Raymond Kelly: Difference between revisions

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===1993 NYPD Handgun Transition===
===1993 NYPD Handgun Transition===
In August 1993, Kelly introduced the [[9mm Luger|9mm]] semi-automatic pistol as an option for officers. The [[Glock]] 19, [[SIG-Sauer P226]], and [[Smith & Wesson Model 5906|Smith & Wesson 5946]] pistols were approved for duty to replace the NYPD's [[Smith & Wesson Model 10]] and Model 64 double-action only revolvers chambered in [[.38 Special]]. Himself a former street cop, Kelly was concerned about the semi-automatic pistols' propensity for sustaining [[firearm malfunction]]s. Indeed, at a media event introducing the new semi-automatic pistols in January 1993, one of the firearms malfunctioned just moments after a deputy inspector explained that malfunctions and failures were the semi-automatic pistol's major design drawback.<ref name="Lin">
In August 1993, Kelly introduced the [[9mm Luger|9mm]] semi-automatic pistol as an option for officers. The [[Glock]] 19, [[SIG-Sauer P226]], and [[Smith & Wesson Model 5906|Smith & Wesson 5946]] pistols were approved for duty to replace the NYPD's [[Smith & Wesson Model 10]] and Model 64 double-action only revolvers chambered in [[.38 Special]]. Himself a former street cop{{Citation needed|{{April 2013}}}}, Kelly was concerned about the semi-automatic pistols' propensity for sustaining [[firearm malfunction]]s. Indeed, at a media event introducing the new semi-automatic pistols in January 1993, one of the firearms malfunctioned just moments after a deputy inspector explained that malfunctions and failures were the semi-automatic pistol's major design drawback.<ref name="Lin">
{{Citation |last =Lin |first =Wendy |title =Long Road to Approval |newspaper =[[Newsday]] |pages =5 |date =August 21, 1993
{{Citation |last =Lin |first =Wendy |title =Long Road to Approval |newspaper =[[Newsday]] |pages =5 |date =August 21, 1993
|url =}}</ref>
|url =}}</ref>

Revision as of 15:18, 6 April 2013

Raymond Kelly
New York City Police Commissioner
Assumed office
January 1, 2002
MayorMichael Bloomberg
Preceded byBernard Kerik
In office
1992–1994
MayorDavid Dinkins
Preceded byLee Brown
Succeeded byWilliam Bratton
Commissioner of Customs for the United States
In office
1998–2001
PresidentBill Clinton
Preceded byGeorge Weise
Succeeded byRobert Bonner
Undersecretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence
In office
1996–1998
PresidentBill Clinton
Preceded byRonald Noble
Succeeded byJames Johnson
Personal details
Born
Raymond Walter Kelly

(1941-09-04) September 4, 1941 (age 82)
New York City, New York, U.S.
Political partyDemocratic
Alma materManhattan College
St. John's University, New York
New York University
Harvard University
Military service
Allegiance United States
Branch/service United States Marine Corps
Rank Colonel
Battles/warsVietnam War

Raymond Walter Kelly (born September 4, 1941) is the Commissioner of the New York City Police Department (NYPD) and the first person to hold the post for two non-consecutive tenures. A lifelong New Yorker, Kelly has spent 43 years in the NYPD according to its website, serving in 25 different commands and as Police Commissioner from 1992 to 1994 and 2002–present. During his tenure with the NYPD, Kelly held most of the department's ranks, except for the Three-Star Bureau Chief, Chief of Department, or Deputy Commissioner. He was promoted directly from Two-Star Chief to First Deputy Commissioner in 1990.[1] After his handling of the World Trade Center bombing in 1993, he was mentioned for the first time as a possible candidate for FBI Director.[2] After Kelly turned down the position, Louis Freeh was appointed.[2]

Kelly was also in the running to become the first United States Ambassador to Vietnam, after President Bill Clinton extended full diplomatic relations to that country in 1995.[3]

In March 2011, New York Senator Charles Schumer publicly recommended Kelly to become the next Director of the FBI.[4]

Education

Kelly graduated from Archbishop Molloy High School in 1959. He graduated with a Bachelor of Business Administration from Manhattan College in 1963.[5] He also holds a juris doctorate from the St. John's University School of Law,[6] a LL.M. from the New York University School of Law,[7] and an M.P.A. from the Harvard Kennedy School.[8]

Kelly has also been the recipient of honorary degrees from Marist College, Manhattan College, the College of St. Rose, St. John's University, the State University of New York, New York University, Iona College, Pace University, Quinnipiac University, St. Thomas Aquinas College and The Catholic University of America.[9]

Personal

Kelly with his wife Veronica in May 2011.

