On the Front Line in the War on Terrorism
Judith Miller
Cops in New York and Los Angeles
offer America two models for preventing another 9/11.
Three time zones, 3,000 miles, and a
cultural galaxy apart, New York and Los Angeles face a common
threat: along with Washington, D.C., they’re the chief American
targets of Islamic terror. And both cities boast top cops, sometime
rivals—the cities are fiercely competitive—who know that ensuring
that a dog doesn’t bark will determine their legacies. After
investing millions of dollars in homeland security, Police
Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly of New York and Chief William J.
Bratton of L.A. can both claim counterterror successes. What can we
learn from their approaches? And will they be able to continue
preventing terrorist attacks in their cities?
On the face of it, the nation’s two biggest metropolitan forces
seem to have adopted kindred counterterrorism strategies. Both have
roving SWAT or “Emergency Service Unit” teams, equipped with gas
masks and antidotes to chemical and biological agents. Both have set
up “fusion” centers to screen threats and monitor secret
intelligence and “open-source” information, including radical
Internet sites, and both have started programs to identify and
protect likely targets. Both have tried to integrate private
security experts into their work. Both conduct surveillance that
would have been legally questionable before September 11. Both have
sought to enlist support from mainstream Muslims and have encouraged
various private firms to report suspicious activity.
Yet despite such similarities, the terror-fighting approaches of
New York and L.A., like the cities themselves, reflect very
different traditions, styles, and, above all, resources. New York,
which knows the price of failure and thus has a heightened “threat
perception,” sets the gold standard for counterterrorism—and has the
funding and manpower to do it. Kelly, 65, views his highest priority
as ensuring that al-Qaida doesn’t hit the city again. “When your
city has been attacked, the threat is always with you,” he tells me.
Deploying its own informants, undercover terror-busters, and a small
army of analysts, New York tries to locate and neutralize pockets of
militancy even before potentially violent individuals can form
radical cells—a “preventive” approach, as Kelly calls it, that is
the most effective way that police departments, small or large, can
help fight terror.
In L.A., a city that has never been attacked, terrorism is a less
pressing concern than gang violence and other crime. Lacking the
political incentive, and hence the resources, to wage his own war on
terror, Bratton, 59, has instead pooled scarce funds, manpower, and
information with federal and other agencies—an approach that federal
officials hold up as a model for police departments that can’t
afford New York’s investment.
Both cities can claim victories that underscore the central role
that law enforcement can—and should—play in homeland security. Just
this June, the NYPD and the FBI announced that they had foiled a new
Islamic terror plot against New York, this time to blow up fuel-tank
farms at John F. Kennedy International Airport. While the plot was
extremely unlikely to succeed—law enforcement had penetrated it from
the start—the arrests revealed that Trinidad and other Caribbean
ports have become fertile ground for Islamic militancy. Since
September 11, the NYPD has broken up at least seven terror plots.
What the LAPD calls its “coming of age” terrorism case—as yet not
widely reported—commenced with a concerned landlord’s call just days
after September 11. It eventually led police investigators to a
small group of Islamic militants who may have provided support for
the 9/11 hijackers (see box).
Yet neither Kelly nor Bratton can rest on his laurels. Those
playing defense must be constantly vigilant, while al-Qaida and
like-minded militants need to be lucky only once.
Size matters. The NYPD has long been one
of the world’s largest law enforcement agencies. On September 11,
2001, it was employing some 50,000 people—36,000 sworn officers and
about 14,000 civilians—to protect more than 8 million people. The
next five largest U.S. police departments combined don’t have as
many employees, Bratton ruefully observes. His own adopted city of
L.A.—he’s originally from Boston—has a civilian and sworn force of
12,800 covering a city of nearly 4 million. As the Police Executive
Research Forum (PERF), a Washington-based think tank, concludes in a
new report, the NYPD has the resources “to do things that other
departments cannot.”
