Hiding the Truth at John Jay?
         August 30, 2010 
        Public discourse and community  outreach are hallmarks of higher education. That’s how academia spreads  knowledge beyond its walls. 
         Instead last Friday, the John Jay  College of Criminal Justice became The Forbidden City. 
         The college barred reporters from hearing criminologists  John Eterno and Eli Silverman detail an inconvenient truth: the NYPD is low-balling  crime statistics. 
         The two  professors had invited the media to their presentation, based on their survey  of nearly 500 former high-ranking police officials. [Eterno is himself a former  NYPD captain.] Some 25 per cent said the NYPD under-reported crimes to make the  city seem safer than it is.
         Eterno  and Silverman both maintain that a conference organizer, John Jay Public  Management Department Professor Marilyn Rubin, had okayed the invitation to  reporters. 
         “We inquired weeks ago,” said  Eterno. “We checked with conference organizers. She was one of them. We were  told media could come.”
         John  Jay spokeswoman Doreen Vinas said, however, that Rubin told her it was a closed  conference and that no permission had been granted. 
         Perhaps  publicity in the form of a Daily News article the day of the conference spooked  John Jay into abandoning its mission to educate and inform. 
         The  News merely reported the truth: “Two academics at an FBI-sponsored conference  Friday will accuse the NYPD of cooking the books to make the city appear  safer.” 
         But apparently that was too much  truth for John Jay, a school dependent on its relationship with police  departments, especially the NYPD. 
         Long-standing police ties (the  president of John Jay, Jeremy Travis, is a former NYPD Deputy Commissioner) apparently trumped the public’s right to know,  and higher education’s role to inform them.
         Then there was the problem of  possibly antagonizing Police Commissioner Ray Kelly. 
         When the Eterno-Silverman study was  reported last February in the Times, the police department disputed its  findings. Deputy Commissioner for Public Information Paul Browne, Kelly’s  closest aide, said that two more comprehensive studies analyzing the integrity  of the city’s crime statistics had found them to be reliable and sound. 
         The timing of John Jay’s about-face  is also suspect because recent events have bolstered the conclusion that the  police are indeed cooking the books. 
         Most notable are allegations by police  officer Adrian Schoolcraft, who secretly tape-recorded roll call meetings at  the 81st precinct, where officers were told to downgrade felonies to  misdemeanors to make crime appear less than it actually is.
         Adil  Polanco of the 41st precinct in the Bronx has made similar  allegations, including the fact that cops were instructed to arrest innocent  people to make their quotas. 
         After he made his claims, Polanco  was suspended. 
         Schoolcraft was taken by police in  handcuffs to Jamaica Hospital, where he was kept in the psychiatric ward  against his will for six days. 
         Yes, Commissioner Kelly does play hardball. 
         This is the department’s modus  operandi these days under Kelly and Mayor Michael Bloomberg. [Whatever happened  to Mayor Mike’s promise of “more transparency than existed under Rudy Giuliani?”  Probably the same as his pledge not to seek a third term.]
         “Yes, the trend in crime is down,”  said Eterno, in a telephone interview after his presentation Friday. “But the  question is by how much. There is a perception by commanders that integrity is  not as important as it was years ago. There is an unrelenting demand for the  numbers to go down. That has led to manipulation of crime statistics. 
         “You fight crime by using timely  and accurate statistics,” he continued. “You investigate immediately. You don’t  tell people that, if they don’t go to the detective squad, we won’t take a  report. 
         “Even a blind man can see it. It is  so patently obvious but the mainstream media just doesn’t get it.” 
         Well,  the mainstream media is starting to get it.
         And, despite their denials that  anything is amiss, Kelly and Bloomberg get it too. And, by hiding information, they  are trying to keep the public from getting it. 
         Kelly  recently transferred the commander of the 81st precinct, Steven  Mauriello, although spokesman Browne said the move was unrelated to  Schoolcraft’s allegations. Mauriello is now said to be under investigation,  although the department has not publicly acknowledged it.
         Deputy  Chief Michael Marino, who led the police posse that dragged Schoolcraft to  Jamaica hospital in handcuffs, is also said to be under investigation, although  the department hasn’t acknowledged that either. 
         No  doubt Kelly’s concern that the public might catch on explains the department’s bizarre  attempt by a Bronx captain to offer a sweetheart deal to Schoolcraft. 
         According to Schoolcraft’s lawyer  Jon Norinsberg, who rejected the deal as “ridiculous,” the offer conveyed to  him by Captain Brandon del Pozo of the 50th precinct in the Bronx,  emanated from the office of Deputy Commissioner Michael Farrell.
         Farrell is the character who came  up with the FBI statistics [which the FBI has disavowed] that describe New York  as America’s Safest Large City. 
         Equally  bizarre was del Pozo’s description of Farrell to Norinsberg in explaining the  origins of Schoocraft’s so-called deal. 
        According to Norinsberg, del Pozo  described Farrell as “Kelly’s civilian equivalent.”
        Just for the record, Kelly is a  civilian.