Kelly was born and raised on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, to James F. Kelly, a milkman,[10][11] and Elizabeth Kelly, a dressing-room checker at Macy's.[10] A fitness buff since his teens, Kelly still regularly lifts weights and does aerobic exercises.[12] He is also a snazzy dresser, favoring custom-made shirts which he has laundered at Geneva, a shirtmaker,[13] and silk ties by Charvet. "A tie is the only true way men can make some sort of statement", Kelly has stated, citing Barack Obama as another fan of the high-end French label. "I can tell when someone's wearing Charvet from a distance – even dark colors stand out."[14] Claiming that good quality clothing enhances his public image as an authority figure, he orders custom hand-tailored suits from master tailor Martin Greenfield, who numbers politicians and movie stars among his clientele and whose suits run in the four figures.[15]

Kelly is the father of Greg Kelly, co-host of the local Fox morning television show Good Day New York.[16]

Military

Kelly is a combat veteran of the Vietnam war. He received his commission as a Second Lieutenant in the United States Marine Corps in 1963. In 1965, he went to the Republic of Vietnam with the 2nd Battalion 1st Marines. As a First Lieutenant in Vietnam, Kelly led Marines in battle for most of his 12 months in country, including participation in Operation Harvest Moon. Upon returning to the U.S., Raymond Kelly joined the Reserves and retired after 30 years of service with the rank of Colonel from the Marine Corps Reserves.[9]

Police Career

Kelly in 2007

Kelly joined the New York City Police Department as a trainee in 1960. He graduated first in his class from the New York City Police Academy and passed the sergeant's test upon returning from Vietnam. This meteoric ascent combined with relative inexperience as a beat cop has prompted some criticisms from colleagues. According to Geoffrey Gray, writing in New York Magazine, "Some retired cops say Kelly’s swift ascent makes him a boss who doesn’t understand the street. 'He’s not a cop,' says one retired chief, dismissively. 'He’s on patrol for a blink of an eye and tells guys on patrol ten years how to do their jobs.' Says another, 'He gives you all the ingredients to make shrimp scampi and says he wants sirloin steak.'"[17]

However, his long service stands in stark contrast to that of his predecessor, Bernard Kerik. Kerik served as an NYPD officer for only 5 years, before becoming commissioner.

First Deputy Commissioner

During the mayoralty of David Dinkins, Kelly was appointed First Deputy Commissioner on February 9, 1990, under New York City Police Commissioner Lee Brown, a former Houston Police Chief and future Houston Mayor.

Kelly was promoted from a Two-Star Assistant Chief to the First Deputy position over several Three-Star Bureau Chiefs, and the Four-Star Chief of Department, Robert J. Johnston Jr.

At the time Johnston was so powerful, Brown altered the traditional hierarchy by announcing that Johnston would report directly to the Police Commissioner rather than the First Deputy as had been called for under the former departmental structure. This was done to prevent Johnston from having to report to his former subordinate, Kelly.[18]

37th NYC Police Commissioner

On October 16, 1992, Mayor Dinkins, appointed Kelly 37th Police Commissioner of the City of New York. Kelly took over a police department that was 11.5% black, in a city with an over 25% black population. At 9 am on his first full day as Police Commissioner, Kelly was on the “black-owned” radio station WLIB for 40 minutes talking to host Art Whaley, as well as callers, to discuss minority recruitment.[19] He showed himself a master of outreach and even attended black church services in an effort to recruit minority policemen.

The national decline in both violent crime and property crime began in 1993, during the early months of Raymond Kelly's commissionership under Dinkins. At the time a firm believer in community policing, Kelly helped spur the decline in New York by instituting the Safe Streets, Safe City program, which put thousands more cops on the streets, where they would be visible to and able to get to know and interact with local communities. As the 37th Commissioner, he also pursued quality of life issues, such as the “squeegee men” that had become a sign of decay in the city. The murder rate in New York city had declined from its 1990 mid-Dinkins administration historic high of 2,254 to 1,927, when Kelly left in 1994,[20] and continued to plummet even more steeply under Mayors Giuliani and Bloomberg, as, indeed, it did all over the country. The decline continued when Kelly returned as commissioner under Mayor Bloomberg in 2002–present.