Shortly after taking office under Mayor Michael Bloomberg in
January 2002, Kelly began his second tour of duty as Gotham’s top
cop by drawing on those considerable resources to revamp and expand
the NYPD’s terror-fighting capabilities. He hired two key
counterterrorism deputies from Washington, D.C.: David Cohen, a
former deputy director of the CIA’s operations wing, to head the
NYPD’s Intelligence Division; and Michael Sheehan, former State
Department head of counterterrorism, to run the force’s new Counter
Terrorism Bureau. Then he assigned more than 1,000 people to their
units, the largest deployment of any American city to combat
terrorism. With funds from the Police Foundation, a private group,
he also sent liaison officers overseas to work alongside police
departments in some of the cities most frequently targeted by
terror, including Amman, London, and Singapore.
Each day, the Counter Terrorism Bureau’s 205 officers analyze
worldwide threats to determine how many officers should deploy
where; provide training for all members of the force; assess risks
to targets; and develop plans for protecting key sites in and near
the city. Much of the NYPD’s recent counterterrorism work has
focused on the financial district in lower Manhattan, home to 75 of
the city’s 367 most sensitive sites, information about which is kept
in a giant red binder, the “Red Book.” Kelly is weighing a plan to
erect a “ring of steel”—cameras, random screenings, and
sophisticated sensors like those that London installed after its own
subway and bus terror attacks in 2005—to help protect the
1.5-square-mile district and its 1 trillion daily financial
transactions. The city is also spending $250 million to install
cameras in its subway and transit system.
The cutting edge of the NYPD’s antiterrorism efforts, though, is
David Cohen’s Intelligence Division. “We’re looking at ‘clusters,’
at how and where people get together, what they do and where they
go, how they raise funds,” Kelly says during an interview at One
Police Plaza. “This analytical work is not being done anywhere else
in government. It’s all about prevention.”
Before September 11, the Intelligence Division mainly developed
intelligence on narcotics and violent crimes, and sought to protect
visiting dignitaries to the city—a glorified “escort service,” Kelly
once scoffed. Now, its personnel devote 95 percent of their time to
terrorism investigations, the PERF report concludes (and sources
confirm). Kelly says that the division has 23 civilian intelligence
analysts, with master’s degrees and higher from Columbia, Cornell,
Harvard, and other universities; some have come from leading think
tanks, even from the CIA—giving the force a capability, he says,
“that exists no place else.” The division’s “field intelligence
officers,” one assigned to each of the NYPD’s 76 precincts, keep
tabs on people, crimes, and arrests that might have terrorism links.
“Core Collection” officers develop confidential informants, who
could give early warning about people being radicalized by militant
associates or websites.
Cohen’s division also supervises
undercover agents who infiltrate potentially violent groups. The
identities of these covert warriors, and other details of the
program, remain fiercely guarded secrets. But information
occasionally turns up in federal prosecutions, such as the NYPD’s
use of an undercover agent in helping to foil the June JFK airport
conspiracy, and of both a Bangladeshi undercover officer and an
Egyptian-born confidential informant in disrupting a 2004 plot by
Islamic terrorists to bomb the Herald Square subway station. “I want
at least 1,000 to 2,000 to die in one day,” one of the accused told
the informant in the subway case, a stunned New York jury heard last
year. Though the men had not acquired explosives, police arrested
them shortly before the Republican national convention in August
2004, after nearly two years of surveillance. The key plotter,
Shahawar Matin Siraj, a 22-year-old Pakistani, recently received a
30-year sentence. “This is the kind of homegrown, lone-wolf case
that starts way below federal radar,” Cohen says. “But had these two
guys acted on their intentions”—to “fuck this country very bad,” as
Siraj threatened on tape—“a lot of New Yorkers would have died and
been injured.”
Undercover work capitalizes on the NYPD’s 870-plus civilian and
uniformed speakers of Albanian, Arabic, Bengali, Farsi, Pashto,
Turkish, and Urdu—more linguists than the FBI’s New York field
office employs. Of the 470 or so in uniform, more than 200 are
“master linguists” in high-priority languages. The latest police
academy class boasted graduates hailing from 65 countries, Cohen
notes. Some will doubtless work for the division’s Cyber
Intelligence Unit, a 25-person group situated in unmarked
headquarters in a Chelsea industrial building; others may wind up in
the Prison Intelligence program at Rikers Island, where they will
work with officials from probations, the New York State Police, and
other agencies to monitor the spread of militancy.
