Eight Years Too Late
January 23, 2012
We would like to apologize for past warnings not to believe more than 50 per cent of anything that emanates from the mouth of police spokesman Paul Browne. We were far too generous.
The credibility, or lack thereof, concerning Mr. Truth — as he is known to readers of this column — was on blatant display over the Daily News’s front page story on Saturday.
The story was about Commissioner Ray Kelly’s extraordinary “policing 101 refresher” memo, as the Daily News termed it, that Browne called “routine.”
This memo was anything but routine. It specifically forbade officers from ignoring crime victims, as critics have charged the NYPD has done since at least 2004.
It ordered cops to stop using tricks to avoid taking crime reports, such as referring victims to the precinct where the crime occurred, or refusing to write up a complaint when the victim can’t identify the suspect, can’t provide a receipt for stolen items, refuses to view photographs, or doesn’t want to prosecute an offender.
Asked by the News’s police bureau chief Rocco Parascandola what had prompted Kelly’s memo, Browne further defied common sense, saying it was unrelated to the escalating concerns throughout the city about the reliability of the NYPD’s crime reporting.
“We use operations to periodically remind personnel of proper procedures,” Browne told the paper. He did not return an email or phone call from this reporter, seeking a truer explanation.
About the only people who might believe his nonsense are the Great Minds of the editorial boards of the Daily News and the New York Post.
We shudder to predict how their subsequent editorials will describe Kelly’s memo: proof, no doubt, that he is dedicated to continued honesty in the counting of crimes.
On the contrary, Kelly’s memo underscores the giant hole in the cornerstone of supposed NYPD successes in lowering crime over the past decade since Kelly returned as commissioner in 2001.
It indicates that for the past eight years Kelly has refused to tackle a widespread, systemic problem, one that some say he himself encouraged by promoting only commanders who produced low crime statistics.
Meanwhile, Mayor Michael Bloomberg has chosen to ignore the problem so that, year after year, he could tout New York City as “the safest big city in America,” a claim that no law enforcement official this reporter has ever spoken to takes seriously.
“This memo should have been written eight years ago when these concerns were first made public,” said a former top police official. “For ten years, Commissioner Kelly has been basking in the glories of reduced crime when those numbers were being questioned. This is what happens when you tell people everything is fine because the police commissioner won’t accept negative news.”
The first police official to publicly sound the alarm was PBA president Patrick Lynch. In 2004, he and the president of the sergeants’ union held a news conference at PBA headquarters, alleging that commanders were ordering cops to downgrade crimes from felonies to misdemeanors to make crime appear lower than it actually was.
Browne’s opaque version of the truth was also evident back then.
He questioned Lynch’s motives, called his allegations “inventions,” and attributed them to a personal dispute with Kelly on an unrelated issue that had led the union to approve a “no confidence” in the commissioner vote the previous month.
Mayor Mike also chimed in, calling Lynch’s allegations “outrageous.”
But Mark Pomerantz, who headed the Mayor’s Commission to Combat Police Corruption, took Lynch’s claims seriously and attempted to investigate. Lacking subpoena power, he requested the department’s Quality Assurance reports of precinct crime statistics. Kelly refused to provide them. Mayor Mike looked away. So Pomerantz resigned.
The Bloomberg/Kelly charade has continued to the present.
In a recent speech to the Police Foundation, described as Kelly’s “State of the NYPD,” Kelly cited current crime statistics to show that the city is the safest it has been since 1963.
O.K., so what prompted Kelly’s memo?
A major factor seems to be the continuing embarrassment over the case of whistle-blower cop Adrian Schoolcraft. He’s the Brooklyn officer who told the department’s Quality Assurance Bureau in Oct. 2009, that commanders in the 81st precinct had ordered cops to downgrade felonies to misdemeanors and to discourage victims from filing complaints.
Three weeks later, a cop posse, led by a deputy chief, visited Schoolcraft’s apartment in Queens and dragged him against his will to Jamaica Hospital, where he was held in its psychiatric ward for six days.
A year later, Kelly disciplined the 81st precinct’s commanding officer and four other supervisors for having doctored crime statistics, just as Schoolcraft had claimed. Yet Kelly never mentioned Schoolcraft’s name.