1993 World Trade Center Terrorist attack

The first World Trade Center terrorist attack occurred on February 26, 1993 while Kelly was Police Commissioner under Mayor Dinkins (1992 to 1994), and Kelly led his department through the investigation of the bombing.

1993 NYPD Handgun Transition

In August 1993, Kelly introduced the 9mm semi-automatic pistol as an option for officers. The Glock 19, SIG-Sauer P226, and Smith & Wesson 5946 pistols were approved for duty to replace the NYPD's Smith & Wesson Model 10 and Model 64 double-action only revolvers chambered in .38 Special. Himself a former street cop[citation needed], Kelly was concerned about the semi-automatic pistols' propensity for sustaining firearm malfunctions. Indeed, at a media event introducing the new semi-automatic pistols in January 1993, one of the firearms malfunctioned just moments after a deputy inspector explained that malfunctions and failures were the semi-automatic pistol's major design drawback.[21]

Transition

After Mayor Dinkins was defeated in his run for a second term, the victorious Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, replaced Kelly with Boston's Police Commissioner William Bratton.

41st NYC Police Commissioner

As Commissioner of the NYPD under Mayor Michael Bloomberg, Kelly once again displayed his mastery of outreach,[weasel words] appearing at events such as the Brooklyn's annual West Indian Day Parade, where he was photographed playing the drums and speaking to community leaders. Bloomberg and Kelly, however, continued to place heavy reliance on the CompStat system, initiated by Bill Bratton and since adopted by police departments in other cities world wide. The system, while recognized as highly effective in reducing crime, also puts pressure on local precincts to reduce the number of reports for the seven major crimes while increasing the number of lesser arrests.[22] The two men continued and indeed stepped up Mayor Giuliani's controversial stop-and-frisk policy, which disproportionately targets black and Latino youth and is considered by some to be a form of racial profiling. In the first half of 2011 the NYC police made 362,150 such arrests, constituting a 13.5 percent increase from the same period in 2010, according to WNYC radio (which also reported that 84 percent of the people stopped were either black or Latino, and that "nine out 10 stops did not result in any arrest or ticket.") According to New York State Senator Eric Adams, “Kelly was one of the great humanitarians in policing under David Dinkins. I don’t know what happened to him that all of a sudden his philosophical understanding of the importance of community and police liking each other has changed. Sometimes the expeditious need of bringing down crime numbers bring out the worst in us. So instead of saying let’s just go seek out the bad guy, we get to the point of, ‘Let’s go get them all.’ If Kelly can’t philosophically change, then we need to have a leadership change at the top.”[23]

Under Bloomberg, Commissioner Kelly also revamped New York City's Police Department into a world-class counter-terrorism operation, operating in conjunction with the CIA. Prior to September 11th, 2001 there were fewer than two dozen officers working on terrorism full time; ten years later there were over 1,000. One of Kelly's innovations was his unprecedented stationing of New York City police detectives in other cities throughout the world following terrorist attacks in those cities, with a view to determining if they are in any way connected to the security of New York. In the cases of both the March 11, 2004, Madrid bombing and the London bombings on July 7 and 21, 2005, NYPD detectives were on the scene within a day to relay pertinent information back to New York. An August 2011 article by the Associated Press reported the NYCPD's extensive use of undercover agents (colloquially referred to as “rakers”[24] and “mosque crawlers”[25]) to keep tabs, even build databases, on stores, restaurants, mosques. and clubs. NYPD spokesman Paul Browne denied that police trolled ethnic neighborhoods, telling the AP that officers only follow leads. He also dismissed the idea of “mosque crawlers,” saying, "Someone has a great imagination."[26]

According to Mother Jones columnist Adam Serwer, "The FBI was reportedly so concerned about the legality of the NYPD's program that it refused to accept information that came out of it."[27] Valerie Caproni, the FBI's general counsel, told the AP that the FBI is barred from sending agents into mosques looking for leads outside of a specific investigation and said the practice would raise alarms. "If you're sending an informant into a mosque when there is no evidence of wrongdoing, that's a very high-risk thing to do," she was quoted as saying. "You're running right up against core constitutional rights. You're talking about freedom of religion."[26]