Richard Falkenrath, a counterterrorism expert who worked in the
Bush White House and succeeded Deputy Commissioner Sheehan last
year, says that New York’s intelligence efforts are “awe-inspiring,”
beyond anything he’s seen at the local, state, and even federal
levels. “New York is far more action-oriented than the feds,” he
says, “partly because it’s a lot easier and faster to take action.”
Even rivals like Bratton, who served as New York’s police
commissioner in the mid-nineties before falling out with his boss,
Rudy Giuliani, share the admiration. “The NYPD’s intelligence
operation is widely regarded as the gold standard,” Bratton
concluded in an article coauthored for the Manhattan Institute (City
Journal’s publisher) last fall.
What Bratton criticizes—and he’s not
alone—is the NYPD’s alleged refusal to give other law enforcement
agencies access to the intelligence that it has so doggedly
gathered. “New York has perfected an array of intelligence-gathering
initiatives,” he observes. “My concern is that at the federal level,
there are too few dots to connect, and in New York, what they
collect is not being shared. As a result, law enforcement is not
being formed by this information.”
Kelly dismisses this as “old criticism.” But neither he nor his
deputies deny that for years after September 11, relations between
the department and the FBI were rancorous. The NYPD blames the
strain on FBI resentment of Kelly’s creation of what are basically a
miniature FBI and CIA within the force. After Kelly tried
unsuccessfully to take over the FBI-run Joint Terrorism Task
Force—the nation’s first alliance between the bureau and local law
enforcement, dating back to 1979—he stationed NYPD detectives
overseas and authorized Cohen’s division to conduct its own
surveillance and infiltration operations, despite FBI opposition.
“For a long while,” Cohen says, “their attitude was: ‘If you’re not
under our control, you’re out of control.’ ”
Kelly’s view that combating terrorism was “something we have to
do ourselves” partly reflected the devastating effect of pre-9/11
intelligence failures on the law enforcement community. Not only did
thousands of civilians die on 9/11; the city’s fire department lost
343 firefighters—the largest loss of life in one day in history for
emergency responders; the Port Authority police suffered 37 deaths,
the largest loss of life in one day in history for police; the NYPD
itself lost 23 officers, the second-largest loss historically. “
‘Trust us’ was no longer acceptable after 9/11,” observes Sheehan,
who is writing a book on counterterrorism, Crush the Cell.
Tensions also grew between the FBI and Sheehan’s Counter
Terrorism Bureau. In the summer of 2003, officials said, the FBI
passed an unverified tip to the CTB that a “dirty bomb” might be on
its way to New York. When Sheehan called a Friday afternoon meeting
to discuss a possible deployment to the city of local, state, and
federal investigators, emergency-response personnel, and
nuclear-detection technology, the FBI began downplaying the threat.
Furious, Kelly, Cohen, and Sheehan decided to use the tip to test
the city’s emergency-response and intelligence teams in a massive
drill. “What we learned from that episode was that when and if we
needed federal assets, we were still on our own, even after 9/11,” a
former senior city official complains.
Relations continued to deteriorate until the FBI replaced its
senior leadership in New York in May 2005. Mark Mershon became the
new head of the FBI’s 2,000-person New York field office (the
bureau’s largest), and Joseph Demarest, Jr. took over its
counterterrorism division. Both determined to repair what they saw
as a crucial partnership. A turning point, both sides agree, came in
November 2005, when FBI director Robert Mueller III visited the NYPD
and had a private sit-down with Kelly. “The director was impressed
by New York’s programs,” Demarest says. Mueller agreed with Kelly
that New York was “big enough and enough of a target to warrant some
independence,” an NYPD official recalled.
The FBI began seeing Cohen’s Intelligence Division not as a rival
or nuisance but as an additional source of vital intelligence.
