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Title: Daley picks FBI agent to lead Police Department
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ ... 34.story?coll=chi_tab04_layout
Published: Nov 29, 2007
Author: Gary Washburn and Angela Rozas
Post Date: 2007-11-29 16:50:50 by Kamala
Keywords: None
Views: 462
Comments: 7

Daley picks FBI agent to lead Police Department

Jody Weis, a Federal Bureau of Investigation agent from the Philadelphia bureau, will take over the Chicago Police Department. (Bloomberg photo Bradley C. Bower / May 8, 2007)

By Gary Washburn and Angela Rozas | Tribune staff reporters

12:20 PM CST, November 29, 2007

Mayor Richard Daley today named a veteran FBI boss to become the city's top cop, saying he was the best choice to repair trust in a Police Department beset by problems of corruption and brutality.

Daley introduced J.P. "Jody" Weis, the special agent in charge of the Philadelphia FBI office, at a news conference where he touted both the veteran agent's previous role in the Chicago FBI office and his work as an internal investigations supervisor who policed fellow agents' conduct.

Daley said Weis will bring a "new perspective" to the department. It is the first time in more than 40 years that the city will have a police superintendent chosen from outside its own ranks, and it comes on the heels of Daley naming a Los Angeles attorney to the agency that handles citizen complaints about police.

Video

Weis' thoughts on the job/Video

Daley, while emphasizing that only "a few or some" officers had abused their trust, said the department can't do its job unless residents "believe that every interaction they have with our officers will be safe and respectful."

Weis said the mayor told him the city must do more to fight crime but "made it just as clear . . . people's confidence in the department needs to be rebuilt."

Both Weis and Daley emphasized plans for the department to increase its outreach to "diverse" communities in the city, in what seemed to be a further acknowledgment of the growing distrust between police and residents in some neighborhoods.

Daley also announced that interim Police Supt. Dana Starks would become the new head of the Chicago Commission on Human Relations, which is charged with investigating complaints of discrimination and enforcing the city's hate crime law.

Mark Donahue, president of the local Fraternal Order of Police, said Weis's outsider status may prove difficult.

"I think the rank-and-file would have preferred someone from within the department, someone they could easily identify with," said Donahue, who added that some officers with ambitions of moving up in the department might leave, sensing a changing of the guard.

Weis, 49, was in the news earlier this year when he helped lead an undercover investigation that exposed an alleged terrorist plot to attack soldiers at the Army's Ft. Dix base in New Jersey. Six men -- who allegedly underwent firearms training, collected an arsenal and conducted surveillance at Ft. Dix and other Army installations -- were arrested in May.

"Today we dodged a bullet," Weis said at the time. "We may have dodged a lot of bullets."

But Weis was the subject of another type of notoriety in 2006 for his role in the case of a FBI whistle-blower who charged that the agency mishandled terrorism investigations during the 1990s and failed to prevent the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks.

At a time when Weis was second-in-command of the Office of Professional Responsibility in Washington in 2003, the FBI opened an internal investigation of the Chicago-based agent, Robert G. Wright Jr., according to a memo subsequently obtained by the Tribune.

Written by a subordinate in Weis' office, the memo quoted Weis and another top official as saying they would "take him out" after Wright appeared on television to air his criticism.

Asked about the allegation when he was appointed head of the Philadelphia office last year, Weis said he could not comment on the case because it involved a personnel matter, according to the Philadelphia Inquirer.

Wright, who was suspended, ultimately won reinstatement by the Justice Department, although officials let a six-month unpaid suspension stand.

Assuming City Council approval, Weis would succeed Supt. Philip Cline, who retired earlier this year as pressure mounted on Daley and the Police Department. Six members of the Special Operations Section were facing criminal charges, snagged in an ongoing corruption investigation. Supt. Dana Starks subsequently announced plans to disband the controversial unit, some of whose members have been the subject of several complaints of brutality and other wrongdoing. On another front, four officers were charged in connection with off-duty beatings in two barroom incidents that were caught on videotape.As part of an effort to restore public trust, Daley recently overhauled the police Office of Professional Standards, which critics contend failed miserably in investigating civilian complaints against police.

In an unusual move, the mayor named an outsider, Ilana Rosenzweig of Los Angeles, to head the revamped agency.

In his selection of Weis, Daley is making a similar departure from years-long practice at City Hall.

