Giuliani’s wise guy

By any reasonable measure, Rudy Giuliani’s many scandalous associations should effectively end his presidential campaign, but it’s Bernie Kerik that should embarrass Giuliani to the point of humiliation.

Today, the NYT offers a detailed, comprehensive look at the bizarre relationship between the former NYC mayor and his disgraced former police commissioner. The piece adds some details that I hadn’t seen before, all of which makes Giuliani look even worse. (Yes, apparently that’s possible.)

There are, for example, the warnings Giuliani received about Kerik’s suspected ties to organized crime, before Giuliani made him police commissioner. Asked about the allegations, Giuliani initially said, “I was not informed of it.” Later, Giuliani testified that he couldn’t remember if his city investigations commissioner, Edward J. Kuriansky, briefed him on Kerik’s alleged criminal activity.

But a review of Mr. Kuriansky’s diaries, and investigators’ notes from a 2004 interview with him, now indicate that such a session indeed took place. What is more, Mr. Kuriansky also recalled briefing one of Mr. Giuliani’s closest aides, Dennison Young Jr., about Mr. Kerik’s entanglements with the company just days before the police appointment, according to the diaries he compiled at the time and his later recollection to the investigators.

The additional evidence raises questions not only about the precision of Mr. Giuliani’s recollection, but also about how a man who proclaims his ability to pick leaders came to overlook a jumble of disturbing information about Mr. Kerik, even as he pushed him for two crucial government positions.

“Rudy can fall for people big time, and sometimes qualifications are secondary to loyalty,” said Fran Reiter, a former Giuliani deputy mayor who now supports Hillary Clinton. “If he gets it in his head he trusts you, he is extremely loyal.”

Why does this sound so familiar? A chief executive who’ll put loyalty above merit, even if that means putting suspected criminals in positions of power and authority — just what the country needs right now.

As for the details, Paul Curtis urges us not to skip past this too quickly: “Giuliani claims he doesn’t remember being told that the man he was about to nominate to command the New York City police department had ties to organized crime. That’s like not remembering when you were warned that the person you hired to babysit your kids was a convicted sex offender.”

Of course, Giuliani bragged about his decision to promote Kerik, despite the criminal allegations and his lack of qualifications.

In 2000, more than half the mayor’s cabinet had opposed Mr. Kerik’s appointment to be police commissioner. His detractors had noted, among other concerns, that Mr. Kerik did not have a college degree, a department requirement at the time for captains and above.

Mr. Giuliani waved off the dissenters. “I believe that the skill I have developed better than any other was surrounding myself with great people,” Mr. Giuliani wrote in his 2002 book, “Leadership.”

“Too many leaders overlook candidates with unusual resumes because of a failure of nerve,” Mr. Giuliani wrote. “By the time I appointed Bernie Kerik, I had hired so many people that I was immune to such criticisms.”

Yes, his ability to ignore the advice of qualified officials is something Giuliani is proud of.

Then there’s this gem:

When Mr. Giuliani became mayor, he gave Mr. Kerik a job in the Correction Department. A year later, the mayor asked him to drop by Gracie Mansion.

The two men sat upstairs and shared a bottle of red wine, a gift to the mayor from Nelson Mandela. Mr. Giuliani said he planned to appoint Mr. Kerik as first deputy correction commissioner. Mr. Kerik, who wrote of this in his autobiography, “The Lost Son,” was taken aback; he was a year removed from being a police detective.

“Mayor, I appreciate your confidence in me, I really do,” he said. “But I ran a jail. One jail. Rikers is like 10 jails.”

Just do it, the mayor replied.

Mr. Kerik followed Mr. Giuliani downstairs to a dimly lighted room. There waited Mr. Giuliani’s boyhood chum Peter J. Powers, who was first deputy mayor, and other aides. One by one, they pulled Mr. Kerik close and kissed his cheek.

“I wonder if he noticed how much becoming part of his team resembled becoming part of a mafia family,” Mr. Kerik wrote. “I was being made.”

Giuliani’s team, according to one of his closest allies, is similar to an organized crime family.

Ladies and gentleman, your Republican frontrunner for President of the United States.

Ezra argued the other day, “This guy is out of his goddamn mind.” I often wonder whether the media and the Republican establishment realize this inconvenient reality.

Inconvenient realities never bother the Rethugs, the fascists (that’s redundant), or the media these days. If Guiliani is the annointed heir to Bush’s dictatorship then, just as Bush’s past from military desertion to drug and alcohol abuse and business failures were sidelined, all of Guiiani’s pecadillos will be swept under the rug, and those who dare bring any of it up will be mercilessly threatened and smeared.

Guiliani is a psychopath who makes Bush look like Forest Gump. For those of us who saw him close up in NYC while he was mayor we know what he’ll be like as president, and he will indeed finish what Bush, Cheney and the neocons have inflicted on us and the world. Loyalty uber alles is his credo. Disagreement makes you a sick person. Dissent is intolerable. And you better be white. He is an insufferable, abusive bully in need of a padded cell.

Ain’t modern democracy, American style, great?

  • I lived in NYC from 1994-1999 and saw a marked improvement in the quality of life under Rudy’s regime… I never had a problem with him as Mayor.

  • I lived in NYC from 1994-1999 and saw a marked improvement in the quality of life under Rudy’s regime… I never had a problem with him as Mayor.

