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Crusader: The Hell-Raising Police Career of Detective David Durk.


Does this break the record for conflicts of interest in a single book review? I know and admire both the subject of this biography and its author. So you're not getting an objective review, but you are getting an honest opinion: This book is a thoroughly deserved vindication VINDICATION, civil law. The claim made to property by the owner of it. 1 Bell's Com. 281, 5th ed. See Revendication.  of a surpassingly brave and honest man. It's also a hell of a fme book.

David Durk had two micro-seconds of national fame around 1970. An Amherst graduate serving as a New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 police officer, he traveled to bitterly anti-war, anti-police college campuses trying to recruit students to become police officers. He had some success, perhaps because students sensed the presence of someone with even more wild-eyed idealism than they had. Soon thereafter, Durk and his (then) friend and colleague Frank Serpico Francisco Vincent Serpico (born April 14, 1936) is a retired New York City Police Department (NYPD) officer who gained public attention in 1971 as the most prominent police officer to testify against police corruption.  were the culminating witnesses in the Knapp Commission The Knapp Commission (officially known as the Commission to Investigate Alleged Police Corruption) stemmed from a five member panel initially formed in April 1970 by Mayor John V. Lindsay to investigate corruption within the New York City Police Department.  hearings into police corruption Police corruption is a specific form of police misconduct sometimes involving political corruption, and generally designed to gain a financial or political benefit for a police officer or officers in exchange for not pursuing, or selectively pursuing, an investigation or arrest.  in New York City:

"The average cop, he testified, longed to be honest, but was convinced that 'he lives in the middle of a corrupt society.' The police department had become 'a home for the drug dealers and thieves', in which men who could have been good officers, men of decent impulse ... were told in a hundred ways every day: go along, forget about the law, don't make waves....

`But being a cop also means to be engaged with life ... Being a cop is a vocation, of it is nothing at all, and that's what That's What is one of the more idiosyncratic releases by solo steel-string guitar artist Leo Kottke. It is distinctive in it's jazzy nature and "talking" songs ("Buzzby" and "Husbandry").  I saw being destroyed by the corruption of the New York City police department, destroyed for me and for thousands of others like me.'"

This is the story of an unusually honest man who joined an unusually dishonest police department. David Durk is a worldly Don Quixote, a man who knew exactly what he was up against but made the charge anyway. Without important, permanent allies, a single police officer took on the systematic corruption of the nation's largest police department and, later, of New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 itself.

The result was inevitable: The city chewed him up and spat him out. He never held an "important" job certainly never a high-paying one). He had prolonged conversations with three mayors about the extent of corruption. Each was intrigued; each thought of giving him some kind of responsibility; none did. When the department retired him, no one would even lift a finger to see that he received a normal pension. His was cut to $17,000 a year by a bureaucratic bu·reau·crat  
n.
1. An official of a bureaucracy.

2. An official who is rigidly devoted to the details of administrative procedure.



bu
 quirk quirk  
n.
1. A peculiarity of behavior; an idiosyncrasy: "Every man had his own quirks and twists" Harriet Beecher Stowe.

2.
. And yet, you could argue that in Durk's battles against the city, Durk won as many as he lost. One almost wackily incorruptible in·cor·rupt·i·ble  
adj.
1. Incapable of being morally corrupted.

2. Not subject to corruption or decay.



in
 man really did create some lasting change.

The New York City Police Department in the 1960s didn't just contain some dishonest cops: It was grossly and systematically corrupt, from top to bottom. The newly arrived Officer Durk was assigned horrible jobs despite excellent work. He asked why and was told to pay off the officer making assignments. On his first day on the job he gave a parking ticket to Toots Shor Bernard "Toots" Shor (May 6, 1903 – January 23, 1977) was, during the 1940s and 1950s, the proprietor of a legendary restaurant, Toots Shor's Restaurant, in Manhattan. , the restaurant owner restaurant owner ndueño/a or propietario/a de un restaurante , and found himself warning a foot beat under the West Side Highway. He was offered food, liquor, and money as part of the regular arrangement. The stores, bars, restaurants, and illegal establishments paid off everyone in the precinct--sergeants, lieutenants, and captains took their shares. Durk refused.