The last non-Chicagoan to head the Police Department was O.W. Wilson, a highly respected criminologist from the University of California at Berkeley. That was in 1960, and the selection was by the current mayor's father, the late Mayor Richard J. Daley. Like his son, the elder Daley was faced with a scandal at the time. Eight officers from the old Summerdale police district were caught operating a burglary ring.

An earlier attempt to replace Cline misfired. The Chicago Police Board, which vets candidates, presented Daley with three recommended candidates in July, including two Chicago police veterans and a former New York City police commander. But apparently unhappy after interviewing the three finalists, Daley asked the board to continue its search in August.

Weis (pronounced "Weese"), 49, began his FBI career in Corpus Christi, Texas in 1985 after completing service as an ordinance disposal officer in the Army, according to his FBI biography. He subsequently was assigned to terrorism, narcotics and violent crimes investigations in Houston and served on a SWAT team and as a bomb technician. Weis was promoted to the FBI's Bomb Data Center in 1992, joining the violent crimes/fugitive unit two years later. Transferred to Phoenix in 1996, he supervised squads dealing with domestic terrorism, international terrorism and civil rights.

Weis was assistant field agent in charge of the Chicago office before going to FBI headquarters. An assignment as criminal special agent in charge in the Los Angeles field office preceded his stint in Philadelphia.

While in Philadelphia, the FBI's Art Crime Team recovered the original typewritten, hand-edited manuscript of "The Good Earth" by renowned American novelist Pearl Buck, which had been missing from the author's archives for more than four decades. And during his Los Angeles assignment, his agents recovered Renoir's "Young Parisians," one of three paintings stolen in a 2000 heist in Stockholm.

Tribune reporters David Heinzmann, Todd Lighty and Jeff Coen contributed to this report.

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....VERY INTERESTING HISTORY TO FOLLOW......

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transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/0705/08/pzn.01.html

PAULA ZAHN NOW

Alleged Terror Plot Exposed in New Jersey; Radical Anti- American Message Being Broadcast to Palestinian Children?

Aired May 8, 2007 - 20:00 ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.

PAULA ZAHN, CNN ANCHOR: Good evening, everybody. Thank you for joining us tonight. Here are some of the stories we're bringing out in the open tonight: what the FBI is calling a brand-new form of terrorism.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

JODY WEIS, FBI: Today, we dodged a bullet. In fact, when you look at the type of weapons that this group was trying to purchase, we may have dodged a lot of bullets.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

ZAHN: An alleged terror plot is exposed. Just how many homegrown terrorists are still under cover tonight?

Also, you're not going to what Palestinian children see on TV. The anti- American slogans the characters chant are only just the beginning.

Plus, neighbors band together to keep a mosque from moving in. Is it blatant intolerance out in the open? We will debate that.

Out in the open first, though: Federal prosecutors, the FBI, and police are all saying tonight they have headed off a big one. Six Muslim men born outside the U.S. are accused of plotting to launch an assault with automatic weapons against a major military base. But is this as big as it seems?

The suspects have no connection to any international terrorist organization. They made a video of themselves firing guns, but were sloppy enough to take to it a store and ask a clerk to copy it for them. And, at one point today, a law enforcement source even said, these were hardly hard-core terrorists.

Let's get straight to the alleged target, Fort Dix, New Jersey, right now.

And that's where we find Deborah Feyerick standing by live.

Deborah, what's the latest?

DEBORAH FEYERICK, CNN CORRESPONDENT: Well, Paula, according to the FBI complaint, these men were inspired by bin Laden. They were inspired by al Qaeda, and inspired by at least two of the 9/11 hijackers.

But there's no direct evidence that they were ever sanctioned by the terror mastermind or received any sort of a fatwa, call to arms, from him. Instead, authorities say they were planning this on their own, sort of an independent cell ready to do jihad.

(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)

FEYERICK (voice-over): The men in these vans are accused of a plot that was sinister and deadly, five men described by authorities as radical Islamists allegedly plotting to target Fort Dix Army Base in New Jersey and kill 100 soldiers or more, using AK-47s or other assault rifles.

WEIS: Today, we dodged a bullet. In fact, when you look at the type of weapons that this group was trying to purchase, we may have dodged a lot of bullets. We had a group that was forming a platoon to take on an army.

