GOVERNMENT / THE ELITE - LOOKING GLASS NEWS | |
Bernard Kerik’s guilty plea |
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by Bill Van Auken World Socialist Web Site Entered into the database on Sunday, July 02nd, 2006 @ 21:19:14 MST |
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Corruption case underscores fraud of “homeland security” Bernard Kerik, New York City’s former police commissioner and George W.
Bush’s first choice to succeed Tom Ridge as secretary of the Homeland Security
Department, appeared in a Bronx courtroom Friday to plead guilty to minor corruption
charges. His guilty plea was part of a deal with prosecutors to avoid felony indictments
and possible jail time. The case against Kerik revolved around his receiving $165,000 worth of unpaid
construction work to convert two apartments in a luxury building in Riverdale
into one huge unit, described by press reports as “opulent.” The work was performed in late 1999 and early 2000, when he was Mayor Rudolph
Giuliani’s correction commissioner. The company said to have paid for
this valuable favor for the official in charge of the city’s sprawling
jail complex, New Jersey-based Interstate Industrial Corporation, was alleged
by officials in that state to have had ties to the Gambino organized crime family.
At the time, the company was seeking contracts with New York City. Kerik quickly realized the cash value of the work performed by the allegedly
mob-linked company, selling the apartment in 2002 for nearly triple what he
had paid for it less than three years earlier. Prosecutors had apparently threatened to bring felony bribery charges against
Kerik before he accepted the plea deal. The reported substance of the accusations
against the former official is that in return for services rendered—including
the suspect firm’s hiring of Kerik’s brother and a friend who had
served as the best man at Kerik’s wedding—the then-correction commissioner
acted as the company’s advocate within the Giuliani administration, arguing
that it be approved for contracts. Under the plea bargain, Kerik was compelled only to plead guilty to two misdemeanors
and pay a $221,000 fine. The ex-police commissioner was represented in the case
by Joseph Tacopina, an attorney who gained nationwide fame for defending one
of the cops convicted in the notorious 1997 stationhouse torture of Haitian
immigrant Abner Louima. Following the ten-minute hearing in which he entered his guilty plea, Kerik
offered no apology and showed no remorse. Instead he lashed out at his accusers.
“Over the last year and a half I’ve watched and listened as people
picked apart my 30-year career in fighting crime and fighting injustice and
tried to destroy everything I’ve ever done,” he said. “But
today it’s over. Now I can get on with my business.” The year and a half he referred to is the period since his December 2004 nomination
as Bush’s Homeland Security chief went up in smoke, as evidence surfaced
pointing to serious corruption involving the nominee. At the time, the Bush
administration and Kerik’s defenders put out the implausible explanation
that he had removed himself from consideration for the Homeland Security post
because of evidence that he had failed to pay payroll taxes for a nanny who
may have been an undocumented immigrant. As for Kerik’s statement about getting on with his “business,”
this was a reference to the plea deal’s allowing him to keep his private
investigator’s license and pistol permit. Following the collapse of his
nomination, and amid continuing revelations of misconduct, Kerik left Giuliani
Partners, the consulting firm launched by the former mayor to cash in on his
post-September 11 fame, and set up his own security consulting business. His
latest job was reportedly in Jordan. Kerik’s assertion that “it’s over” may be premature.
The free construction work by a company publicly linked to the mob is only one
in a series of scandals that have swirled around the former New York City jail
and police commissioner. It appears that the plea deal involved a political decision by the city administration
of billionaire Republican Mayor Michael Bloomberg to drop all other probes by
the city’s department of investigation into possible wrongdoing by Kerik.
There were several such active investigations involving everything from charges
of mismanagement of funds derived from the sale of cigarettes in the city’s
jails to suspect contracts, suspicion of credit card abuse at the police department,
and the apparent use of city employees on work time to perform private tasks
for the commissioner. Both the city administration and the national political establishment were
no doubt nervous about seeing television coverage of Kerik dragged into the
lower Manhattan jail that now bears his name. However, multiple lawsuits in
relation to Kerik’s alleged abuses of power while serving first as jail
and then police commissioner are still outstanding. Kerik was tapped by Bush for the Homeland Security post largely because of
his purported role in the response to the September 11 attacks. In the wake
of his nomination, however, it was revealed that he had shamelessly exploited
these attacks for personal gain. This included rushing into print with an autobiography using “Ground
Zero” photographs taken from the New York Police Department’s files,
as well as raking in tens of thousands of dollars in royalties for writing a
brief foreword to another book, whose sale was supposed to benefit the families
of slain cops and firefighters. He also parlayed his 9/11 celebrity into a lucrative seat on the board of the
Taser corporation, manufacturer of police stun guns, a deal that reportedly
netted him millions worth of company stock. It was also revealed that, in the course of the grim efforts to recover remains
from the World Trade Center site, Kerik had accepted the use of an apartment
overlooking the rubble—ostensibly donated as a rest area for recovery
workers—where he simultaneously carried on two extra-marital affairs. That such an individual was tapped by the president of the United States to
head an agency that ostensibly has the lead responsibility for protecting the
American people from terrorist attacks is damning proof that the entire “war
on terror” is a politically motivated fraud. Kerik began his meteoric rise as a third-grade detective who became Giuliani’s
bodyguard and chauffeur during the latter’s run for mayor. He was chosen
for high office by Bush—and by Giuliani before him—not because of
any professional qualifications, but for his unswerving loyalty to his political
patrons. His corruption would hardly have been out of place in an administration that
is up to its neck in multi-billion-dollar scandals that range from the no-bid
contracts for Halliburton and other politically connected firms in Iraq to the
mysterious evaporation of massive amounts of aid funds for the hurricane-ravaged
Gulf Coast. It is worth recalling that Bush’s decision to nominate Kerik was warmly
applauded by New York’s Democratic Senator Hillary Clinton. At the time,
she issued a statement predicting that Kerik would serve as an advocate for
New York City. “Bernard Kerik knows firsthand the challenges and needs
of New York and other high-threat areas,” she declared. “As a member
of the president’s Cabinet, he can make that case every single day.” This claim was ludicrous. Had Kerik been appointed, he would have loyally carried
out the same actions as his replacement, Michael Chertoff, who recently slashed
homeland security funding for both New York City and Washington in order to
funnel it into congressional districts that face no credible terrorist threats,
but where Republicans are facing tight races in the November elections. _________________________ Read from Looking Glass News Was
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