Today, no  outside monitor of the police department exists. There is a powerless body  called the Mayor’s Commission to Combat Police Corruption. But its first  chairman, Michael Pomerantz, resigned after Kelly refused to turn over requested  documents and Bloomberg failed to intercede.
       Pomerantz’s  successor and current chairman, Michael Armstrong, was, nearly 40 years before,  counsel to the famed Knapp Commission on Police Corruption, which did succeed  in combating systemic graft in the NYPD. Today, however, Armstrong sees no  reason to monitor the NYPD. 
      As he told the now-defunct New York Sun, “The best formula for a  corruption-free police department is to have a tough, knowledgeable, hands-on  police commissioner, and we have one now.”
       Hynes’  greatest falsehood at his Mineo news conference was giving Kelly partial credit  for the three cops’ indictments, ignoring the NYPD’s initial support for the  officers and its skepticism of Mineo’s claims. 
       “In a real sense,” he said, “Police Commissioner Kelly's  commitment is one reason we can announce the actions of the Kings County  grand jury this morning."
       That is truly rich. It confirms that Hynes is either so afraid  of Kelly that he has lost all objectivity or that he takes his information from  Police Department press releases. 
       Here’s what that release — issued by Deputy Commissioner for  Public Information Paul Browne (known in these parts as Mr. Truth) — said about  the Mineo indictments.
       “Contrary to some critics, the NYPD Internal Affairs Bureau,  after locating two witnesses in close proximity to the incident who said they  did not see the alleged sodomy, continued its aggressive investigation of the  allegations. IAB located and interviewed additional witnesses, reviewed hours  of videotape, secured officers’ lockers and retained equipment for DNA and  other testing…”
       Now the truth. IAB was apparently so impressed by those two  witnesses that Browne’s initial statement said the police did not believe  Mineo’s claims. That’s why the department kept the three cops on full duty for  more than two weeks after the incident was reported. 
       In addition, I.A.B. initially secured only one of the three cops’  lockers while searching for DNA evidence that a police baton or another  instrument had been used to penetrate Mineo. Such evidence was linked to  another cop — whose locker IAB had not initially searched. 
       Contrast IAB’s actions under Kelly with those under Giuliani and  then Police Commissioner Howard Safir, following the sodomy of Abner Louima a  decade before. 
       Whatever their faults — and this column has documented them ad  nauseum — Giuliani and Safir ordered an aggressive IAB investigation that led  to the conviction of police officer Justin Volpe.
       Chief Charles Campisi, who headed that investigation, still  heads IAB, indicating that he acts in  accordance with what he believes the police commissioner wants. When the boss  wants results, he is relentless. When the boss wants no scandal, he sees no  evil. 
       The Mollen commission foresaw this inconsistency. As they wrote  in their final report in July 1994, “The Department allowed its systems for  fighting corruption virtually to collapse. It had become more concerned about  the bad publicity that corruption disclosures generate than the devastating  consequences of corruption itself.”