Sex, Lies, and Michael Mineo
         February 1,  2010
         Anyone who knows cops knows that, as  federal judge Jack B. Weinstein has stated, they lie. 
        They may not lie from venality as much as from  laziness. But lie they do. A lot.
        “Informal  inquiry by the court and among the judges of this court, as well as knowledge  of cases in other federal and state courts, has revealed anecdotal evidence of  repeated, widespread falsification by arresting offices of the New York Police  Department,” Weinstein recently wrote in a case against the city filed by two  brothers whom the police falsely accused of selling cocaine to an undercover.
         
Three other cops are now on trial in Brooklyn  State Supreme Court on the explosive claim of Michael Mineo, a 25-year-old,  admitted Crips gang member. 
         After cops caught him smoking marijuana on  Oct. 15, 2008, he says one of them, 26-year-old Richard Kern, sodomized him  with a sharp object. Prosecutors charge Mineo was violated with Kern’s retractable  police baton while handcuffed on the ground of the Prospect Park subway  platform. 
         Two other officers, Alex Cruz and Andrew  Morales, are charged with lying to cover up Kern’s alleged assault. Kern faces  25 years in prison if convicted.
         In 2007, New York City paid $50,000 to settle  two excessive force lawsuits against Kern. However, the Civilian Complaint  Review Board, a body often unfriendly to cops, cleared him of wrongdoing. 
         At least superficially, the Mineo case  resembles the infamous NYPD sodomy that shocked the city more than a decade  ago: the 1997 broom-handle torture of Haitian immigrant Abner Louima inside the  bathroom of the 70th precinct in Brooklyn by police officer Justin  Volpe.
         Back then, the Brooklyn District Attorney’s  office whiffed on the case, which played out in federal court and became a  national symbol of racism, police brutality and cover-up.
         But unlike the law-abiding Louima,  Mineo has a troubled history and an arrest record pointing to a past as a liar  and a thief. His rap sheet includes at least seven drug possession busts and  arrests for credit card fraud, identity theft and gang assault.
         So far testimony has been inconclusive about  whether the sexual assault occurred and whether Cruz and Morales lied to cover  it up.
         Brooklyn  prosecutors say they have the goods to convict, which they plan to deliver this  week: crucial DNA evidence and a star witness, Transit Officer Kevin Maloney, who  will corroborate Mineo’s claims. 
         Sounds promising but for one thing —  Brooklyn District Attorney Joe Hynes has his own history of dubious claims, if  not outright lying. 
         Consider the case of former FBI  agent Lindley DeVecchio, whom Hynes charged with leaking information to the mob,  leading to four murders. 
         In announcing DeVecchio’s indictment, Hynes  called the case “the most stunning example of official corruption I have ever  seen.”
         That claim evaporated 18 months later when it  was discovered that his key witness, mob moll Linda Schiro, had given a contradictory  version of events to reporters Tom Robbins and Jerry Capeci. 
         Hynes dropped the case against DeVecchio,  saying, “There’s no way we would have brought a prosecution if we had had that  information.” 
         However, just two months before Hynes  indicted DeVecchio, a writer had alerted the D.A.’s office about Schiro’s past  interviews with Robbins and Capeci. 
         Hynes’ own detective, Thomas Dades, later  told the Daily News that Schiro had also told him about her contradictory version of events. 
        “So for anyone to say they are surprised now  that she had inconsistent stories, they aren’t being truthful,” Dades said.