After de Blasio placed Sharpton next to him at a City Hall event following the “choke-hold” death of Eric Garner, with Bratton on his other side, people at Police Plaza began saying that Sharpton runs the police department. Until he fires Noerdlinger, they’re going to say Sharpton runs City Hall.
IN PRAISE OF DIVERSITY? Ethnic politics is now front and center in the city’s criminal justice landscape.
Just ask Police Commissioner Bill Bratton. Or Brooklyn DA Ken Thompson.
Last week, a group of Hispanic officers accused Bratton of dissing Hispanics in general, and in particular, former First Deputy Commissioner Rafael Pineiro, the department’s highest ranking Hispanic officer. Bratton forced Pineiro to retire last month with no credible explanation.
The criticism of Bratton, by the National Latino Officers Association, stemmed from what the group termed a “media blackout” of the department’s Hispanic Heritage Celebration month at Police Plaza last Tuesday.
The blackout, said a news release from the NLOA’s executive chairman, retired sergeant Anthony Miranda, “eliminated any public or community recognition for the growing Hispanic law enforcement community.”
Although Bratton “spoke of a ‘commitment to diversity,’’’ said Miranda, “it was a pledge only heard by those present. Hispanic officers wonder if his words were just for the event or was he truly committed because in the past he made similar statements about the longevity of … Pineiro and six months later Pineiro was forced to retire.”
Despite lobbying efforts by Hispanic officer groups, Bratton has given no hint whether he will appoint another Hispanic officer to succeed Pineiro or whether he might appoint Chief of Department Phil Banks, the department’s highest ranking black officer.
Meanwhile in Brooklyn last week, Thompson announced at another Hispanic Heritage Month celebration that he would appoint Eric Gonzalez as his office’s first ever Latino Chief Assistant. Gonzalez, who has been with the DA’s office since 1995 under Thompson’s longtime predecessor Joe Hynes, has served as Thompson’s counsel since his election last November.
But what of Thompson’s current chief assistant, Mark Feldman, a veteran state and federal prosecutor, who is white and Jewish and whom Thompson appointed chief assistant after his election?
“This has nothing to do with race,” said Thompson’s spokeswoman, Lupe Todd, of the office shake-up. “And no, Mark didn’t do anything bad to the DA, none of that.”
Thompson, she said, “was very open and honest when he announced that Mark had walked in the door with him as DA and helped him with the transition.”
Feldman, she added, will become the Senior Executive Assistant District Attorney for Crime Strategies and Investigations, reporting to Gonzalez. She later corrected that to say that Feldman would report to Thompson. Feldman did not respond to an email from NYPD Confidential, seeking comment.
So what’s actually going on? Said a DA from another borough who asked for anonymity: probably the chemistry between Thompson and Feldman wasn’t right and they kicked him upstairs.
Either that or at least for now, it’s better to have a surname of Gonzalez than Feldman.