Maple on Rachel: How Scrumptious
September 29, 2014
Perhaps it reflected a new era of good feeling, ushered in by Commissioner Bill Bratton’s collaborative-policing approach. Or perhaps it was just a bunch of law enforcement guys getting older and becoming mellow.
But last week the NYPD engaged in a rare event at Police Plaza: a love-fest.
The occasion celebrated the life and times of the late Jack Maple — The Jackster, as he called himself — who is regarded as the founder of CompStat, which provides the department with a statistical-based approach to fight crime.
Maple first outlined the computer-based program on a table napkin at Elaine’s restaurant, circa 1994. It is now considered the “raison d’être” of the city’s dramatic crime drop over the past 20 years.
Scores of law enforcement personnel spoke of Maple in the kind of majestic awe that might befit Alexander the Great or Mao Tse Tung, both of whom Maple had been compared to before he died in 2001.
The event drew former Mayor David Dinkins and current Mayor Bill de Blasio who, in a humbling tribute to a man he never knew, conceded Maple was probably a more important attendee of Brooklyn Technical High School than hizzoner’s son, Dante.
At least on the educational front, let’s hope the mayor has better luck with Dante than Maple Sr. had with Jack, who never graduated from Brooklyn Tech and only later received a General Education Diploma.