John Miller: The Daily News Hatchet Job
January 6, 2014
The Daily News, which once called itself “the honest voice of New York,” or some such nonsense, took a day off last Friday from its first-snowfall-of-the-year coverage to publish a front page hit, as well as a lead editorial and a separate news story, bashing the NYPD’s incoming terrorism head, John Miller.
The full front page read: “TV GUY IS NEW TERROR CHIEF,” with a box at the bottom, saying: “In a surprising move, Bratton [Police Commissioner Bill Bratton] has named former TV news star John Miller as the city’s anti-terror honcho — a massive role for which he has minimal experience.”
The paper’s two-column lead editorial the same day stated that “Miller’s government service pales in comparison with that of those who served on [outgoing police commissioner] Ray Kelly’s team,” and described Miller as “a cub” when compared to outgoing Intelligence Division head David Cohen.
The editorial also stated that the four men who served as deputy commissioner for counter-terrorism under Kelly each had “a resumé far more impressive than Miller’s.”
The editorial omitted the fact that none of them stayed for more than a couple of years, and that the first of them, three-star marine general Frank Libutti, left after 14 months with no credible public explanation.
Or that another of them, Richard Falkenrath, insisted on having two police department drivers and two top-of-the-line luxury vehicles that the department leased for him at a cost to taxpayers of $20,000 a year.
Or that, after a homeless man made the mistake of stopping at Falkenrath’s Riverdale home to ask for a glass of water, police held him in a psychiatric ward for five weeks, then escorted him aboard an airplane to relatives in Chicago.
The Friday news story on Miller, with the bylines of no less than five reporters, included the statement: “The gap in experience between Miller and Cohen is staggering, leading some to question whether Bratton made the right choice.”
Make no mistake, readers: this was an attack not just on Miller but on Bratton.
It was a shot across Bratton’s bow that reads as though it may have been hatched by Kelly, Cohen and Daily News owner, Mortimer Zuckerman. Back in 2004, Zuckerman was the beneficiary of the work of three Intelligence Division detectives, assigned by Cohen to conduct a private investigation for Zuckerman.
But the News’s attack on Miller could have an unintended consequence.
It could open the first public debate about the terrorism-fighting methods and legacy of both Cohen and Kelly — methods and legacy that Miller, with his three years as an Assistant Director of the FBI and two years as Assistant Deputy Director of National Intelligence, is in a position to impugn.
O.K., readers, you well might ask, What’s to debate?
Well, let’s start with the so-called 16 plots against the city, which Kelly and Cohen have claimed that the NYPD alone prevented — a canard that the News perpetuates to this day.
Check out this sentence — [if you can get through it] — from the Miller-denigrating editorial: “Independently cultivating terror watchfulness globally and on the streets of New York the [Intelligence] division headed off 16 plots against the city.”
We might also debate how and why the Intelligence Division is currently the subject of two civil rights lawsuits for spying on constitutionally protected activities of Muslims.
And because of Kelly’s and Cohen’s belittling of the NYPD's law enforcement partners, we might debate why its Intelligence Division has no meaningful collaborative relationship with any other law enforcement agencies, save perhaps the police in Abu Dhabi.
This is no exaggeration. Recall the urban Mexican standoff between the NYPD and the Port Authority Police back in 2006 at the barriers of Ground Zero — NYPD patrol cars on the outside, Port Authority police just inside the gate. The stare-down was a turf war. That’s how you fight terrorism?
Or the bizarre diplomatic imbroglio at Kennedy Airport in 2007 when, on Cohen’s orders, Intelligence Division Chief Tom Galati held up the arriving Iranian delegation to the U.N. for 40 minutes, to the chagrin of the Port Authority Police, the Secret Service and the State Department’s Diplomatic Security Service — not to mention the State Department itself.