Under Mayor Bloomberg, Kelly's NYPD also incurred criticism for its handling of the protests surrounding the 2004 Republican National Convention, which resulted in the City of New York having to pay out millions in settlement of lawsuits for false arrest and civil rights violations, as well as for its rough treatment of credentialed reporters covering the 2011 Occupy Wall Street demonstrations.[28]

On March 5, 2007, it was announced that a Rikers Island inmate offered to pay an undercover police officer posing as a hit man to behead Kelly as well as bomb police headquarters in retaliation for the controversial police shooting of Sean Bell.[29]

New York City Police Pension Fund

In April 2009, Kelly abstained in a vote to remove Quadrangle Group[30][31][32] from doing business with the NYC police pension fund.

Other Positions Held

Director International Police Monitors

Kelly served as Director of the International Police Monitors of the Multinational Force in Haiti from October 1994 through March 1995. This U.S.-led force was responsible for ending human rights abuses and establishing an interim police force there. For his service in Haiti, President Bill Clinton awarded Kelly a commendation for "exceptionally meritorious service". Kelly was also awarded the Commander's Award for Public Service by then Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Shalikashvili.[citation needed]

Under Secretary for Enforcement

Kelly supervised the U.S. Customs Service.

From 1996 to 1998, Kelly was Under Secretary for Enforcement at the United States Department of the Treasury. At that post he supervised the Department's enforcement bureaus, including the Customs Service, the Secret Service and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center, the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network, and the Office of Foreign Assets Control.[citation needed]

Interpol, Executive Committee

Kelly served on the executive committee and was elected Vice President for the Americas of Interpol from 1996 to 2000.[citation needed]

Commissioner, U.S. Customs Service

From 1998 to 2001, Kelly served as the Commissioner of the U.S. Customs Service, where he managed the agency's 20,000 employees and $20 billion annual budget.[citation needed]

Private sector

Kelly was Senior Managing Director for Corporate Security at Bear Stearns from 2000 to 2001.

Affiliations

Since becoming Police Commissioner, Kelly has served as the Honorary President of the Police Athletic League of New York City (PAL) a non-profit youth development agency that helps inner-city children and teens.

Also during his service as commissioner under Mayor Bloomberg, Kelly has been a member of the Harvard Club of New York, with membership and expenses charged covered by the privately funded New York City Police Foundation. The gift was not reported in Kelly's financial disclosures, but indications upon public revelation in 2010 were that the disclosures would be amended.[33]

A 2010 report on gifts "reported six shared plane flights to Florida in 2008 and five more in 2009, provided by Mayor ... Bloomberg at an undetermined cost".[33]

Clashes With Civil Liberties Group Over Transparency

On October 16, 2011, the New York Civil Liberties Union filed a lawsuit in New York State Supreme Court in Manhattan seeking to force the New York Police Department to release the daily schedules of Commissioner Kelly, whom it characterized as “the most important appointed official" in city government. According to the suit the details of whom Kelly meets with remain largely shrouded in secrecy, in marked contrast to those of other high-placed officials, including the President of the United States, who are required to publicly disclose portions of their schedules. New York Governor Andrew M. Cuomo last month began posting a detailed version of his daily schedules online. “There is no good reason for Commissioner Kelly to withhold this information from the public,” Donna Lieberman, the executive director of the civil liberties group, said in a statement. “If it’s safe for the leader of the country to disclose his schedule, then it’s safe for the N.Y.P.D. commissioner to do the same.”[34] In Mr. Kelly's defense, Mitchell L. Moss, a professor of urban policy and planning at New York University, argued that a police commissioner should get “broad latitude” in a post-terrorist era. According Professor Moss, “The police commissioner of New York City occupies a special, appointed position. He’s our secretary of defense, head of the C.I.A. and, I would say, chief architect rolled into one. He may be the one person who we should treat with some respect on his privacy.”[35]

In an editorial entitled "They Like Transparency Until They Don't", the New York Times admonished:

In recent years, the New York Civil Liberties Union had to sue to get stop-and-frisk data from the police, details on the race of people shot by officers and shooting reports since 1997. Most recently, the group has filed a suit on behalf of an online columnist asking for Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly’s calendar. The department has argued that the commissioner’s whereabouts are secret for security reasons. Civil liberties lawyers note that the president’s schedule appears daily on the White House Web site, so why not Mr. Kelly’s?

