A ‘spoof’ that spurred probe 
      May 17, 1999
       A leading candidate for president of the Patrolmen's
        Benevolent Association is fending off a charge that 13 years ago he dressed
        up Ku Klux Klansman-like at a PBA convention.
       Candidate Jim Higgins's behavior then so offended
        Ben Ward, the city's first black police commissioner, that Higgins became
        the subject of an Internal Affairs investigation.
       Top police officials at the time contacted by Newsday
        last week could not recall the investigation.
       The allegations against Higgins - now the PBA's
        recording secretary, who has been endorsed by Staten Island Borough President
        Guy Molinari and praised by former mayoral first pal Peter Powers - were
        aired last week on talk radio by a black cop who accused Higgins and
        some of his PBA buddies of parading through the Concord Hotel's dining
        room with pillow cases covering their heads and white sheets wrapped
        around them.
       The officer, Noel Leader, a member of a group called
        100 Blacks in Law Enforcement, charged on WEVD's Alan Colmes show, on
        which Higgins also appeared, that Higgins and buddies behavior upset
        guests and caused the all-black Erskine Hawkins band to leave the bandstand.
       Leader was seconded in his charge by a caller, "Mark
        from Queens," who turns out to have been Det. Marquez Claxton, also
        a member of 100 Blacks. According to a tape of the broadcast provided
        to Newsday, Higgins initially denied the incident had occurred. The following
        colloquy ensued:
       Higgins: "That's not true."
       Claxton: "That's not true?"
       Higgins: "Absolutely not."
       Colmes: "What is Mark referring to?"
       Higgins: "I don't know what he is referring
        to."
       Leader: "I heard it was a convention upstate."
       Higgins: "Really? It's news to me."
       Higgins later admitted on the air he was wearing
        an "outfit," but described it as a "cone head" outfit
        that he said was imitative of the cast of "Saturday Night Live." 
        "We had different outfits on, yeah," he said.
      "It took him 10 minutes to admit it," 
        retorted Leader on the air.
      In an interview with Newsday, Higgins described his
        behavior as a "spoof."