Former New York police commissioner Ray Kellyâsometimes mentioned as a potential opponent to Mayor Bill de Blasioâs reelection campaign next yearâpraised law enforcement authorities who caught the New York and New Jersey bombing suspect Monday, but offered a sharp critique of the mayor.
Shortly after New Jersey cops arrested Afghan-born 28-year-old Ahmad Khan Rahami after a morning shootout and foot chase in Linden, New Jersey, Kelly also indicated that the de Blasio administration is too politically correct and overly sensitive to media criticism, prompting city officials to discard law enforcement tools that could help prevent future terrorist attacks.
âIt was dumb, quite frankly,â Kelly said of de Blasioâs just-retired police commissioner Bill Brattonâs decision in April 2014 to disband the five-officer Demographics Unit that Kelly created in 2003 to study the social habits and locations of New Yorkâs myriad ethnic and religious groups, especially Muslims in the post-9/11 world.
The unit, which at its height boasted 15 plainclothes detectives who frequented mosques, book stores, and restaurants in an intelligence-gathering operation, was vehemently protested as spying and religious profiling by Muslim advocacy organizationsâa view supported by a Pulitzer Prize-winning series by the Associated Press in 2011.
âThey were doomed to success,â Kelly said sarcastically about the APâs reporting, which he and then-Mayor Michael Bloomberg protested at the time as unfair and wrongheaded.
âThey ended it,â Kelly said of de Blasio and Bratton. âThey negotiated the front-page story in The Times above the fold. It was all PR.â
He added: âThey wouldnât be doing that today.â
De Blasioâs press spokesman didnât respond by deadline to Kellyâs criticisms on those and other subjects.
Kelly said the Demographics Unit, later renamed the Zone Assessment Unit, was designed to create a âgranularâ picture of New York Cityâs residentsâwho they were, what neighborhoods they lived in, how they spent their time.
âIt was sort of the information that was already in the U.S. Censusâbut just deeper,â he said.
As for how such information could have been useful, Kelly gave the example of the Chechen Boston Marathon bombers, who as they fled law enforcement authorities hijacked a BMW and ordered the driver to take them to New York. The Demographics Unitâs intelligenceâthat ethnic Chechens tended to live in certain neighborhoods in Brooklyn and New Jerseyâcould have helped locate the criminals had they made it to their destination, Kelly said.
A physically fit 75-year-old and former Marine who saw combat in Vietnam, Kelly indicated he is unlikely to run for mayor next year.
âIâm not seriously considering it,â said Kelly, who is vice chairman of the K2 Intelligence investigative firm, a contributor to ABC News, and a distinguished visiting fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
In an interview at the Yale Club, after Kelly was the keynote speaker at a counterterrorism conference organized by the Tel Aviv-based Shurat Hadin Israel Law Center, he also criticized the de Blasio administration for removing from the NYPDâs websiteâas part of a lawsuit settlement with Muslim groupsâa groundbreaking study of homegrown Islamic radicalism that he commissioned in 2007.
âYou can still get it on Amazon for 15 bucks,â Kelly said about the 92-page report, titled âRadicalization in the West: The Homegrown Threat.â (Actually the current Amazon price is $19.99.)
Kellyâthe cityâs top cop under Mayor David Dinkins in the early 1990s and then again, from 2002 to 2014, under Michael Bloomberg, interrupted by service as the undersecretary of enforcement in Bill Clintonâs Treasury department and head of U.S. Customsâsaid de Blasio was too quick Saturday night to discount terrorism or a possible link to an explosion hours earlier in Seaside Park, New Jersey, after a bomb went off around 8:30 p.m. in Manhattanâs Chelsea neighborhood, injuring 29 people.
âIt was too early. We still didnât know,â Kelly told The Daily Beast about de Blasioâs statements on live television a few hours after the Chelsea bombing, adding that Hizzoner âshould have been more prudent⊠We donât know what [Rahamiâs] internet activity was. We donât know what his phone activity was or his phone records. Thatâs something theyâre going through now. Itâs premature.â
Kelly was equally dubious about de Blasioâs assertion that âthereâs no other individual weâre looking for at this point in timeâ during Mondayâs City Hall briefing, at which an FBI official asserted that thereâs âno indicationâ that the 28-year-old Rahami is part of a terror cell.
âThey always have these elected people who want to downplay the potential threat,â Kelly said as additional details of the investigation into Rahamiâs actions were revealed as the story rapidly unfolded. âItâs his [de Blasioâs] watch, so now he wants to.â
Kelly said city officials were too quick to discount terrorism in the Central Park explosion last Fourth of July weekend that resulted in a young tourist losing his left foot. The NYPD initially identified the likely culprit as an experimenter or hobbyist.
Later, however, the improvised explosive device, placed in a shopping bag, was discovered to have been activated by TATP, a homemade chemical mixture long favored in terrorist attacks, including the explosives used in last fallâs attacks in Paris.
âTATP is an explosive made from acetone and peroxide,â Kelly said. âItâs made out of widely available chemicals and itâs very volatile, and they only identified it two weeks after the event as being TATP. But by that time, the media didnât care about it⊠A lot of questions should have been asked firstâ before the more benign non-terrorism explanation was disseminated. âThis could have been a test of some sortâ in preparation for a full-scale attack.
Asked if he believed city officials had been âtoo PC,â Kelly answered with a chuckle: âI think weâve been that way for a while.â
During a briefing on Monday, de Blasio reversed himself on his Saturday night declaration to reporters on the Chelsea sidewalk that âthereâs no evidence at this point of a terror connection,â and âat this moment, we do not see a link to terrorism,â and âthere was no specific evidence of a connectionâ to the bombs discovered in New Jerseyâassertions that havenât stood the test of two days.
âBased on the information we have now, we have every reason to believe this was an act of terror,â de Blasio said, adding that âvigilance is called for.â
(Presumably, Hizzoner wasnât referring to the just-released paperback edition of Kellyâs best-selling memoir, Vigilance.)
In Kellyâs remarks to the counterterrorism conference, he gave his audience a detailed timeline of the multi-agency investigation of the bombings in New York and New Jerseyâwhich he later said was based on his own sources along with publicly available information.
âThey traced the flip phones [found on the Chelsea devices] very quickly to an individual living in New Jersey,â Kelly said. âBy the way, his fingerprints were on the bomb⊠The investigators did a good job in speeding the investigation.â
Luckily, Kelly added, Rahamiâs âtradecraft was very bad.â