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- <text id=93TT0364>
- <title>
- Oct. 11, 1993: Cops And Robbers
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 11, 1993 How Life Began
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CORRUPTION, Page 43
- Cops And Robbers
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A New York City police scandal shows how some officers can be
- both--and other cities watch and worry
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD LACAYO--Reported by Jordan Bonfante/Los Angeles and Sharon Epperson/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> Michael Dowd was the kind of cop who gave new meaning to the
- word moonlighting. It wasn't just any job that the 10-year veteran
- of the New York City force was working on the side. Dowd was
- a drug dealer. From scoring free pizza as a rookie he graduated
- to pocketing cash seized in drug raids and from there simply
- to robbing dealers outright, sometimes also relieving them of
- drugs that he would resell. Soon he had formed "a crew" of 15
- to 20 officers in his Brooklyn precinct who hit up dealers regularly.
- Eventually one of them was paying Dowd and another officer $8,000
- a week in protection money. Dowd bought four suburban homes
- and a $35,000 red Corvette. Nobody asked how he managed all
- that on take-home pay of $400 a week.
- </p>
- <p> In May 1992 Dowd, four other officers and one former officer
- were arrested for drug trafficking by police in Long Island's
- Suffolk County. When the arrests hit the papers, it was forehead-slapping
- time among police brass. Not only had some of their cops become
- robbers, but the crimes had to be uncovered by a suburban police
- force. Politicians and the media started asking what had happened
- to the system for rooting out police corruption established
- 21 years ago at the urging of the Knapp Commission, the investigatory
- body that heard Officer Frank Serpico and other police describe
- a citywide network of rogue cops.
- </p>
- <p> To find out, New York City mayor David Dinkins established the
- Mollen Commission, named for its chairman, Milton Mollen, a
- former New York judge. Last week, in the same Manhattan hearing
- room where the Knapp Commission once sat, the new body heard
- Dowd and other officers add another lurid chapter to the old
- story of police corruption. And with many American cities wary
- that drug money will turn their departments bad, police brass
- around the country were lending an uneasy ear to the tales of
- officers sharing lines of coke from the dashboard of their squad
- cars and scuttling down fire escapes with sacks full of cash
- stolen from dealers' apartments.
- </p>
- <p> The Mollen Commission has not uncovered a citywide system of
- payoffs among the 30,000-member force. In fact, last week's
- testimony focused on three precincts, all in heavy crime areas.
- But the tales, nevertheless, were troubling. Dowd described
- how virtually the entire precinct patrol force would rendezvous
- at times at an inlet on Jamaica Bay, where they would drink,
- shoot off guns in the air and plan their illegal drug raids.
- </p>
- <p> Onetime Bronx patrolman Bernie Cawley, 29, now serving three
- years to life for narcotics charges and for selling stolen guns,
- told the commission why he was known to other cops as the Mechanic.
- "Because I used to `tune people up,' " he placidly explained.
- "It's a police word for beating people." Suspects? he was asked.
- "No, I was just beating people up in general." In four years
- on the force, Cawley claimed, he assaulted people as many as
- 400 times with his nightstick, flashlight and lead-lined gloves.
- "Who's going to catch us?" he said, shrugging. "We're the police."
- </p>
- <p> "The cops who were engaged in corruption 20 years ago took money
- to cover up the criminal activity of others," says Michael Armstrong,
- who was chief counsel to the Knapp Commission. "Now it seems
- cops have gone into competition with street criminals." For
- cops as for anyone else, money works like an acid on integrity.
- Bribes from bootleggers made the 1920s a golden age for crooked
- police. Gambling syndicates in the 1950s were protected by a
- payoff system more elaborate than the Internal Revenue Service.
- Pervasive corruption may have lessened in recent years, as many
- experts believe, but individual examples seem to have grown
- more outrageous. In March authorities in Atlanta broke up a
- ring of weight-lifting officers who were charged with robbing
- strip clubs and private homes, and even carrying off 450-lb.
- safes from retail stores.
- </p>
- <p> The deluge of cash that has flowed from the drug trade has created
- opportunities for quick dirty money on a scale never seen before.
- In the 1980s Philadelphia saw more than 30 officers convicted
- of taking part in a scheme to extort money from dealers. In
- Los Angeles an FBI probe focusing on the L.A. County sheriff's
- department has resulted so far in 36 indictments and 19 convictions
- on charges related to enormous thefts of cash during drug raids--more than $1 million in one instance. "The deputies were
- pursuing the money more aggressively than they were pursuing
- drugs," says Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Bauer.
