Appointing the Mayor’s Detail
May 3, 2010
Who selects the head of Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s security detail?
Is it the mayor, or Police Commissioner Ray Kelly?
That’s the question some are asking as the detail’s longtime head, Deputy Inspector Charles Dunne, retires and Bloomberg seeks to replace him with the detail’s lieutenant, John Brennan.
If you’re a betting man, you’d be wise to choose the mayor.
There are two theories — rumors, some might say — on Kelly’s attitude about this: He is merely annoyed, or downright furious that Bloomberg has pre-empted him.
On one point, however, everyone agrees: Kelly is too smart and too disciplined to complain in public.
Mayoral details are one of the few areas — perhaps the only area — where Bloomberg has pushed back against the police commissioner, to whom he has given more power than any other in the city’s history.
In 2002 when Bloomberg became mayor and Rudy Giuliani was still viewed as the hero of 9/11, Bloomberg ordered Kelly to provide the former mayor with a permanent police detail.
For the next 18 months, Kelly assigned up to two dozen detectives to protect Rudy, his wife, two children, his mother, and his then-mistress, Judy Nathan.
Kelly was a good soldier but he was not a happy camper. It wasn’t merely that he recognized —more clearly than Bloomberg did — that Giuliani, now a private citizen with a multi-million dollar income, could afford to pay for his own private security.
More important, Kelly resented Giuliani for having dismissed him — a David Dinkins appointee — as police commissioner when Giuliani became mayor in 1994.
When Bloomberg ended Giuliani’s detail a year later, Kelly took his revenge.
Powerless against Giuliani, he retaliated against the detail’s detectives, whose lives he controlled.
He transferred some of the detectives to assignments as far from their homes as possible. For example, he reassigned two detectives who lived in Staten Island to the farthest reaches of Manhattan and the Bronx.
But Kelly’s revenge was short-lived. After hearing from Giuliani, Bloomberg ordered Kelly to reassign them closer to home. Openings for the two Staten Island detectives materialized in the local District Attorney’s office of William Murphy. Murphy, a Democrat, had defeated Guy Molinari, a Republican, in the last DA’s race. Kelly had publicly supported Molinari.
As for the current detail, D.I. Dunne will become a federal marshal; no doubt because of Bloomberg’s backing. As for Brennan, he is the equivalent of NYPD royalty, as a member of the Brooklyn-based Brennan clan. His father, Paddy Brennan, was a two-star chief. His late brother Dermot continued to serve the NYPD for 12 years after he was diagnosed with brain cancer and underwent a series of operations, chemotherapy and radiation. In Dec. 2002, five days after yet another surgery, which left his arm and leg partially paralyzed, he walked across the stage at Police Plaza to receive his final promotion, to first grade detective.
So Brennan will continue to accompany the mayor on his weekend jaunts to Bermuda. These are becoming controversial, which may explain why Mayor Mike wants someone at his side whom he knows and trusts, not someone appointed by Kelly.
The Times reported last week that Bloomberg travels to Bermuda with two officers who have special permission to carry weapons, which are largely forbidden in Bermuda. Meanwhile, the island’s Ministry of Home Affairs denies that the mayor comes with armed guards.
As the department’s official unofficial historian Mike Bosak put it: Who would you believe, the Bermuda Home Ministry or The Times?
The Times also reported that Bloomberg “has walled off his life in Bermuda from voters in New York, arguing it is none of their business,” and hosts “small parties at his house [where] … gardeners have stopped trimming the vegetation … [and it] now largely blocks the view from the water.”