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Get a link in your mailbox to your weekly NYPD Confidential column as soon as it is published! Click on the button above right on this page — or here — to sign up for this feature. The Amazing Ms. McCrayMarch 19, 2018 With the emergence of first lady Chirlane McCray as a potential political candidate, people are beginning to speculate about the influence she may exert — and has already exerted — at City Hall. Mayor de Blasio has called his wife “my number one advisor, the most trusted person in my administration, the person I make all major decisions with.” Last week, the 63-year-old McCray announced she was considering running for public office. She got off to a bumpy start as first lady. Her first chief of staff, Rachel Noerdlinger, had been the Rev. Al Sharpton’s longtime spokeswoman. She was forced to resign after it was disclosed that her boyfriend, Hassaun McFarlan, had a criminal record, had posted violent messages online and owed $420 in traffic tickets. “She’s the chief of staff for the first lady, Chirlane McCray, so I’m basically her driver,” he said at the time.
In recent weeks, McCray has been the subject of mainstream media scrutiny after NYPD Confidential noted that a City Hall news release read: “MAYOR DE BLASIO AND FIRST LADY CHIRLANE MCCRAY APPOINT J.PHILLIP THOMPSON AS DEPUTY MAYOR FOR STRATEGIC POLICY INTIATIVES.” The release was subsequently corrected to read that McCray and the mayor had “announced” Thompson’s appointment. Still, her name appears in City Hall news releases, alongside the mayor’s. Some recent examples:
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For reasons that remain unclear, and that he did not explain, the law enforcement figure said: "I wonder if she [McCray] is uncomfortable with powerful black men." That may or may not be true. But, since 2014, the fire department has been headed by Daniel Nigro, who is white. At corrections, de Blasio appointed Joseph Ponte as commissioner, a white man from Vermont. After Ponte ran into difficulty and resigned, the mayor appointed a white woman, Cynthia Brann.
When Bratton departed two years later, de Blasio selected then-Chief of Department Jim O’Neill, who is white, to succeed him over First Deputy Ben Tucker, who is black. At O’Neill’s swearing at Police Plaza, McCray introduced him, the first time in recent memory that a mayor’s wife did the honors. |
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