Ray Kelly: Still Running Rings Around the Bureau
       March 10, 2008
      The FBI may be leading the investigation into last Thursday’s
        bombing of a Times Square recruiting station. But why, then, is NYPD
        Commissioner Ray Kelly appearing solo on television to explain it?
       Inter-agency cooperation appeared to go smoothly at first — at
        least for the first few hours. At Thursday’s first post-bombing
        news conference at 9 a.m., Kelly, Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Mark Mershon,
        the head of the FBI’s New York office, stood together as one. 
      Mershon said the investigation would be conducted by the Joint Terrorist
        Task Force. For those not in the know, the JTTF is comprised of FBI agents
        and NYPD detectives under the FBI’s jurisdiction. That means the
        FBI is the lead agency.
      A few hours later, Kelly held a news conference at Police Plaza about
        a counterfeiting case with Queens District Attorney Richard Brown. After
        that ended, Kelly held his own news conference and answered questions
        about the bombing, releasing a video of it. So far as it known, no one
        from the FBI was invited.
      No big deal, you might say, except that, since returning as Police Commissioner
        in 2002, Kelly has run rings around the Bureau when it comes to taking
        credit for terrorism operations. 
      We’ve already written ad nauseum of his attempts to bypass the
        JTTF through the NYPD’s Overseas Spy Service under Deputy Commissioner
        David Cohen, whom we will now refer to as ”Confidential Cohen,” a
        term of endearment first uttered by Mr. James Breslin.
      Just last week, Kelly announced that the NYPD and the Madrid police
        department in Spain had agreed to share anti-terrorism information. That’s
        an especially touchy subject for the FBI because Kelly touts as one of
        his Overseas Spy successes the dispatching of NYPD detectives from London
        to meet with Madrid police following the train bombing there before the
        FBI did. In so doing, the detectives bypassed the FBI legal attaché assigned
        to the U.S. Embassy in Spain. 
      It’s not clear what information that Madrid police meeting yielded.
        The NYPD never informed the FBI what they learned. The FBI surreptitiously
        got hold of the detectives’ report and determined it was mostly
        newspaper clippings.
      We’ve also written ad nauseum about Confidential Cohen’s
        domestic spy service, also meant to bypass the JTTF. This included sending
        Intelligence Division detectives out of New York City’s jurisdiction
        to other states on undercover anti-terrorism missions without alerting
        either local authorities or the FBI, with sometimes comical results.
        [See NYPD Confidential columns on the New Jersey scuba-diving sting,
        where Jersey officials ordered the NYPD detectives out of the state.]
      Eventually, Confidential Cohen’s anti-terrorism maunderings morphed
        into spying on protest groups at the 2004 Republican National Convention,
        with sometimes equally comical results. [See NYPD Confidential columns
        on the NYPD’s infiltration of a meeting of the Black Tea Society
        in Boston, after which Mass. State police stopped the detectives on the
        Mass pike for speeding and nearly arrested them.]