How Rahm Did In Garry
December 7, 2015
At a major conference of city police chiefs in San Francisco two years ago, ex-Chicago police Superintendent Garry McCarthy’s phone was constantly ringing. Each time it was his boss, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel.
“This is the fifth call I’ve gotten from him today. This is my life with this guy,” he told a former NYPD colleague attending the conference. “He knows I am out of town. He tortures me. He’s a micromanager. He’s like [Rudy] Giuliani on steroids.”
After the conference, McCarthy took a couple of days to travel north through the wine country with his soon-to-be second wife, whom he had met in Chicago. It was there McCarthy suffered a heart attack.
“This was a healthy man,” said a former top NYPD official. “He worked out every day. He was playing football for the PBA at age 40.” He and other former NYPD colleagues attribute his heart attack, at least in part, to the pressures from Emanuel.
McCarthy was also volatile. In 2005, as an NYPD deputy commissioner, he was arrested, handcuffed and disarmed by a Palisades Parkway police officer after protesting a parking ticket given to his daughter. The incident escalated when his former wife Gina grabbed Garry’s confiscated gun from the arresting officer.
But he was also regarded in the NYPD as an aggressive, intelligent and community-minded officer. “He came up with a program to close off streets to drug dealers,” said a former top NYPD official. “An integral part of the plan involved community cooperation.”
NYPD police sources said McCarthy was blindsided by Emanuel, who fired him last week. During his four-year tenure in Chicago, the sources say, he had repeatedly told his former colleagues in New York, “The mayor has my back.”