When the chairman of the Mayor’s Commission to Combat Police Corruption sought police files to investigate the unions’ charges, Kelly refused to release them.
Bloomberg said and did nothing. The chairman resigned.
“Those allegations didn’t get the light they should have then,” said Lynch last week. “It looks like they are now.”
CRONIES. When Kelly returned as police commissioner in 2002, many people — Your Humble Servant included — believed he would crack down on cronyism, which reached new heights under his predecessor, Bernie Kerik. How naïve we were.
Take the 113th precinct in Queens. Two weeks ago, this column described the shenanigans of its commanding officer, Deputy Inspector Kristel Johnson, and her boss, the former Queens South Borough Assistant Chief Thomas V. Dale.
To cover up her mistakes, Johnson scapegoated lower-ranking officers, while protecting well-connected higher-ups, like Captain Matthew Travaglia, the precinct’s executive officer.
In May 2009, the department’s Internal Affairs Bureau charged Travaglia with failing to obtain permission to moonlight as a lawyer, and for actually running his law practice while claiming to be working at the precinct.
Despite his alleged misconduct, Borough Commander Dale — in total disregard of department protocol — then approved Travaglia’s moonlighting, police sources say.
Johnson allowed him to work nights, so he could continue practicing law during the day.
Kelly’s response? Earlier this year, he promoted Dale to Chief of Personnel.
Ten days ago, he promoted Johnson to full inspector.
THE BIG LIE. For four days, Commissioner Kelly and spokesman Browne tried to convince the public that a traffic or school safety officer — not a cop — had refused to aid 11-year-old asthma victim Briana Ojeda, who died in the emergency room at Long Island College Hospital.
Some kind of officer allegedly told Briana’s mother, Carmen, that he did not know how to perform CPR, which, Kelly and Browne reminded the public, every cop knows how to do.
Meanwhile, the Ojeda family hired attorney Bonita Zelman, who learned from witnesses that the useless officer had also hindered Carmen Ojeda’s desperate drive to the hospital to save her daughter.
Zelman stated publicly that if Kelly didn’t identify and suspend the officer by that day’s end, she would be in court the next morning to obtain the necessary documents to unmask the cop.
She added that, if Kelly was unable to identify him four days after Briana died, then the city needed a new police commissioner.
An hour and a half later, Kelly held a news conference and identified the police officer as Alfonso Mendez.
CLOSING UP OR RELOCATING? Giuliani Partners is closing its doors but the firm is not closing its doors. It’s moving from its 5 Times Square office some ten blocks uptown to Bracewell and Giuliani, the Houston-based firm that the former mayor joined as a named partner in 2005.
“Rudy is merely consolidating his locations,” said Pat D’Amuro, who heads Rudy’s subsidiary, Giuliani Security and Safety. “No one is being laid off.”
Others point out that the Giuliani brand began sinking after his disastrous 2008 presidential run. It sunk further with Kerik’s guilty plea to fraud and tax charges, and reached a new low last month with the arrest of his daughter Caroline for shoplifting.