Kelly Speaks Out: Why?
June 22, 2015
Law enforcement guys have a code. Often mistreated by their bosses and misunderstood by the media, their ethic is to suck it up, shut your mouth and move on.
Not Ray Kelly, though.
Last week the most powerful and longest-serving police commissioner in the city’s history lit into Mayor de Blasio [and implicitly Police Commissioner Bill Bratton] for limiting Kelly’s controversial policy of Stop and Frisk, which Kelly said has led to an increase in homicides and shootings.
“For over two decades,” he told Fox News’s Maria Bartiromo, “New York City has been made safer as a result of proactive policing, police using their own initiative.” Now, he saw “a certain hesitancy on the part of police to engage. …All signals that are being given lately to police officers are: ‘Don’t get involved, don’t engage in this type of practice.’”
Referring to de Blasio’s and Bratton’s recent comments, dismissing the importance of the crime spike as confined to gang members in only ten precincts, Kelly said, “For people to say ‘Oh, they’re only gang members,' you know, I thought all lives matter. That was a very strange signal from this administration here in this city.”
Asked where those signals emanated from, Kelly said, “From the mayor.”
O.K., so what’s going on here? Why did Kelly speak out?
Was it, as people at Police Plaza say, because his memoir [modestly sub-titled ‘My Life Serving America’] is due out this fall and Kelly wants to sound controversial?
Was it his 20-year rivalry with Bratton, which began in 1994 when Bratton replaced him as police commissioner and repeats itself today?
Most likely, he wants to protect his legacy, which, in today’s climate of African-American anti-police distrust, is daily being shredded. His overuse of Stop-and-Frisk has been declared unconstitutional, resulting in a federal monitor and inspector general — supervision the NYPD has never before experienced.
Even his counter-terrorism claims are being questioned. Top Bratton officials refute Kelly’s assertions [albeit not for attribution] that he prevented numerous plots against the city.