Adrian Schoolcraft: Now It’s Getting Serious
January 31, 2011
Many people think that the worst scandal in today’s NYPD concerns its alleged manipulation of crime numbers. They are wrong.
Even worse is how the department retaliated against the whistleblower cop who came forward with proof that bosses in his Brooklyn precinct had in fact manipulated the numbers.
After officer Adrian Schoolcraft secretly tape-recorded his superiors at the 81st precinct, ordering cops to downgrade felonies to misdemeanors, the department went into attack mode.
This culminated on Oct. 31, 2009, when Brooklyn Deputy Chief Mike Marino and a posse of officers yanked Schoolcraft from his Queens apartment in handcuffs and dragged him to Jamaica Hospital, where he was held in its psychiatric ward, against his will, for six days.
So incredible was this story that few, if anyone — inside or outside law enforcement — believed such a thing could happen here in New York City.
This was America, not the old Soviet Union. This was the NYPD, not the KGB.
In short, many people felt there must have been a legitimate reason for the police to have hospitalized Schoolcraft.
Even this reporter, who is open to most police-abuse tales until proven otherwise, found the story simply unbelievable and was slow to investigate, despite an early heads up from Schoolcraft’s father about his son’s forced hospital stay. [See box in column at right.]
Instead, in early 2010 the Daily News broke the story, although it focused more on Schoolcraft’s allegations of cooking the crime books than on his forced hospitalization.
Since then, Schoolcraft has been vindicated on his crime-downgrading allegations. The top commanders of the 81st precinct have all been given departmental charges and/or been transferred.
But, on the hospital front, many people continue to believe that Schoolcraft must be a psycho in need of hospitalization.
The fact that he had not complained to any law enforcement agency, but instead filed a $50-million lawsuit against the police department only heightened the sense that the dozen or so police officers had a legitimate reason to break into his apartment after he left work early that October day, and drag him off to the hospital.
If Schoolcraft was telling the truth and had nothing to hide, the argument went, why hasn’t he provided his full hospital records to an investigative agency?
Well, that is about to change.
Last week, Schoolcraft’s attorney, Jon Norinsberg, sent off to Queens District Attorney Richard Brown a signed permission to view Schoolcraft’s full Jamaica Hospital records, as well as audiotapes of the police raid on Schoolcraft’s apartment.
While Brown may love the police a little too much, the Judge, as he is known, is an honest prosecutor and runs an honest shop.
His first assistant, Jack Ryan, is also legit. He was the prosecutor two decades ago, then working for the Attorney General, who wrote the report concluding that Tawana Brawley had made up her story of being raped by a group of white men, and that Al Sharpton, who rode to national prominence on her lies, was also full of it.
“We haven’t received it yet,” Ryan said of Schoolcraft’s records. “We are anxious to see it. When we do, we will take appropriate action.”
THE VANISHING SPOOK [Con't] Here’s some more information on the department’s Number Two Spook, Assistant Commissioner of Intelligence Larry Sanchez.
Or rather, the department’s former Number Two Spook.
Turns out that Sanchez isn’t about to vanish into the night, as this column reported last week. He has already said sayonara to the NYPD.
Apparently, he is so secret that the department made no announcement, official or otherwise, of his departure.
But sources say he has joined the private sector world of international spookdom and is already out and about, traveling through the Middle East and South Africa, armed with at least one fat government security contract. The sources say he might even open a branch office right back here in little old New York.