D-Day for Eric. 
        Decision day is approaching for Captain Eric Adams. It may even come this 
        week. 
      Adams 
        – a constant critic of Commissioner Kelly who publicly criticized 
        his and Bloomberg’s actions over last October’s subway terrorism 
        scare – was slapped with departmental charges the day after he filed 
        for retirement. Adams has said he sought to resolve the issue without 
        going public by taking a minor hit but that Kelly refused.
      Now let’s compare Kelly’s actions towards 
        Adams with four recent departmental disciplinary cases.
       In 2004, police officer Mark Faljean was found guilty 
        in Brooklyn Criminal court of sexually abusing another officer’s 
        wife. He was fined just two months pay. Last November he was allowed to 
        retire a month shy of his 20th year on the force so that he could receive 
        a full pension. 
      Last July, Lieut. Anthony Perotta, a thirteen-year 
        veteran, was suspended for exposing himself to a civilian supervisor in 
        an elevator. In October, he was allowed to vest out and retire, also keeping 
        his pension, although he won’t begin receiving it until 2113.
      Last December Inspector Robert Wheeler shot a robbery 
        suspect in Washington, D.C., fled the scene, then called local police 
        to inform them of the robbery. But he failed to tell them he had shot 
        a suspect or that he was a New York City officer. The next day he returned 
        to New York but didn’t fess up until the following day.
      For three weeks Kelly took no action against him. 
        He then placed him on modified assignment, the mildest penalty possible. 
        So far as is known, no charges have been filed against him. 
      Finally, there’s Deputy Commissioner Garry McCarthy, 
        whose trial in a New Jersey traffic court continues this week. The trial 
        stems from a traffic ticket issued to his daughter by Palisades Parkway 
        police in February, 2005. 
      McCarthy testified that he had had two glasses of 
        wine shortly before the incident, that his gun was in his waistband, that 
        he allowed his wife to back his department-issued Ford Explorer into oncoming 
        traffic at a Palisades service station, that he cursed at the ticketing 
        Palisades detective who McCarthy said had cursed at him first, and that, 
        despite his wife’s urging, he refused to leave the scene. 
      The Internal Affairs Bureau has done a full work up 
        and sent two officers to observe the trial. So far Kelly has done or said 
        nothing.
      Unseen all last week 
        [since the body of Imette St. Guillen was discovered]: 
        Commissioner Kelly. Mayor Bloomberg answered questions about her death.