Mueller also blessed Mershon’s desire to make the FBI-led Joint
Terrorism Task Force, with its 180 FBI and 125 police members, more
inclusive. The senior-ranking NYPD official on the task force even
became its “comanager.” “You get a real buy-in,” explains Demarest.
“Important decisions are no longer made alone.” Cohen adds: “It’s
hard to overstate how far we’ve come from the animosity of the early
days.” He estimates that, though the FBI has the “first right of
refusal” on tips and leads—35,000 have come in since the city set up
its counter-terrorism hotline five years ago—the NYPD has pursued
almost two-thirds of them.
NYPD officials insist that the
department doesn’t deserve its reputation for arrogance and that its
counterterrorism programs have always required cooperation with
private businesses and other law enforcement agencies. Since
launching Operation Nexus in 2002, notes Cohen, the NYPD has visited
more than 30,000 businesses in New York and beyond, encouraging them
to report suspicious purchases or other potentially
terrorism-related activity.
Another initiative, Operation Shield, helps area businesses
assess, and revise, security. The program also shares unclassified
intelligence and security tips with private security firms. “Shield
is all about sharing with the private sector on a real-time basis,”
Kelly says. “Two days after the bombings in Mumbai”—the devastating
simultaneous bombings of seven trains in India last year that killed
over 200 and wounded hundreds more—“our lieutenant did a
teleconference from there with 100 Shield members in our pressroom,
giving more specifics about the attack than anyone else had.” A
recent session, with more than 500 in attendance, discussed the
chlorine bombs that American forces have faced in Iraq.
New York’s “fusion center,” the nation’s first, now includes
counterterrorism reps from approximately 40 local, state, and
federal agencies. The NYPD coordinates, too, with the numerous
agencies that operate the city’s massive public transportation
system, with its 6.5 million daily riders. The NYPD protects that
system mostly with its own funds, since the federal government has
spent only $386 million nationally on transit security—far less than
the $24 billion it has spent bolstering aviation security. In 2007,
Falkenrath disclosed in March, there had already been 22 subway bomb
threats and 31 intelligence leads on subway attack plots.
Despite these outreach efforts, state
officials and leaders in other cities still occasionally grumble
that the NYPD is reluctant to work with other police departments or,
more often, that it neglects to inform them about its operations on
their turf. Michael Sheehan, quoting his former colleague Cohen,
responds: “There is no such thing as intelligence sharing; there is
only intelligence trading.” Even small police forces can develop
useful tips and leads with the proper skills and a little
creativity, he points out; that’s why the NYPD has invested
considerable resources to train and work with police from the
tristate area. “But yes,” Sheehan acknowledges, “we prefer to work
with people who are seriously in the game—those that run informants
and collect real information, rather than just circulate
watered-down, nonspecific threat information provided by the
Department of Homeland Security.”
Getting more partners “in the game” is the goal of Operation
Sentry, the NYPD’s discreet new effort to forge counterterrorism
partnerships within a 200-mile radius of the city. Recognizing that
the 9/11 attacks began not in New York but in Boston and Portland,
Maine, Kelly invited law enforcement officials from counties and
cities as far away as Baltimore to a three-day meeting late last
year to discuss such issues as the radicalization of Muslim youth
and what New York has learned about how to identify
terrorism-related conduct.
Francisco Ortiz, New Haven’s police chief, calls Sentry
“invaluable.” Through Sentry, he now gets updates on regional
threats as they unfold, as well as invitations to bimonthly sessions
in New York featuring the latest threat assessments and training
courses on improving security at sensitive sites. “They’re helping
us become a better listening post in Connecticut for New York,” he
says. Ortiz now intends to use some of his own 400-officer force to
start a version of New York’s Nexus program to sensitize local
businesses to potential threats. New York police trainers have
already visited New Haven to help.
Utica police chief C. Allen Pylman finds the Sentry sessions
“eye-opening”—particularly one that focused on the “Toronto 18”
plot, disrupted last year, to behead the Canadian prime minister,
bomb high-profile targets, and conduct random shootings in shopping
malls. “My city of 65,000 people is not likely to be a target of
terrorism,” Pylman notes. “But are there people here who may be
supporting radical causes? Yes, I think so.”