- </p>
- <p> When cities enlarge their police forces quickly in response
- to public fears about crime, it can also mean an influx of younger
- and less well-suited officers. That was a major reason for the
- enormous corruption scandal that hit Miami in the mid-1980s,
- when about 10% of the city's police were either jailed, fired
- or disciplined in connection with a scheme in which officers
- robbed and sometimes killed cocaine smugglers on the Miami River,
- then resold the drugs. Many of those involved had been hired
- when the department had beefed up quickly after the 1980 riots
- and the Mariel boatlift. "We didn't get the quality of officers
- we should have," says department spokesman Dave Magnusson.
- </p>
- <p> When it came time to clean house, says former Miami police chief
- Perry Anderson, civil service board members often chose to protect
- corrupt cops if there was no hard evidence to convict them in
- the courts. "I tried to fire 25 people with tarnished badges,
- but it was next to impossible," he recalls.
- </p>
- <p> The Mollen Commission testimony could also lead to second thoughts
- on the growth of community policing, the back-to-the-beat philosophy
- that in recent years has been returning officers to neighborhood
- patrol in cities around the country, including New York. Getting
- to know the neighborhood can mean finding more occasions for
- bribe taking, which is one reason that in many places beat patrolling
- was scaled back since the 1960s in favor of more isolated squad-car
- teams.
- </p>
- <p> The real test of a department is not so much whether its officers
- are tempted by money but whether there is an institutional culture
- that discourages them from succumbing. In Los Angeles the sheriff's
- department "brought us the case," says FBI special agent Charlie
- Parsons. "They worked with us hand in glove throughout the investigation."
- In the years after it was established, following the Knapp Commission
- disclosures, the New York City police department's internal
- affairs division was considered one of the nation's most effective
- in stalking corruption. But that may not be the case anymore.
- Police sergeant Joseph Trimboli, a department investigator,
- told the Mollen Commission that when he tried to root out Dowd
- and other corrupt cops, his efforts were blocked by higher-ups
- in the department. At one point, Trimboli claimed, he was called
- to a meeting of police officials and told he was under suspicion
- as a drug trafficker. "They did not want this investigation
- to exist," he said.
- </p>
- <p> A similar story came from a black-hooded undercover informant
- who told the commission that in 1991 more than a dozen crooked
- cops from a precinct in Manhattan's East Village had even come
- up with the idea of a Fourth of July barbecue with local drug
- dealers. A plan by the local district attorney for the informant
- to attend, equipped with a listening device, was thwarted when
- commanders suddenly ordered the officer in charge of the barbecue
- arrested on drug charges. By tipping off the other officers,
- that had the effect of scuttling any wider inquiry. No other
- arrests were made, even though police found the names of five
- officers in the phone book of a drug dealer.
- </p>
- <p> Last year New York City police commissioner Raymond Kelly announced
- a series of organizational changes, including a larger staff
- and better-coordinated field investigations, intended to improve
- internal affairs. His critics say those changes don't go far
- enough. At last week's hearings two retired members of the internal
- affairs division, Sergeant James Dowd and Lieut. James Wood,
- described how they offered evidence last year that two officers
- were dealing heroin, only to watch department investigators
- bungle the probe, then accuse Dowd and Wood of wrongdoing instead.
- Much of that happened after Kelly's reforms had been announced.
- The Mollen Commission is expected to recommend the establishment
- of an outside monitoring agency, a move that Kelly and other
- police brass have expressed some reservations about. "No group
- is good at policing itself," says Knapp Commission counsel Armstrong.
- "It doesn't hurt to have somebody looking over their shoulder."
- An independent body, however, might be less effective at getting
- co-operation from cops prone to close ranks against outsiders.
- "You have to have the confidence of officers and information
- about what's going on internally," says former U.S. Attorney
- Thomas Puccio, who prosecuted a number of police-corruption
- cases.
- </p>
- <p> Getting that information was no easier when officers were encouraged
- to report wrongdoing to authorities within their own department.
- In many cities that have them, internal affairs divisions are
- resented within the ranks for getting cops to turn in other
- cops--informers are even recruited from police-academy cadets--and for rarely targeting the brass.
- </p>
- <p> "One of the things that has come out in the hearings is a culture
- within the department which seems to permit corruption to exist,"
- says Walter Mack, a onetime federal prosecutor who is now New
- York's deputy commissioner of internal affairs. "But when you're
- talking about cultural change, you're talking about many years.
- It's not something that occurs overnight."
- </p>
- <p> Dowd, who is scheduled to be sentenced this month on a guilty
- plea that could bring him 15 years or more in prison, put it
- another way. "Cops don't want to turn in other cops," he said.
- "Cops don't want to be a rat." And even when honest cops are
- willing to blow the whistle, there may not be anyone willing
- to listen.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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