Saint Morg Never Forgets
       March 9, 2009
       An irate Robert  Morgenthau says this column erred last week when it implied that fourteen years  ago the Manhattan District Attorney indicted a Mollen Commission informant as  pay back for Mollen poaching a Morgenthau corruption case and turning it over to  the feds. 
       “We didn’t have a clue he was working for the Mollen Commission,”  said Morgenthau of the informant, who provided information about the 30th  Precinct, where 33 cops were convicted of drug-related crimes. “We indicted him  for perjury because a lot of innocent people went to jail.” 
       Morgenthau  made his complaints [there were others, including this column’s depiction of  the 1990 Palladium case in which two men were wrongfully convicted, which we  won’t get into here.] in a telephone call to Your Humble Servant. 
       Anyone  who thinks that the Morg, at age 89, has lost a step should consider himself  lucky he wasn’t on the receiving end of that phone line, which crackled with his  controlled, white-hot fury. 
       The  last two weeks have been trying for the nation’s foremost prosecutor. He announced  he would not seek reelection after 34 years, prompting the resignation of his  chief aide Dan Castleman, one of whose supporters called Morgenthau a “Judas”  because he refused to anoint Castleman as his successor. 
       Still, Morgenthau  was concerned enough over the Mollen incident that occurred more than a decade ago  that he wanted the record set straight. Or at least in the direction he wanted it  set. [Despite his protestations, there are those who continue to feel he acted  malevolently towards Mollen.] 
       One of  Morgenthau’s more [or perhaps less] saintly qualities is that he never forgets.  [Better listen up, Dan. That Judas crack sticks in the Morg’s craw.] 
       With  that in mind, let’s move on to the race for Morgenthau’s successor, where the  three candidates, sans Castleman, appeared together on WABC yesterday morning
       First  up, former Judge Leslie Crocker Snyder, who ran against Morgenthau in 2004 and  made an issue of his age [He was 85 then.] She kept up her attack, maintaining that  34 years was too long for a person to remain in office and that over the last  decade the D.A.’s office had become “stale.” Said Snyder: “At a certain point,  you need fresh ideas from the top.”
       Is it  any wonder that the Morg is supporting the candidate who can best defeat her? 
       That  brings us to Cyrus Vance Jr., son of the former secretary of state in the  administration of President Jimmy Carter, whom Morgenthau reportedly favors. 
       Vance’s  problem is that he has spent most of his career in Seattle, returning to New York in 2004. Though back in town for five  years, he may still not fully appreciate the lay of the land.