View Full Version : Kerik Nomination is a Ticking Time Bomb


AJS
12-04-2004, 09:27 AM
Published on Friday, December 3, 2004 by the Long Island, NY Newsday


by Ellis Henican


Campaign bodyguard to Rudy Giuliani.

Errand boy for the Saudi royal family.

Energetic exploiter of Sept. 11th tragedy.

Tough-talking publicity-hound vowing to bring law and order to Iraq - then hightailing it out of there after a disastrous 14 weeks, leaving the place far less safe than he found it.

Oh, the bullet points on Bernie Kerik's real-life resume just go on and on. But is this really the guy we want standing between us and the terrorists?

George W. Bush apparently thinks so.

White House sources were saying last night that Kerik, the scandal-scarred former commissioner of the New York Correction and Police departments, will be named today to take Tom Ridge's job as head of homeland security.

For now, let's give the Bush folks the benefit of the doubt: Maybe they've been wowed by Kerik's shameless swing-state Kerry-bashing in Bush's behalf. ("I fear another attack, and I fear that attack with ... Senator Kerry being in office responding to it.")

Maybe they've been bullied by Giuliani's bulldog lobbying for a loyal business buddy and after-hours pal. ("OK, Karl," you can almost hear Rudy say, "I won't be attorney general, but you gotta take Bernie at homeland security!")

Or maybe it's just that the FBI background check isn't back from the field.

Whatever the reason, the White House personnel office really ought to ask some probing questions around New York. You can bet they'll get an earful of heads-up about this hard-charging, thick-necked, shaved-head lightweight.

Let this be a warning from someone who's followed the man's ladder-climbing career: He's a personal and professional time bomb the Bushies will learn to regret. Don't say I didn't warn you, guys!

hat's certainly the message that smart law-enforcement professionals in New York were exchanging yesterday, as they shook their heads in disbelief at Kerik's latest career goal.

"He couldn't run the Rikers commissary without getting greedy and making a mess, in a jam," one correction veteran said. "Now he's gonna be in charge of the Department of Homeland Security? Let's just hope the terrorists don't decide to come back."

This former subordinate was referring to just one of many petty scandals that have hung over Kerik's career. When he ran Correction, nearly $1 million of tobacco-company rebates were diverted into an obscure foundation Kerik was president of. This was for cigarettes bought with taxpayer money and then sold at inflated prices to jail inmates. But this rebate money - would kickbacks be a better word? - got spent entirely outside the normal rules for public funds.

No one was criminally charged. But a whole rash of IRS rules were seemingly violated. One board member quit in protest when the foundation treasurer refused to provide him with financial reports. And no one has ever explained where all the money went.

It was a typical Kerik deal. He behaved from start to finish like normal rules didn't apply to him.

It isn't possible in so little space to give an adequate tour of the man's rise from Jersey high-school dropout to prospective anti-terror boss.

As a public service, however, let me suggest a few ripe areas of personal inquiry that someone in Washington might like to pursue.

Along the way, don't lose sight of this: The homeland security chief stands between Osama bin Laden and our good-night sleep.

Why did he pull out of Iraq so suddenly? Does he think he did a pretty good job teaching the Baghdad police how to keep order and how to behave in "a free and democratic society," to use his words at the time?

Was Sept. 11th Commission member John Lehman on to something when he called Kerik's leadership after the terror attack "scandalous" and "not worthy of the Boy Scouts."

What exactly does he do at Giuliani Partners? How's that anti-crime campaign in Mexico City going? What companies and foreign governments are on his client list?

Why did Kerik send a New York City homicide detective to rouse TV hair and makeup artists in the middle of the night when his book publisher (and workout-partner) lost her cell phone?

What new job does he have in mind for John Picciano, his perennial chief of staff? Could Picciano really pass a federal background check? What about the complaint (later dropped) that he'd beaten up his correction-officer girlfriend and waved his gun around?

There are answers for all of it, I am sure. Answers to these few questions and many racier ones.

Over the weeks to come, Kerik will have a chance to answer all of them.

I, for one, am waiting.

So are a lot of people who've gotten to know the man in New York.
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It just gets better and better with the Bush Admin!

TREKY
12-04-2004, 12:41 PM
...for Bush.With all that in his resume he should fit right in with this administration.

MarkS
12-04-2004, 01:29 PM
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It just gets better and better with the Bush Admin!

Here in Baltimore, our Mayor, who was elected on a get tough on crime platform in 1999, has hired two police commissioners who were NYPD alumni. The first, after a stop as head of the Maryland State Police, pleaded guilty to various federal criminal violations related to his activities while he was Baltimore's police commissioner. The second recently was fired in the wake of an incident that began with a possible domestic violence indicent involving his then live-in girlfriend and an investigation that uncovered a history of suspicious events involving his former wife and girlfriend.

When the first New Yorker was appointed, a former colleague of mine who had grown up in New York City and dated a cop when she was living in New York after law school, said that the NYPD was a world of its own, with its own rules and mores. It was her belief, based on her familiarity with the NYPD, that high living, graft and abuse of outsiders were accepted practices within the ranks as compensation for the rigors of the job. I know that it is unfair to disparage the reputation of anyone based upon the actions of a few former colleagues and the hearsay of a former cop's girlfriend. But, I would be wary of hiring anyone who was a NYPD alumnus for a significant position of trust and power.

AJS
12-04-2004, 01:35 PM
"We are Thugs Incorporated, with branches in Washington, NYC, LA, and a hometown near you!"

P-Quoddy
12-04-2004, 11:15 PM
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It just gets better and better with the Bush Admin!

He also sold off something like $5 million of his Tasor stock right before getting the job. I wonder if he had any inside info on an upcoming lawsuit against the zapper company? I think his upbringing and his days of being an undercover narc taught him more than just the going rate of an eightball.
One things for sure, if keeping the homeland secure becomes a simple matter of knowing who's ass to kiss, the former Gulianni chauffeur and Bush convention MC will succeed.

2Fast2Furryious
12-04-2004, 11:17 PM
So, wait...a Bush toadie got the top spot in the Department of Homeland Security? Get out. GET OUT!

Yeah, let's continue to milk all of those deaths of 9/11. Why not? As we all know Muslims are crazy and will kill us but ultimately this is BILL CLINTON'S fault so screw them all and elect some Telly Savalas-looking dumba$$ to protect the nation from the next attack that will inevitably kill more but will slip past the Bush radar.

Hate to be an alarmist...but look at the facts. The world loves us after Iraq and will continue to support us...hahahaha PSYC; America sucks and we will be attacked again. Baldie, save us!

AJS
12-05-2004, 12:27 AM
If this turd were still operating in NY, he'd soon be on E. Spitzer's jam list, guar-ron-teed.