Where Was Cy?
May 28, 2012
Why didn’t Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance attend Police Commissioner Ray Kelly’s momentous news conference last Thursday on the Etan Patz case?
Kelly announced that a suspect the public had never heard of — Pedro Hernandez, a worker in a bodega near where six-year-old Etan disappeared — had been arrested after confessing to Etan’s 1979 murder, and implied the case was solved.
Sources say Kelly had expressly invited [some say strong-armed] Vance to the news conference while excluding the FBI, which had worked with the NYPD for decades on the Patz case.
While, at his news conference, Kelly indicated that Hernandez’s admission had ended the 33-year-old hunt for Etan’s killer, Bureau officials remain skeptical, the sources said.
The FBI had expressed similar doubts about Kelly’s trumpeted arrests in two recent terrorism cases involving so-called “lone wolves,” distancing itself from both.
In each case, the so-called lone wolves — Ahmed Ferhani and Mohamed Mamdouh in the first case, and Jose Pimentel in the second — were indicted by Vance in state court because the FBI did not consider any of the suspects to be serious terrorism threats.
At each news conference, announcing their arrests, it was Vance, not the FBI, who stood at Kelly’s side.
By choosing not to appear with Kelly at last week’s news conference, Vance, too, appeared to express doubts.
His absence was all the more noticeable, considering the last line of Kelly’s press statement, announcing Hernandez’s arrest and confession: “We are working very closely with the Manhattan District Attorney.”
A top city law enforcement official said that Vance’s reluctance to attend Thursday’s news conference may also be related his re-election effort in 18 months and his attempt to avoid a repeat of another headline-grabbing case in which he followed the NYPD’s lead — his premature arrest last year of Dominique Strauss-Kahn.
Shortly after the NYPD pulled DSK off a Paris-bound plane, following his encounter with a maid in the Sofitel Hotel, Vance charged him with sexual abuse and attempted rape — only to drop the charges because of subsequent doubts about the maid’s credibility.
Instead, without Vance, Kelly had S. Andrew Schaffer, the NYPD’s Deputy Commissioner of Legal Matters at the news conference, apparently to give Hernandez’s arrest a legal imprimatur.
Schaffer was a silent prop. As with all Kelly news conferences, only the commissioner spoke for the department.
Sources also say that Vance is seeking to ensure that the FBI remains involved in the case.
Just a month ago, the Bureau dug up a SoHo basement near where Etan disappeared, but failed to find evidence implicating another suspect.
After Hernandez’s arrest, FBI agents attended case meetings at Vance’s office along with the NYPD, sources say.
“The impression I am getting is that Vance wants the FBI involved even if it’s only to raise his comfort zone with the investigative steps that remain before going to a grand jury,” the source said.
Furthermore, sources say that neither the DA’s office nor the FBI helped interrogate Hernandez in Camden, New Jersey. The interrogation, which led to a confession, was an exclusive NYPD affair.
The problem with Hernandez’s confession and arrest, say law enforcement officials, is not that the police arrested him prematurely. As NYPD spokesman Paul Browne pointed out, once Hernandez confessed, detectives had no other choice than to arrest him.
Rather, the problem is Kelly’s never-ending penchant for publicity and self-promotion [to say nothing of diverting people from his much-criticized Stop and Frisk and Muslim spying policies].
For, in the Patz case, Hernandez’s arrest is not the final step but only the beginning.
Hernandez’s history of mental illness means that his confession, by itself, is not enough to indict, much less to convict.
“I have a bad feeling,” said retired NYPD Lieu. Commander Vernon Geberth, the author of a definitive textbook on homicide.
“You need more than a confession. You need a body. You need forensic evidence. And there is none.”