Secret Spook About to Vanish
January 24, 2011
The Police Department’s Assistant Spook in Residence is departing.
His shadowy presence at the NYPD for the past six years has been so secretive that, outside of a few top officials, no one knows who is he is or what he does.
His name is Laurence H. Sanchez. The department’s roster lists him as Assistant Commissioner in the Intelligence Division, just below fellow former spook, Deputy Commissioner David Cohen.
Spook is shorthand for CIA. Like Cohen, Sanchez worked there, starting in 1984. In 2004 he joined the NYPD.
Whether he formally left the CIA is another question. Check out the vertical website “zoominfo.” There, he is listed as a “CIA liaison to the NYPD.”
What exactly was his job at the police department?
Christopher Dickey wrote in Newsweek in 2009 that “Sanchez was able to keep Cohen abreast of anything and everything the CIA learned abroad, including whatever information about New York might be spilled by prisoners interrogated at the agency’s ‘black sites.’”
So who is Sanchez? His bona fides are formidable. He has a degree in geophysics with a minor in Russian from the University of Montana. He is a power-lifter, boxing titlist and a master-qualified scuba diver. He speaks Russian and Portuguese and is an expert in nuclear proliferation.
At the CIA, he served as an assistant to its Executive Director. He spent four years in its Non-Proliferation Center and a year as a deputy team chief for nuclear forces inspections in the former Soviet Union. In 1998, he was seconded to the Energy Department as its Director of Intelligence.
He did not return phone messages to his NYPD office at the Chelsea redoubt where he is still said to work.
A former top NYPD official described him as “an American patriot.”
Working with Cohen, he is said to have played a key role in expanding the NYPD’s Intelligence Division.
Sanchez, said the official, helped develop “an effective expanded Intelligence Division within constitutional boundaries. He came from that world and provided expert guidance and suggestions. He well understood the domestic threat and the idea that any intelligence program had to operate within the boundaries of the Constitution. He knew the area he was in. It didn’t need to be explained to him.”
But this description of the Intelligence Division belies what others say: that it has become a mini-CIA, operating under no restraints whatsoever.
In fact, another former top police official described the Intelligence Division to this reporter two years ago as a “mini-CIA within a municipal agency without the safeguards to ensure that it does not break the law.”
He added: “What mechanisms are in place to ensure that the NYPD does not become a rogue organization?”
If there are such safeguards, Police Commissioner Kelly has never spelled them out to the public.
In fact, Kelly has run the Intelligence Division for the past ten years without civilian oversight and public accountability.
And Mayor Michael Bloomberg, whether out of ignorance, design, or fear of Kelly, has abdicated his mayoral responsibility to monitor the NYPD and the police commissioner.
Sanchez’s own words have added to the perception that the Intelligence Division has no safeguards.
Before the Senate’s Committee on Homeland Security in 2007 — as reported by Dickey on pages 236-239 of his book, “Securing the City: Inside America’s Best Counter-Terrorism Force” — Sanchez testified that “rather than just protecting New York City citizens from terrorists, the NYPD believes that part of its mission is to protect New York citizens from turning into terrorists.”
Dickey adds: “In other words, the police would save Muslims from themselves.”
New York City, Sanchez testified, “has created its own methods to be able to understand them [terrorists], to be able to identify them and to be able to make judgment calls if these are things that we need to worry about.”
“The federal government doesn’t have that mission,” Sanchez added. “They’re going to have a heck of a lot harder time [to reach] a standard of criminality that you need if your prime objective is you’re going to lock them up.’”
Besides these words, there is evidence to suggest that the Intelligence Division has already gone rogue.
After the 9/ll terrorist attacks, Kelly sought to eliminate all restrictions on police surveillance mandated by the Handschu agreement, which was enacted to curb the excesses of the 1960s when police officers infiltrated radical political groups and encouraged their members to commit illegal acts.
Agreeing to Kelly’s demands, federal judge Charles Haight eliminated Handschu restrictions in early 2003, granting the NYPD virtually unlimited surveillance powers.
That spring, following two anti-Iraq war demonstrations in Manhattan, the Intelligence Division abused the freedom Judge Haight had given them.