Similarly, The Times was forced to go to court to get fuller access to police data. A judge ruled early last month that the New York Police Department had improperly withheld information about pistol owners and the locations of hate crimes.

Such effort and expense to get public information is simply wrong. Mayor Michael Bloomberg, who has vowed to promote more open government, should tell his administrators to comply with the Freedom of Information Law quickly and thoroughly.[36]

Interview With 60 Minutes About Anti-Terrorism Measures Now In Place In New York City

On September 25, 2011, Mr. Kelly was interviewed on the television program 60 minutes by Scott Pelley about anti-terrorism measures taken in New York City's financial district in the 10 years following the 9/11 attacks. One of these has been the development of a $3-billion NYPD Joint Operations Center that includes representatives from the military, FBI, FEMA, and state and local first responders. During the interview, Mr. Kelly averred that the New York City police department now even possesses missiles that could take down a plane, if necessary.

Pelley: "Are you satisfied that you've dealt with threats from aircraft, even light planes, model planes, that kind of thing?"
Kelly: "It's something that's on our radar screen. In an extreme situation, we have some means to take down a plane..."
Pelley: "Do you mean to say the NYPD has the means to take down an aircraft?"
Kelly: "Yes. I'd prefer not to get into the details, but obviously this would be in a very extreme situation..."
Pelley: "You have the means and the training?"
Kelly: "Yes."[37]

From the segment:

It is nearly impossible now to walk a block in lower Manhattan without being on television. There are 2,000 cameras, and soon there will be 3,000 -- all of which feed into this control center housed in a secret location.,[38]

Technology built specifically for the NYPD includes radiological and nuclear detectors on boats, radiation detectors on helicopters and trucks, and detectors on cops' gun belts so sensitive that people who've had medical procedures may trigger them. And Lower Manhattan now includes thousands of surveillance cameras that can identify shapes and sizes of unidentified "suspicious" packages and can track people descriptions, like, "someone wearing a red shirt," within seconds.[39]