    Just as many Texans had no problem with George W. Bush as governor and look how well he turned out.

  • Obviously when one ignores the Constitution problems ensue.

    I am so happy that when my father was a POW during World War II, the Geneva Convention worked to protect him. He was not tortured. (Just starved prior to his escape.)

    However the current policy of current administration continues to put our soldiers at risk.

    Yet, there is hope. Although the bad news is our government is broken, the good news some attorneys as the public want to repair it.

    In that regard, http://www.USAjudges.com; is the first data-driven collection system that allows attorneys and the public to restores transparency to government in a way no other organization has.

    (And it was Texas attorneys who first recognized they could impact local judicial elections long before attorneys in the other 49 states.)

    Still nationally, ethical lapses persist – http://www.communityrights.org/Newsroom/crcInTheNews/WP04-18-06.asp)

    And on a state-wide basis, the first thing state judges did was to vote to make their proceedings confidential.
    http://www.ajs.org/ethics/pdfs/When%20confidentiality%20ceases.pdf

    But not before the 5th District reminded citizens in their view, judges really are above the law:

    “Mitchell vs. McBride 944F.2D 229 “A judge will not be deprived of immunity because the action he took was in error, was done maliciously, or was in excess of his authority; rather he will be subject to liability only when he has acted in the clear absence of all jurisdiction.’ The rule of judicial immunity applies even where the judge is accused of acting maliciously or corruptly…Sariello vs. Campbell 860 F. Supp. 54”

    USAjudges.com discovered other states have their own problems.

    Remember the Nebraska judge who ruled “no prison” for 5’1″ convicted child molester, which was Upheld on appeal?
    http://www.journalstar.com/articles/2006/05/25/local/doc4474ed34cdca3829136003.txt

    USAjudges.com discovered Judge Christine Cecava was no maverick judge. Indeed, Judge Cecava served as past president of the Nebraska Judges Association; and, in the Why Does Anyone Write Fiction, Department – likewise served on the ‘Task Force’ to protect children.
    http://www2.csc.edu/eyh/speaker/speaker2000.asp

    As I mentioned at the judicial conference where I spoke this summer,

    “Protect children from whom? Her?”

    So I want to continually remember to thank the good attorneys and regular Americans who, in continuing to submit reports to USAjudges.com, make our own government transparent.

    The public can make a difference.

    Thanks.

  • ***JRS***should have come out of your basement more often because you missed so much. That’s the limit of your endorsement? Your quality of life improved? Because for many just the opposite occurred and there is a long record of it. The quality of life for the Mob certainly improved. The firefighters certainly improved.

    What a generalized comment. Improved compared to what? What quality? Are you blind…no, can’t be. Because if you were blind you would be handicapped and their quality of life didn’t improve…unless you consider moving them out of town an improvement. So what improved?

  • At some point, I think the accumulating evidence that Giuliani may be more amoral than Bush has to reach a tipping point, and if it comes before the primaries, if nothing else, it has to open the door for the others – Romney and Huckabee, most likely.

    If it doesn’t come until after the primaries have anointed a de facto nominee, I have to think it’s going to a long season for the GOP, because those running for Congress are going to be dealing with how to keep the stink from sticking to them.

    It’s going to be the ugliest presidential campaign yet – and I am not looking forward to it.

  • Seems the story made the front page. Below the fold, but on the front page nonetheless.

    And on top of the investigation into the radio foul-up … not a good week to be Rudy.

  • Giuliani’s team, according to one of his closest allies, is similar to an organized crime family.

    Poor Rude…
    He’s got all the props to be the next angry white male republican nominee:
    He’s crazier than a loon raised on bat shit.
    Surely that’s qualification enough.

    And he would be the nominee…
    If it weren’t for one small thing:
    He wags his ass a little too well in a mini skirt.

  • It’s not too late, Rudy! Give your Republicans what they want and you’ll come out on top. Republicans want to lick the dogshit off of the jackboot that’s planted in their faces, they need the kiss of the riding crop on their upraised buttocks to remind them that they’re alive.So stop explaining and start threatening. This one’s yours to lose so break out that black leather and those oh-so-appealing fishnets and run as the whatever-it-is that you are. Play to your strengths: racism, arrogance and ignorance and you’re a shoo-in.

    Trust me.

    P.S.: Appearing on the campaign trail in a wetsuit or two wouldn’t hurt.

  • I can’t say that I’m surprised that qualifications are secondary to loyalty with Rudy, if in fact that’s the general rule. Bush single-handedly desensitized the country in this regard, it’s expected that an incompetent fool like Giuliani would govern in the same fashion. Our only hope come election time (if in fact Rudy gets the slot) is that the country votes so overwhelmingly in favor of the other candidate that not even the sure-to-come voting fraud in Rudy’s favor can give him the win.

    Otherwise, we’re screwed for another 4 years. Even if a democrat makes it in, and it looks like Hillary will be the dem choice, it won’t matter, not really. Only two families having at the Presidency for the past 20+ years is not a good thing. Business as usual, I guarantee it.

  • Rudy can fall for people big time, and sometimes qualifications are secondary to loyalty,” said Fran Reiter, a former Giuliani deputy mayor who now supports Hillary Clinton. “If he gets it in his head he trusts you, he is extremely loyal.”

    Who does this sound like? Giuliani really would be Bush 2.0 but worse.

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