones had allegedly tried to pay for the trucks in cash, but was told it was against company policy, so he used a debit card that didn’t have sufficient funds to cover the $205.79 cost. He then allegedly directed NYPD officer Richard LeBlanca to use his debit card but it, too, lacked sufficient funds. Orlando Garcia, the former NYPD officer, then allegedly used his card to pay.
Jones was charged with conspiracy and faces 20 years in prison. His attorney, Chris Patella of Bayonne, N.J., declined comment, saying, “My advice is that he not talk to people.”
The NYPD’s Deputy Commissioner for Public Information, Paul Browne, did not return an email message seeking comment.
HIS DAY IN COURT. Did Staten Island police mishandle the case of a black man who suffered a broken jaw because his accuser was a white, retired detective?
That’s the question a jury will decide this week in Brooklyn federal court before Judge Jack Weinstein in a civil rights case with racial overtones.
On May 16, 2003, Aaron Wong, a 21-year-old black man, and his girlfriend, 19-year-old Brooke Lopez, parked their car in a cul-de-sac outside a small apartment complex. The son of the complex’s owner, a retired 16-year NYPD veteran, James Mangone, ordered them to leave, saying they were trespassing.