Kelly vs. the FBI: Round 17,000
March 7, 2011
Is Police Commissioner Ray Kelly really going to close the Joint Bank Robbery Task Force, as he has threatened?
He appears to be hesitating.
Pulling the NYPD’s six detectives from the task force may seem minor.
But beneath the surface, the matter is fraught with significance.
In high-level law enforcement — where obfuscating, and even dissembling, are a way of doing business — symbols can be more important than numbers and statistics.
And the Joint Bank Robbery Task Force, which is comprised of FBI agents and NYPD detectives, is a symbol.
Until the task force was formed in 1979, both the FBI and NYPD — agencies long at odds — had jurisdiction over all bank robberies.
Until then, the FBI patronized local police agencies, including the corruption-prone NYPD, which the Bureau considered an untrustworthy partner. Feuds and rivalries complicated their bank robbery investigations.
In the spirit of law enforcement cooperation, the Joint Bank Robbery Task Force was created to handle armed bank robberies. The NYPD’s Major Case Squad took over the less serious “note jobs.”
The task force proved so successful that it became a symbol of cooperation between the FBI and the NYPD.
It became the model for the Joint Terrorist Task Force, formed a year later, which is also comprised of NYPD detectives and FBI agents. That, in turn, became the model for joint FBI and police terrorist task forces across the country.
Such local and federal cooperation has a special resonance in New York City, which is the nation’s primary terrorist target.
You might think that, under these circumstances, it would be a good idea for the NYPD to make nice with the FBI. Instead, since becoming police commissioner in 2002, Commissioner Kelly has gone out of his way to disparage the Bureau.
He has repeatedly criticized the FBI for failing to prevent the World Trade Center attacks and, a decade later, continues to go his own way.
With this stance, he has cultivated an image as the nation’s premier terrorism fighter.
Last month, a National Geographic television special, “Counter-Terror NYC,” showcased NYPD sniper teams carrying assault weapons at high-profile events to guard against terrorists and showed a NYPD high-tech patrol boat with a radiation detector to spot a dirty bomb.
Last week, a group called the National Committee on American Foreign Policy presented Kelly with an award for creating the country’s first counter-terrorism bureau for a municipal police department.
Neither National Geographic nor the Foreign Policy Committee addressed the fact that Kelly goes out of his way to antagonize the FBI and other government agencies fighting terrorism and that his actions often contradict sensible policy.
His much-heralded stationing of NYPD detectives overseas was a direct slap at the Bureau, which has “legates,” or legal attachés, in many of the same overseas countries.
Other actions calculated to upset the FBI:
Sending NYPD detectives on out-of-state, anti-terrorism forays without alerting the Bureau, which has national jurisdiction in such matters.
Dispatching NYPD detectives across the country, supposedly for “national security,” to spy on protestors planning to demonstrates at the 2004 Republican National Convention at Madison Square Garden — also without informing the Bureau.
Despite these slights, FBI leaders seem to have bent over backwards so as not to antagonize Kelly.
Mark Mershon, who headed the FBI’s New York office from 2005-2008, explained shortly after arriving in the city that his first priority was to get along with Kelly.
In an unprecedented Bureau move, Mershon’s successor, Joe Demarest, was hired from retirement, at least in part because of his positive relationship with Kelly.