The NYPD's Schnorring Commissioners
May 2, 2016
Guess which top NYPD official has joined the Harvard Club? None other than Commissioner Bill Bratton.
Guess who picked up Bratton’s tab — listed in his 2014 financial disclosure form as between $5,000 to $47,999?
Generous fat cats from the non-profit Police Foundation.
And guess how Bratton justified the Harvard perk in his filing? “Customary practice of Foundation to underwrite these costs for NYPD Commissioners,” he wrote.
Are you kidding? Paying up to $47,999 for Bratton at the Harvard Club is hardly customary. That practice began just a few years ago under Bratton’s predecessor, Ray Kelly. Firing the foundation’s longtime director, Kelly strong-armed it into paying his Harvard expenses. (The foundation also paid $400,000 to a consultant who served as Kelly’s personal public relations man while Kelly considered running for mayor.)
Two Bratton aides told this reporter that paying his Harvard expenses is a necessary feature of the job; that the Harvard Club serves as a convenient midtown spot where the commissioner can take business guests at relatively cheap prices.
Department spokesman Steve Davis said, “There is a business purpose to these meetings. And he [Bratton] is accountable to the Police Foundation.”
The Police Foundation was founded as a good-government, anti-corruption measure after the Knapp Commissioner-era of police corruption of the early 1970s. But four decades later, this has changed.
One of Bratton’s many contributions to the NYPD was to turn the police commissioner into a celebrity. But celebrities tend to feel entitled. This has led over the past 20 years to some high-level schnorring — a Yiddish word that describes habitual begging with no intention of repaying.
That sense of entitlement led former Commissioner Howard Safir to accept a trip to the Oscars in Hollywood, plane fare and expenses paid for by Revlon Corp. Ditto Safir’s successor Bernie Kerik’s accepting $165,000 in free renovations from a company seeking city contracts. Safir was censured by the Conflicts of Interest board and forced to reimburse Revlon $7,100, the cost of the trip. Kerik went to federal prison.
Then there are Bratton and Kelly, piggybacking over each other in terms of both celebrity and schnorring. In his first tour as commissioner in the 1990s, Bratton accepted free plane trips to Colorado and the Dominican Republic, courtesy of Wall Street financier Henry Kravis, which Mayor Rudy Giuliani used as an excuse to sack him.