After years of this, Durk met another cop, Frank Serpico, who was equally honest. The two of them, Durk taking the lead, revealed the extent of police corruption to the highest officials of John Lindsay's administration; no action. So Durk organized a flanking move: He and Serpico went to The New York Times. After a remarkable Durk-arranged meeting, in which half a dozen police, including an inspector, a captain, Durk, and Serpico, briefed top editors on police corruption, David Burnham of the Times k,rote rote 1  
n.
1. A memorizing process using routine or repetition, often without full attention or comprehension: learn by rote.

2. Mechanical routine.
 the story. The Knapp C-ommission conducted an investigation, and a reforming commissioner was appointed. Business as usual changed--at least somewhat, at least for a while.

Then, the usual pattern of Durk's life took over. Redford and Newman were going to do a Butch-and-Sundance movie about him and Serpico. It didn't happen. The two hero-cops fell out. A movie made a hero out of Serpico (he was, and deserved it) and an unattractive minor figure out of Durk (to me, a horrible injustice--read Lardner's account and draw your own conclusions).

So Durk remained a cop, widely loathed, detailed to a progression of departments, and a pain in the ass Noun 1. pain in the ass - something or someone that causes trouble; a source of unhappiness; "washing dishes was a nuisance before we got a dish washer"; "a bit of a bother"; "he's not a friend, he's an infliction"  to a succession of bosses. Mayors and department heads kept looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 a quiet place to put him. He was sent to look into the payment of cigarette taxes and found millions of dollars being lost to the city through cor-ruption and payoffs. He looked into famous city stores helping c:ustomers evade sales taxes on purchases of jewehy, furs, and art--and found that 90 percent of such purchases were mailed out of town to avoid tax (what was mailed was often an empty box). Finally, no one would give him another job, and he retired. Suspicious, competitive, and inflexible, he had lost his last department-head friends. His solace is the publication of this book--and what a book it is. James Lardner may not be Cervantes, but in some respects he may be as good a biographer as the expiring century could have produced for Durk. Lardner is an ex-police officer. He worked as a reporter for The Washington Post and for many years as a New Yorker staff writer. And in Crusader he puns off the difficult job of remaining completely true to the reader while presenting Durk in his own terrns. The author is honest; but, oh rare biographer, he has not lost the capacity for admiration.

As they say in diving competitions, in degree of difficulty this biography ranks near the top. I would have described Durk as, well, indescribable. Take his conversational style: Feeling a need to cram a great deal of information into what was, inevitably, too little time," Lardner writes, "David would dispense with the transitions and explanations that might have served to put his listeners at their ease ... he often failed to say whether something had happened 15 years ago or last week. A newcomer to the experience might feel like Dorothy traveling by cyclone in Tbe Wizard of Oz Wizard of Oz

reaches and departs from Oz in circus balloon. [Children’s Lit.: The Wonderful Wizard of Oz]

See : Ballooning


Wizard of Oz

false wizard takes up residence in Emerald City. [Am. Lit.
: every so often, a familiar element would pass through the conversation (asbestos ... Trump ... gypsy cabdrivers ... The Queens DA's office... Colombian hit men) but the connections between them were not always evident."

Durk always wanted another job, but he did not want to reach for it. Old colleagues would arrange job interviews for him, and Durk would speculate to a potential new boss about what he might do if he found corruption in the official's own office. Modem Don Quixotes don't injure only the windmills The List of windmills is a link page for any windmill or windpump. Collections
  • Mill database with over 15000 mills from all over Europe
  • Mill database for Lincolnshire
By country
Canada
  • Folmar Windmill, Bayfield, Ontario
.

This splendid book is a wonder of two kinds: It is a complete vindication of David Durk and a treat for any reader lucky enough to turn its pages. For students of one of The Washington Monthly's perennial subjects, the behavior of people in bureaucracies, Crusader should not be missed.
COPYRIGHT 1996 Washington Monthly Company
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1996, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Graham, Donald E.
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:May 1, 1996
Words:1185
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