FEYERICK: The initial tip came more than a year ago, when a store clerk contacted authorities, saying he had been asked to copy a video slowing a group of 10 men shooting assault weapons, militia- style, and calling for jihad.

An FBI informant infiltrated the group, convincing them he could get his hands on AK-47s and M-16 semiautomatic weapons. The doctored weapons were delivered last night, with FBI agents and state police soon sweeping in to take out the terror cell.

CHRISTOPHER CHRISTIE, U.S. ATTORNEY: All that, combined with their increased training sessions, the intensity of those, and ultimately their desire to get automatic weapons to complete their plan, told us it was now time to take this down and not let it go any further.

FEYERICK: The five defendants, one of them an alleged sniper from Kosovo, traveled to the Poconos this February for training.

Randy Swiden (ph) says he saw them on the firing range.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: And they just set up some targets in a 50- yard range and started firing. But they had brought jugs and other, like, paper plates as targets, instead of regular aiming targets.

FEYERICK: According to the complaint, on that training trip, they talked about bombs, C-4 explosives, and the possibility of striking U.S. warships docked in Philadelphia. They watched terror training videos, along with attacks on U.S. military vehicles and personnel.

CHRISTIE: They watched the blowing off of the arm of a United States Marine, and the room burst out into laughter.

FEYERICK: One of the defendants, year-old Serdar Tatar, provided the cell with a map of Fort Dix. Authorities say his family owns this pizzeria near the base and that he used to deliver pizzas there. JOSEPH HOFFLINGER, PIZZA CHEF: No, he seemed like a regular, regular person. You know, he would come in. Hi. How you doing? What's up? You know...

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Would he hang around?

HOFFLINGER: Yes, he would stay for, like -- he would sit there and have lunch, talk to his father, and then he would go.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

FEYERICK: And, according to the FBI complaint, that man, Tatar, suggested causing a power outage here at Fort Dix, saying that that would make this attack a lot easier.

And, even when he suspected that the paid FBI informant was working for the feds, he still told that informant that he was doing this in the name of Allah.

Now, three of the defendants are ethnic Albanians. They're in the country illegally. They ran a roofing company that they worked from out of their home. One of the defendants is a taxi driver, another a convenience store worker, both in Philadelphia.

And a sixth man was charged with supplying some of the weapons. Now, except for one of the men, they did not have lawyers today. They were represented temporarily by a public defender. They did not have to enter guilty pleas. They have all been charged with conspiring to kill U.S. military personnel. And that is a charge that carries maximum life in prison -- Paula.

ZAHN: Deborah Feyerick, thanks so much.

So, what exactly do we know tonight about the suspects? Deborah just mentioned three are ethnic Albanians. They happen to be brothers from Cherry Hill, New Jersey.

And Allan Chernoff has been digging into their background and talking with their neighbors, and joins me now from outside their home.

Allan, what have you found out?

ALLAN CHERNOFF, CNN SENIOR CORRESPONDENT: Paula, the Duka brothers are known on this block by their Americanized nicknames, Tony, Elvis and Shain.

But, according to prosecutors, they are illegal immigrants, all three of them. They work for their father's roofing company run right out of this home over here. And, after work, neighbors would see them playing soccer on the front lawn.

In fact, one neighbor says the family was very friendly, even helping his elderly father-in-law.

Just one thing a bit strange: They used to keep livestock in their backyard.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

MICHAEL LEVINE, NEIGHBOR OF SUSPECTS: There was a sheep in the backyard. They had chickens back there once. And I think they had a rooster back there. And, from what I understand, it was for Ramadan, the sheep, and it was going to be sacrificed.

So, we didn't think anything of it. We didn't say anything.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

CHERNOFF: Some other neighbors, though, did complain. The police came and took the sheep and chicken away.

Now, there is a Marine who lives right across the street. He's done two tours of duty in Iraq. And the mother of the Dukas actually came to his welcome-home party.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

STEPHAN HILBERT, NEIGHBOR OF SUSPECTS: They just walked over amongst -- with all the family and friends over there, and just gave me a quick welcome-home, and glad I'm safe, and, you know, and shook my hand. I mean, granted, it was just the lady and two of the small kids, but it's just kind of weird.

They come over and you welcome me home from fighting terrorism over in another country. And here you are, the men in your household are plotting to attack a local military installation.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

SNIP.....

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