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Former Top Cop Indicted on Federal
Fraud, Conspiracy Charges
By Bill Van Auken
11/09/07 "WSWS"
-- -- Bernard Kerik, the former head of the New York City Police
Department, who was briefly a nominee to head the US Homeland
Security Department, was arraigned Friday in US federal court in
White Plains, New York on a 16-count indictment that includes
felony charges of fraud and conspiracy.
Among the principal charges against Kerik is that he took
some $255,000 worth of goods and services from a New Jersey
construction and waste haulage company linked by investigators
to the Gambino crime family. In return, he is said to have
helped the mob-connected firm by lobbying city officials to
approve it for contracts.
Kerik is also charged with accepting—shortly after the
September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks—a rent-free luxury
apartment worth $9,000 a month on Manhattan’s posh Upper East
Side from a real estate management firm that was also seeking
city business. The firm ended up covering some $236,000 in free
rent for the then police commissioner.
The indictment further charges Kerik with taking and failing
to report a $250,000 loan that originated with an Israeli
industrialist seeking business deals with the federal
government. This was in 2003, a period in which Kerik was
sitting on several government boards and had been appointed as a
senior police advisor under the US colonial administration in
Iraq.
Other charges include tax evasion on his elicit income,
falsely claiming $80,000 in charitable contributions on his tax
returns and lying to US officials during the vetting process for
his nomination to the Homeland Security post.
The principal charges related to the mob-linked firm were
already well known. Kerik pleaded guilty to misdemeanor charges
covering basically the same offense in a state case in 2006,
receiving no jail time and merely a $221,000 fine.
Earlier this year the former police commissioner rejected a
plea deal with the US government because he would not, as in the
state case, escape jail time. The charges he now faces carry a
maximum sentence of 142 years in jail.
The focus of media reaction to the Kerik indictment has been
on how it—not to mention a trial that could play out in the
midst of the 2008 election campaign—will affect the political
fortunes of Republican presidential frontrunner and former New
York City mayor, Rudy Giuliani. It was Giuliani who tapped
Kerik, first to head the city’s sprawling jail system and then
to become head of its nearly 40,000-member police department.
Then, after leaving office, he recommended Kerik to Bush for the
post of Homeland Security secretary.
Campaigning in Iowa, Giuliani told reporters: “I made a
mistake in not clearing him effectively enough. I take
responsibility for that.” He dodged further questions on whether
he would stand by Kerik, affirming that it was inappropriate to
discuss a matter before the courts.
Giuliani’s evasion won’t wash. During the state case against
Kerik, Giuliani was compelled to acknowledge under oath that he
had been briefed on the ties of his nominee for police
commissioner to the mob-connected businessman, but that he had
no recollection of it. This represented a fallback position from
his earlier claims that he had known nothing about the matter.
One would think that being told that the man he wanted to
head the country’s largest police department was accepting money
from people linked to the mafia would be something the mayor, a
former federal prosecutor, would have picked up on. The only
credible explanation is that Giuliani knew and appointed him
anyway.
Moreover, Kerik was not just some job applicant whom the
mayor failed to thoroughly investigate. Rather, he was
handpicked by Giuliani and installed in senior positions for
which he was manifestly unqualified.
The relation between Kerik and Giuliani began when the latter
was running for mayor against incumbent Democrat David Dinkins
in 1993. A junior-ranking NYPD detective, Kerik was attracted to
Giuliani’s law-and-order program and became the Republican
candidate’s bodyguard and chauffeur.
In gratitude for Kerik’s personal services and unquestioning
loyalty, Giuliani appointed him to a sinecure in the city’s jail
system and then made him correction commissioner. In 2000, he
appointed him police commissioner. The choice of a high school
dropout to head the NYPD, the largest US police department,
sparked significant controversy, given that mid-level police
supervisors are required to hold a college degree.
That Giuliani did not know about his protégé’s corrupt
practices is simply not credible. The city’s Department of
Investigations had uncovered his ties to the mob-linked firm
during its investigations of the company and they were aired
again in the routine probe of Kerik when he was nominated to
head the police department. And one of the principal officials
Kerik was lobbying on the company’s behalf was the head of the
city’s Trade Waste Commission, who just happened to be
Giuliani’s cousin.
