Wired in Newark
      March 17, 2008
       Fans of the fictional, Baltimore-based television series “The
        Wire” can catch a real-life version now playing out in Newark,
        New Jersey.
       The cast: Newark’s Mayor Cory Booker, his Chief of Staff Pablo
        Fonseca, Police Chief Anthony Campos, and Police Director Garry McCarthy.
       On the TV. version of “The Wire,” Baltimore’s reform
        mayor wins election by promising to attack crime and reform the police
        department as the key to rejuvenating the city. 
      In real-life Newark, Mayor Booker won election in 2006 by promising
        to attack crime and reform the police department as the key to rejuvenating
        Newark. 
      Eighteen months ago, he hired former NYPD Deputy Commissioner McCarthy
        as Newark’s civilian Police Director. Say what you will about Garry — and
        this column has said plenty, specifically about his dust up with the
        Palisades Parkway police over a parking ticket for his daughter   — when
        it comes to policing, he’s the real deal. 
      Booker also hired McCarthy’s former boss, ex-NYPD Commissioner
        Howard Safir, to study the Newark P.D. Safir cited potential for conflict
        between the civilian Police Director [McCarthy] and the department’s
        top uniformed chief [Campos] beneath him. In perhaps the only intelligent
        recommendation Safir ever made, he noted that the city charter — or
        whatever it is that sanctions the arrangement — might need change. 
      O.K., so McCarthy takes over in Newark. He works round the clock. [No
        one ever accused Garry of laziness.] Crime plummets. Earlier this year,
        Newark experiences a stretch of 43 consecutive days without a murder.
        So far this year, there have been only five, compared to 18 in 2007.
      But there’s that conflict at the top. Ostensibly it’s between
        McCarthy and Campos, a Newark police department veteran, who is known
        as Elvis for his wavy hair and sideburns. Two weeks ago, McCarthy transferred
        two dozen officers. Campos overturned the transfers. 
      What? The Number Two counters an order from Number One? That takes guts,
        or a death wish.
      Well, it turns out Campos was ordered to block the transfer by Booker’s
        Chief of Staff Fonseca. He’s another longtime Booker political
        supporter. According to the Newark Star-Ledger, he wants to be consulted
        on all department personnel moves. And Campos is said to be his guy. 
      By ordering Campos to block McCarthy’s transfer Fonseca is taking
        a giant step. He’s placing Booker in an embarrassing situation
        and Campos in a vulnerable one. 
      Last week, McCarthy, who is not known for his delicacy — recall
        his failure to follow the advice of NYPD Chief of Department Joe Esposito
        and accept the Palisades Parkway police’s summons and get out of
        there as quickly as he could  — upped the ante. He suspended Campos
        for five days. 
      Booker was forced to publicly back McCarthy, though, apparently as a
        sop to Fonseca, he said Campos would draw his pay while suspended. He
        also called the dispute between McCarthy and Fonseca “healthy tension.” The
        hell it is. Sooner or later, and probably sooner rather than later, Booker
        is going to have to choose between his Police Director and his Chief
        of Staff. Campos could become the scapegoat.