Awards and Honors

See also

References

  1. ^ Steinhauer, Jennifer; Rashbaum, William K. (May 24, 2004), "In Age of Terror, Police Leader Gains in Access and Influence", The New York Times
  2. ^ a b "The Commish". The Brian Lehrer Show. 2007-10-19. {{cite episode}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |episodelink= (help); Unknown parameter |serieslink= ignored (|series-link= suggested) (help); (video of broadcast)
  3. ^ Shain, Michael (July 14, 1995), "Can New Viet Envoy Be Our Own Ray Kelly?", Newsday, pp. A15
  4. ^ Sen. Charles Schumer loves idea of NYPD commissioner Ray Kelly taking over FBI, by Jonathan Lemire March 13, 2011
  5. ^ Manhattan College Web Site
  6. ^ St. John's University Web Site
  7. ^ NYU Notable Alumni
  8. ^ NYPD Crimson Harvard Kennedy School Magazine, Winter 2011
  9. ^ a b New York City Government Official Biography
  10. ^ a b "Major Figures In Queens Police Shooting Case". WNBC. NBCUniversal. Retrieved November 1, 2007.
  11. ^ Rashbaum, William K. (November 15, 2005), "N.Y. Police Chief Has a Tough Act to Follow, and It's His Own", The New York Times
  12. ^ "For NYPD Commissioner, Being Fit Is Part of the Job"
  13. ^ Geoffrey Gray, "Boss Kelly: The long-serving NYPD commissioner is autocratic, dismissive of civil-liberties concerns—and effective. Is that a reasonable trade-off to keep the city safe?" New York Magazine, May 16, 2010.
  14. ^ Cosciarelli, "Ray Kelly, NYPD Commissioner, Loves a Good Tie, Hoodie", Village Voice, Jun. 20 201
  15. ^ Ann Farmer, "A Tailor, Called Upon by Designers and Politicians," New York Times, Nov. 6, 2010.
  16. ^ Greg Kelly set to co-host 'Good Day New York', by Richard Huff July 10, 2008, NY Daily News
  17. ^ Gray (2010), New York Magazine.
  18. ^ Carper, Alison (February 10, 1990), "Brown Names Top Aide", Newsday, p. 11
  19. ^ James, George (October 20, 1992), "Kelly Says He'll Stress Recruiting More Blacks", The New York Times, pp. B3
  20. ^ http://www.gothamgazette.com/article/crime/20011130/4/226 | Julia Vitullo-Martin, The New And Old Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, The Gotham Gazette, Nov. 2001.
  21. ^ Lin, Wendy (August 21, 1993), "Long Road to Approval", Newsday, p. 5
  22. ^ Tony Ortega, "Graham Rayman's 'NYPD Tapes' Series Wins Gold Keyboard, NY Press Club's Highest Award", Village Voice, May 16 2011.
  23. ^ Reid Pillifant, "The Gentleman Commissioner: Why NYDP Controversies Never Seem to Touch Ray Kelly", Capital New York, Sept. 7, 2011
  24. ^ "The AP investigation revealed that the NYPD built databases of everyday life in Muslim neighborhoods, cataloguing where people bought their groceries, ate dinner and prayed. Plainclothes officers known as "rakers" were dispatched into ethnic communities, where they eavesdropped on conversations and wrote daily reports on what they heard, often without any allegation of criminal wrongdoing,"— "Law on NYPD's side in Muslim intel program?" CBS News, November 8, 2011.
  25. ^ "Police have also used special informants, dubbed "mosque crawlers," to monitor weekly sermons and activity inside of mosques — even when there's no evidence of wrongdoing , the AP said." —Jill Colvin, "NYPD Spying on Muslim Communities with Help of CIA, Report Says", DNA Info Manhattan Local, August 24, 2011
  26. ^ a b Colvin (August 24, 2011).
  27. ^ See Pillifant (2011) and Adam Serwer, "60-Minutes Hearts NYPD Commissioner Ray Kelly", Mother Jones, Sept. 2011.
  28. ^ New York Times editorial, "Police and the Press", Nov. 26, 2011.
  29. ^ Baker, Al (March 6, 2007), "Inmate Plotted to Kill Police Leader and Plant a Bomb, Officials Say", The New York Times
  30. ^ Pension probe prompts city board votes to cease new investments with Quadrangle Capital Partners
  31. ^ Quadrangle Capital Partners pension 'agents' suspended
  32. ^ Albany pay-to-play pension scandal appears national in scope, Attorney General Andrew Cuomo says
  33. ^ a b Rivera, Ray and William K. Rashbaum, "Police Leader Had Help With Harvard Club Dues", October 25, 2010 (October 26, 2010 p. A20 NY ed.). The Times credited nypdconfidential.com with first report of the Club affiliation arrangement. Retrieved 2010-10-26.
  34. ^ Al Baker "Lawsuit Seeks Release of Police Commissioner’s Schedule", New York Times, October 18, 2011
  35. ^ Baker, New York Times, Oct. 18, 2011.
  36. ^ "They Like Transparency Until They Don't", New York Times, November 14, 2011.
  37. ^ Jen Doll, "Ray Kelly: 'The NYPD Could Take Down an Aircraft if Necessary'", "Running Scared, Village Voice, Sept. 26, 2011
  38. ^ Doll, "Running Scared", "Village Voice", Sept. 26, 2011
  39. ^ Doll, Village Voice Sept. 26, 2011.
  40. ^ Official New York City Government Biography
  41. ^ About the Father of the Year Awards
  42. ^ a b J. Lo and Marc Anthony celebrate official new N.Y. St. Patrick's Day parade Grand Marshal Ray Kelly, by Kenneth Haynes, October 7, 2009
  43. ^ http://100yearassociation.com/awards/richard-a-cook-gold-medal-award/
  44. ^ Grand Marshal and Aides for the 249th NYC St Patrick’s Parade Installed, January 16, 2010
  45. ^ Romano, Kristin. "Ray Kelly New York's Top Cop", Irish America magazine, March 14, 2012. Accessed March 21, 2012. "A former-marine, a beat cop and the only person ever to serve two, non-consecutive terms as New York City Police Commissioner, Raymond P. Kelly has dedicated his life to serving his country and his city."

External links

Police appointments
Preceded by New York City Police Commissioner
1992–1994
Succeeded by
Preceded by New York City Police Commissioner
2002–present
Incumbent
Political offices
Preceded by Commissioner of Customs for the United States
1998–2001
Succeeded by
Preceded by Undersecretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence
1996–1998
Succeeded by

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