In many ways, Los Angeles and New York
might as well be on different planets. Tim Connors, the director of
the Manhattan Institute’s Center for Policing Terrorism, which has
been advising the LAPD, argues that differences of geography,
history, politics, and culture result in dramatically different
attitudes toward, and resources for, fighting terrorism.
The sheer mass of sprawling territory that William Bratton’s
12,800-member force and other law enforcement agencies must cover is
daunting. “What is New York at its widest—40 miles?” asks L.A. city
councilman Jack Weiss, a champion of Bratton’s campaign for more
funds and flexibility for the LAPD, especially its counter-terrorism
efforts. “The city of Los Angeles alone is some 450 square miles.
The county is 4,000 square miles, with 88 incorporated and
unincorporated cities and the world’s seventh-largest economy. We
have 45 separate police departments.” The FBI’s L.A. field office
must protect 18 million residents in seven separate counties, says
its head, J. Stephen Tidwell. “Ray Kelly has an army of 37,000.
Well, nobody has an army here, so no one can do it by himself.”
“You’re talking about protecting a county that has multiple
climates,” agrees John Sullivan, a lieutenant in the Los Angeles
County Sheriff’s Department and an early champion of intelligence
sharing and of redefining police as “first preventers” of terrorism.
The county, he points out, contains 85 percent of California’s
critical assets.
Civic culture and history also constrain Bratton’s
terrorism-fighting capabilities. The LAPD’s notorious resort to
illegal surveillance in the past led to extremely tight legal
restrictions on whom it could monitor, and for what kinds of
suspected offenses. Bratton is trying to loosen those restrictions,
but Angelenos remain deeply suspicious of the police. Further, while
most New Yorkers witnessed the 9/11 attacks, spent months breathing
in air thick with ashes and the stench of scorched metal, lost
friends and relatives, or knew people who knew victims, for
Angelenos the day was “a disaster movie,” says Amy Zegart, a
counterterrorism expert at UCLA. Terrorism—except in the L.A.-based
TV show 24—is something that happens to others, not to them.
Another constriction is L.A.’s byzantine political system,
dominated by competing fiefdoms and myriad jurisdictions with
overlapping responsibilities. The California Highway Patrol, for
example, polices the freeways that dissect Bratton’s territory. The
Port of Los Angeles, through which some 45 percent of the nation’s
cargo passes, has its own police force. So do the area’s airports.
The biggest, best-funded local law enforcement office in the city
isn’t even Bratton’s LAPD; it’s the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s
Department, which has a sworn and civilian force of 16,216. And
Sheriff Leroy Baca, a savvy elected politician, enjoys a $2.1
billion yearly budget—twice the LAPD’s. Of its $1.2 billion budget,
the LAPD spends roughly $24 million on counter-terrorism; New York
spends $204 million.
The Police Commission, a five-member panel appointed by the
mayor, chooses Los Angeles’s chief cop and is likely to endorse
Bratton for a second five-year term. But it’s the 15-member city
council that approves Bratton’s budget and personnel levels. While
Bratton could in theory shift officers from gang duty to
counter-terrorism, Weiss tells me, it would be difficult without the
council’s blessing. Nor can Bratton unilaterally create an LAPD
career path in intelligence, as New York has done. Sacramento, seat
of the state government, also wields far greater leverage over Los
Angeles than Albany does over New York. “Everyone has a view on what
we should and should not be doing,” Bratton says. “Even the L.A.
Times seems to think it runs the police force.”
Such limitations make Bratton’s progress
on counterterrorism since his appointment five years ago all the
more remarkable. Working with Weiss and a handful of other
supporters, he has added 75 officers permanently to the group of 33
who worked on terrorism before 9/11, and he has won the authority to
hire or shift another 44 later. Still, the perpetual shortage of
manpower and funds has made “sharing,” “jointness,” and “force
multiplier” Bratton mantras. He has relentlessly sought to forge
closer ties with other law enforcement and public-safety agencies in
the region, particularly the FBI. “In this department, you need to
justify exclusion,” Bratton says. The FBI’s Tidwell describes law
enforcement cooperation in L.A. as “almost genetic,” a tradition,
reinforced by Bratton and Baca, forged by decades of joint responses
to earthquakes, fires, floods, and other natural disasters that
plague the Southland. On the Joint Terrorism Task Force squads, to
which Bratton has assigned some 15 officers, the FBI clearly leads.