A web of scandals and abuses of power
Moreover, the actions summarized in the federal indictment
constitute only a part of the web of scandals surrounding the
police commissioner. In the aftermath of September 11, for
example, it emerged that Kerik had taken over an apartment
overlooking the rubble of ground zero meant to serve as a rest
area for rescue and recovery workers. Instead, he appropriated
it to carry on two simultaneous extramarital affairs, one with a
female jail guard and the other with his millionaire publisher.
In both cases, the commissioner’s messy personal life spilled
over into official abuses of power. In the case of the jail
guard, the city was confronted with lawsuits brought by jail
supervisors who said that they were retaliated against by Kerik
for attempting to impose discipline on his girlfriend. And in
the case of the publisher, Judith Regan, the police commissioner
dragooned homicide detectives into police-state-style visits to
the homes of junior level employees at Fox Television to
interrogate them after Regan reported that her cell phone had
gone missing during an appearance on the network.
In his autobiography, The Lost Son, Kerik includes a
revealing account of a meeting in which Giuliani told him he was
going to name him first deputy correction commissioner, a post
for which the street cop felt himself woefully unprepared. After
convincing him he could do the job, Giuliani led him downstairs
to a dimly lit room where senior administration aides waited.
Each embraced Kerik and kissed him on the cheek.
“I wonder if he [Giuliani] noticed how much becoming part of
his team resembled becoming part of a mafia family,” Mr. Kerik
wrote. “I was being made.”
There is no doubt that Giuliani not only noticed the
resemblance, but reveled in it. Throughout his tenure at City
Hall, one of the mayor’s less than endearing quirks was a
constant recitation of lines from his favorite movie, “The
Godfather,” which would send his aides into titters.
Behind this ritual was a mindset that intermingled arrogance,
criminality and authoritarianism, producing atrocities like the
stationhouse torture of Abner Louima and the police killings of
Amadou Diallo and Patrick Dorismond, as well as a series of
corruption scandals.
Once Giuliani was forced from office by term limits—though
not before trying to cancel the 2001 election on the grounds
that only he was fit to lead the city after 9/11—he and Kerik
both cashed in on their September 11 fame.
Giuliani proclaimed Kerik a “hero” of the terrorist attacks,
though the police commissioner’s function on that day was not
that different than when the two first met—trailing the mayor
north from ground zero as a kind of glorified bodyguard.
Meanwhile, he left behind an emergency response that was in
chaos, in which lack of coordination and failure of
communication between the NYPD and the Fire Department has been
singled out as a factor in the horrendous death toll among
firefighters that day.
Kerik became a “security expert” in Giuliani’s new consulting
firm, while raking in millions of dollars serving on the board
of Taser Inc., manufacturer of the electric stun gun, and acting
as a spokesman for US drug companies trying to use a supposed
security threat as a pretext for blocking cheap imports from
Canada.
It was not just Giuliani who knew what Kerik was up to, but
the Bush administration as well. While some aides had uncovered
information about Kerik’s links to mob-connected individuals,
Alberto Gonzales, then the president’s counsel and later US
attorney general, overrode their concerns and recommended his
appointment to the Homeland Security post.
For the Bush administration, the combination of avarice,
loyalty and criminality that characterized the former police
commissioner made him a perfect fit for the job. He would
function well in an administration that was carrying out
criminal wars, sanctioning torture, conducting illegal domestic
spying and handing out no-bid contracts to politically connected
companies like Halliburton and Blackwater.
In the end, the geyser of scandals that erupted after Kerik’s
nomination was announced made his elevation impossible. The
administration found that it simply couldn’t get away with it.
The twisted saga of Bernard Kerik is a reflection of the
corruption and criminality that is pervasive throughout the US
political establishment and among the ruling elite as a whole.
At the same time, that such an individual could have been chosen
to head the Homeland Security Department is the clearest proof
that the so-called “war on terror” is a fraud.
That Kerik was grossly unqualified to head what is, at least
on paper, one of the most important federal agencies was, from
the standpoint of the administration, beside the point. It
wasn’t looking for someone capable of coordinating responses to
domestic emergencies. Rather, its aim was to capitalize on
Kerik’s identification with September 11 as a propaganda device
to advance its campaign to terrorize and intimidate the American
people into submitting to further wars and even more sweeping
attacks on democratic rights.
As Kerik’s indictment is being weighed for its potential
impact on his former benefactor, Giuliani, it should be recalled
that one of the more enthusiastic endorsements for his
nomination to the post of Homeland Security secretary three
years ago came from none other than the Democratic presidential
frontrunner, New York Senator Hillary Clinton
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