Levitt with un trademarked article: One Police Plaza ...

Levitt with un trademarked article: One Police Plaza ...

40K3,8849
40K3,8849

    Feb 25, 2008#1

    Will kelly make him remove the trademark..."NYPD"  from his web site?
     PS. Lenny.. Johnston had one of the new, recently introduced military surplus ballistic helmets on, not a "Pith helmet"....... Pith Helmets are worn by life guards and were worn by American and British soldiers  serving in the Burma theater and far east in WWII.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pith_helmet
    ****


    What Johnston had on, but painted stealth black...

    http://nypdconfidential.com/print/2008p/080225p.html
    One Police Plaza


    No Sorrow Here For Larry Davis
    February 25, 2008

    Your Humble Servant breathed a small sigh of relief last week upon learning
    of the death in upstate Shawangunk prison of the convicted drug dealer, murderer,
    and so-called urban legend Larry Davis.


    Although God only knows what some police commissioners of the NYPD might
    have said about me in private, in 30 years of reporting, Davis was the only
    person I angered enough that he threatened to kill me.


    Davis made the threat some two decades ago, after I reported the details
    of a taped telephone conversation he had while on the lam for shooting six
    cops in his sister’s apartment. In that conversation, Davis told of planning
    to kill one of his gang [“Put two in his head and throw him off the roof"]
    in the hopes that the police might mistake the victim for Davis.


    He made his threat to me in a telephone call to the press room of the Bronx
    county courthouse, where Yours Truly was hanging his hat in those days. Davis
    was in Riker’s then, having beaten the rap for shooting the cops. Authorities
    got him only for weapons possession. He told me he had my home address and
    that people on the outside would be coming for me. I hung up the phone, never
    heard from him again, but never got that call out of my mind.


    Just 20 years old, the short, stocky Davis had become something of a Bronx
    folk hero after he shot the six cops, then eluded capture
    for the next 17 days during a city-wide
    police manhunt. Chief of Department Robert Johnston orchestrated the pursuit,
    closing street after Bronx street until he trapped Davis in a housing project
    like a rat. The cold winter night of his capture, Johnston appeared in the
    East Bronx wearing a pith helmet. [Not for nothing was
    he known in the NYPD as Patton.]


    The phenomenon of Larry Davis — also acquitted of killing four drug
    dealers — so intrigued my editors at Newsday that they encouraged me
    to get to know him and his family. So I did. He, his mother Mary, his brothers
    [some of whom were also drug dealers and served long prison stretches], sisters,
    nephews, nieces and other assorted relatives and friends lived with six pit
    bulls in a large, wood-framed house on Woodycrest Avenue near the Bronx County
    courthouse. Davis showed me the business cards of some police officers and
    claimed to be dealing drugs with them. Despite the attempts of his lawyers
    William Kunstler and Lynne Stewart — the same Lynn Stewart who was convicted
    in 2006 of illegally aiding blind terror Sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and his radical
    followers — there was no evidence to support any police corruption involving
    Davis.


    By the time of his trial for shooting the cops, there was enough support
    for him that the Rev. Lawrence Lucas, a Roman Catholic priest, brought a class
    of students into the courtroom. It was a kind of civics lesson. Lucas strode
    over to Kunstler and gave him a bear hug. A jury of 10 blacks and two Hispanics
    subsequently acquitted Davis of the shooting, accepting his story that he fired
    in self-defense. Convicted only of the least serious, the weapons possession,
    charge, he was sentenced to 5 to 15 years in prison.


    His urban legend status continued through his last trial in 1991, when he
    was charged with killing another drug dealer, Ramon Vizcaino. This time it
    didn’t
    go so well for him. While in prison, Davis — who had changed his name
    to Adam Abdul Hakeem — was visited by a female IRS agent, whom Corrections
    Department officials suspected of providing Davis with the home addresses of
    judges, detectives and prosecutors who had been involved in his arrests.


    The agent, Lorraine M. White, acknowledged to me she had visited Davis in
    prison on numerous occasions but denied giving him any addresses. The day my
    interview of her appeared in Newsday, she resigned from the IRS.


    Two weeks later, on March 14, the Vizcaino jury convicted Davis. Although
    I doubt my Newsday stories had anything to do with the verdict, Davis’s attorney
    Michael Warren bellowed in the courtroom, “Are you happy Lenny? You low-life.
    You dog. You scoundrel.” [See New York Newsday, March 15, 1991.]


    One last point — this one, the flip side of the folk-hero, urban legend
    story: that all blacks in the Bronx supposedly distrust the police. Former
    Bronx district attorneys Mario Merola and Paul Gentile, both white men, tried
    unsuccessfully to convict Davis.


    Gentile’s current successor, Bronx district attorney Robert Johnson,
    the state’s only black district attorney, pursued the Vizcaino case against
    Davis. Upon his conviction, Johnson said that the guilty verdict “means
    that a very dangerous individual is going to be made to pay for his wanton
    acts. … Because of the nature of his crime and the background of Adam
    Abdul Hakeem, the people intend to seek the maximum sentence.” Davis
    got the max: 25 years to life.


    Despite Johnson's pursuit of Davis, both former police commissioner Howard
    Safir and former governor George Pataki called him anti-cop. What had spurred
    their anger was that Johnson opposes the death penalty. After police officer
    Kevin Gillespie was killed in 1996, Pataki removed the case from Johnson. Awaiting
    trial, Gillespie’s alleged killer, Angel Diaz, hanged himself in prison.


    In the same interview with the New York Times in which Safir called his predecessor
    Bill Bratton “some airport cop from Boston,” he said he had “no
    respect for Johnson, none whatsoever.” He later maintained he was misquoted.




    Me and the NYPD.
    The New York Civil Liberties formally filed suit
    in state court against the police department to get me back my press pass,
    which I had had since 1983.

    The suit seeks to learn whom the police department issues press cards
    to, information the department has refused to provide — despite statements
    by Mayor Michael Bloomberg that he wants more “transparency” — his
    word — within the police department.


    The suit cites the following incidents:

    Police Commissioner Ray Kelly’s visit to Newsday in 2003
    to complain to my editors about columns critical of him. Kelly had never complained
    to me. Neither did any member of his staff.

    Kelly’s
    barring me from One Police Plaza in 2005 for no stated reason. The ban was
    rescinded through the intervention of the Civil Liberties attorney Chris Dunn.
    I was then provided with a “minder” — Sgt. Kevin
    Hayes of the Public Information Department — who was assigned to follow me
    about the building.

    Kelly’s barring me again from Police Plaza in 2006, again for
    no stated reason. That, too, was rescinded after Dunn intervened.
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