“And that doesn’t cause anyone any problems here,” Tidwell
maintains. His office, too, has changed its own attitude toward
sharing intelligence. “Our motto used to be ‘restrict and share what
you must.’ It’s the opposite today.” Tensions between the LAPD and
the Department of Homeland Security have also eased somewhat after
DHS secretary Michael Chertoff met last year with the chiefs of the
nation’s 15 largest police departments.
Homeland Security now has an official stationed full-time at
L.A.’s crown jewel of “jointness”: the Joint Regional Intelligence
Center, or “Jay-Rick,” which both Bratton and Chertoff hold up as a
model for similar fusion centers soon to be operational in more than
three dozen U.S. cities. Launched with a $4 million Homeland
Security grant and opened last year in a concrete federal building
in Norwalk, a 45-minute drive (without traffic) from downtown L.A.,
the center has 16 LAPD staffers and some 30 designees from other law
enforcement and public-safety agencies. Inside, it resembles a
modern-day newsroom: a vast open working space, shoulder-level
partitions separating the analysts’ gray desks, computer screens
everywhere, and wall-mounted television monitors showing various
American and foreign-language news broadcasts.
The JRIC’s analysts don’t conduct investigations; instead, they
vet tips and leads—nearly 25 new ones per week—to identify the 1
percent that prove serious. If someone threatens to spread anthrax
in the city, for instance, the JRIC’s “threat squad” of some 20
analysts from federal and local agencies tries to figure out if the
danger is real. Is the threat written or oral? From someone who
seems scientifically knowledgeable? Have hospitals reported people
with flu-like symptoms or who are having trouble breathing? Are
adequate antibiotics on hand?
The JRIC’s heavy workload troubles Amy Zegart, among others. “The
track-every-lead, confiscate-every-toenail-clipper approach may be a
political winner, but it’s a counterterrorism loser,” she says.
“Officials need to narrow the scope of inquiry to avoid more
wild-goose chases rather than conduct them.” Experts also complain
that it’s hard to tell who leads the JRIC. In theory, the LAPD, the
sheriff’s office, and the FBI “comanage” the center. But what that
might mean in an actual crisis is far from clear.
Moreover, the JRIC’s remote location makes it an unlikely
assembly point in an emergency. John Miller, Bratton’s former deputy
for counterterrorism and now an assistant FBI director in
Washington, D.C., denies that the center’s location had anything to
do with low rents, as some critics have charged. The choice of
Norwalk, he says, ensured that the JRIC would be near, but not too
near, logical targets in downtown and West L.A. Also, some officials
say, since the FBI-led Joint Drug Intelligence Group already had an
office in the building, it was relatively cheap and easy to link the
bureau’s classified and unclassified computer lines to the fusion
center’s. “The concept is right; the people are right; and they’ll
grow into it,” Miller says.
However, staffing shortages prevent the center from operating
“24/7,” as envisaged. Getting security clearances has also been a
problem, according to Robert Fox, the LAPD lieutenant who comanages
the center. “Clearances can take a year,” he says.
Operation Archangel, a second pillar of
the LAPD’s counterterrorism effort (also financed by millions in
Homeland Security funds), uses sophisticated computer software to
identify, prioritize, and protect vulnerable targets—so far, 500 of
them, ranging from Disneyland to nuclear plants, officials say.
Archangel asks the owners and operators of these sites to provide
the latest structural information—floor plans, air-conditioning and
electrical-system locations, entrances and stairwells, and so
on—which goes into a massive database; the software then assesses
vulnerabilities and devises deterrence and prevention strategies, as
well as emergency response plans. “We’re basically doing what we did
before, but on steroids,” says Tom McDonald, the LAPD lieutenant who
runs Archangel and sees it, as many federal officials do, as
something that other cities can emulate.
