Not  Even Prison Walls Can Shut Bernie Up 
         June 14, 2010
         The blog was dated Monday, June 7, 2010. The posting time  read: 8:47 P.M.
         Below the date, in red lettering, was the headline: “Terror  Threat Should Have Prevented Disaster.”
         And then these words [albeit with a couple of misspellings]  that the writer felt the world had to hear:
         “In the immediate  aftermath of the attacks of 9/11, Osama Bin Laden proudly announced that the  damage they expected as a result of their attacks was far less than actually  occurred. … Since then, I along with several others had predicted that some of  our greatest threats would eventually come from within, from home grown and  naturalized citizens who were radicalized and hate this country. … The most  recent arrests of Mohammed Mohood Allessa, [sic] 20, and Carlos Amonta, [sic] 24,  both of New Jersey, is an example of that.”
         That’s right, readers. The world’s  most irrepressible terrorism fighter, Bernard Kerik, has found a way to blog from  inside the federal prison in Cumberland, Maryland, on the West Virginia border,  which he entered last month and where he could be spending the next four years.
         Surprised that he was able to circumvent the  barriers most prisoners face? Don’t be. When it comes to Kerik, little is  predictable. 
         Until he entered prison last month, Kerik continued  to write on his website, insisting that, despite his guilty plea to eight  corruption counts, he was a victim of relentless government persecution.
         Now in prison,  Kerik’s internet presence remains alive, apparently with help from someone on  the outside who is receiving his emails and then posting them. 
         According to a source expert in prison  ways, Kerik is allowed to write authorized emails using “Corrlinks,” a service  that bills itself as “a way for family and friends to communicate with their  loved ones incarcerated in prison.” 
         “The inmate has to register the individual,  that person receives authorization to accept the emails,” says the source.  “They monitor everything he says.” 
         Bureau of Prisons spokeswoman, T.  Billingsley, did not return a phone call.
         Whoever that person is on the  outside, he’s packaging the emails to launder Kerik’s past. 
         For example, a square box at the top  of the page tells us in capital letters that “Bernard B. Kerik was the 40th  Police Commissioner of the New York City Police Department and in command of  the NYPD during and in the aftermath of the attacks on America on Sept. 11,  2001. He later served as the interim Minister of the Interior of Iraq and in  December, 2004, was nominated as the Secretary of the U.S. Dept of Homeland  Security.” 
         Absent is any mention of Kerik’s departing  Iraq after just three months with no explanation.
         Nor is there mention of his problems  that forced him to withdraw his nomination for the Homeland Security job.
         In addition, there’s nothing about his guilty plea  or his four-year prison sentence, which goes 15 months beyond federal  guidelines because he disregarded a judicial order, barring him from leaking  sealed grand jury material to the media. 
         That included a reckless and unsupported internet posting,  declaring that the feds had threatened to destroy him and his family if he  didn’t plead guilty to bribery and conspiracy charges — which he subsequently  did. 
         Over on the right hand side of the  page, the title reads, “About Me,” with a slimmed-down snapshot of Kerik without  those massive shoulders that he seemed to have lost since being placed under  house arrest after he pleaded guilty. It begins: “Bernard Kerik is one of the  most accomplished law enforcement executives in the United States.” Sounds like  Bernie never left home.
         It’s one thing to plead guilty to federal  corruption charges, as Kerik did. It’s another to be permitted to blog from  prison and claim, in effect, that his guilty plea never occurred. 
         On the  other hand, you’ve got to give Kerik credit. He just won’t quit.
        
            DARKNESS AT NOON. The forces of darkness won big last week  when a federal appeals court sided with the police department. 
         Overturning two lower court  decisions, the court ruled that the NYPD could keep secret 1,800 pages of  documents about the work of its Intelligence Division undercover officers who  were sent all over the world to spy on groups planning to protest the 2004  Republican National Convention at Madison Square Garden.
        While protective of the NYPD, the decision is disastrous for  the city and will encourage even more secrecy in a department that provides  less information to the public than any in modern city history.