If such a system sounds obvious, it isn’t, Miller points out. For
instance, during the Columbine massacre, students had to help police
sketch the school’s floor plan on top of a squad car with a marker.
“Archangel is the kind of automated system you would need in an
emergency,” Miller says.
But Archangel, located in the deliberately nondescript basement
of an office building in West L.A., operates with just 15
people—one-third its projected staffing—and not around the clock.
“We are hurt, not just in this program, by the fact that our city
does not permit federal Homeland Security funds to pay for full-time
city employees,” says Michael Downing, who spent time in London
studying terrorism before taking command of the LAPD’s
Counter-Terrorism and Criminal Intelligence Bureau this spring.
“Resources are definitely a challenge.”
Another, adds McDonald, is the reluctance of some private
businesses to associate openly with his program, fearing that being
identified as targets will drive away business. Such concerns rule
out L.A.’s adoption of the NYPD’s “in-your-face” exercises, like its
random deployments of heavily armed police and vehicles to sites
around the city. Bearing names like “Atlas” and “Hercules,” these
displays of force, says Kelly, deter terrorists by showing them that
New York is just too tough a target. “There’s less fear here than in
New York, and less interest in generating fear,” says William
McSweeney, chief of the Los Angeles Sheriff’s Department’s Office of
Homeland Security.
The lack of public urgency means that
Bratton must work doubly hard to get the counterterrorism manpower,
money, and information that he needs. And that, in turn, has
involved lots of travel, for which he has faced criticism. While
Kelly is famously a homebody—he’s taken no vacation since starting
in October 2002 and has made only five day trips from the city since
then—Bratton was out of town more than a third of 2005, and nearly
as often last year. Staunchly defended by Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa,
Bratton says that the LAPD and the city benefit from the information
and cooperation that he gets from his travels. The explanation has
satisfied most critics. Nor do Angelenos balk at their chief’s
$300,000-plus salary, much heftier than Commissioner Kelly’s
$189,700.
Continuing to promote “jointness,” Bratton is now trying to get
several cities to pool resources to station detectives overseas, as
New York has for several years; these liaison officers would share
their reports among those who helped finance their posts. Supported
by the Manhattan Institute and the Department of Homeland Security,
he is also planning a national police academy in Los Angeles to
train police from across the country in intelligence-led policing
skills. “The nation’s 18,000 local police departments have been
crying out for such advanced training and broader strategic
guidance,” says Jerry Ratcliffe, who teaches at Temple University
and attended the first planning meeting.
Despite their differences, both the NYPD
and the LAPD agree that a key way to crush incipient terrorist cells
and thwart terrorism is to use local laws and follow locally
generated leads, which, after all, is what good police departments
do best. Relying on this low-key approach, Downing says, the LAPD
has arrested some 200 American citizens and foreigners with
suspected ties to terrorist groups since September 11. At present,
he adds, his division has 54 open intelligence cases, involving at
least 250 “persons of interest.” One of the most celebrated examples
of the strategy is the 2005 Torrance case, in which the arrest of
two men for robbing a gas station in that city eventually unraveled
a militant Islamic plot to attack U.S. military facilities,
synagogues, and other places where Jews gather in Los Angeles
County. But L.A., Downing admits, still lacks the resources to
develop its own undercover agents and informants. “We do that with
the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force,” he says.
Because most American cities resemble L.A. more than they do New
York, Bratton’s priority of pooling resources and information is
likely to be a more attractive, if less ambitious, model than New
York City’s approach, which includes running its own undercover
counter-terrorism operations. But Washington has begun to
acknowledge the virtue of New York’s argument that thwarting
terrorism requires better local intelligence about what potentially
dangerous groups and individuals are planning. Last year, the
Department of Homeland Security’s “Urban Area Security Initiative”
began to offer grants to help local police strengthen their ability
to collect and analyze intelligence. Our cities, L.A. and New York
included, will be safer for it.
Research for this article was supported by the Brunie Fund for
New York Journalism.