Crazy Rudy’s full court press

Published 11:20 am Friday, June 8, 2018

by Blair Bless

Last year, as the tightly wound spool of scandal surrounding his administration started to unravel, President Trump reportedly asked a roomful of White House officials rhetorically, “Where’s my Roy Cohn?”

In addition to serving as the president’s mentor, attorney and fixer, the late Mr. Cohn is an ignominious footnote in our nation’s history for the persecutorial role he played during Sen. Joseph R. McCarthy’s investigations into communist activity during the 1950s.

Every passing day brings further evidence that the president has found his Roy Cohn redux. His name is Rudy Giuliani.

Heralded as “America’s Mayor” in the wake of 9/11, Mr. Giuliani has reemerged — demonically, phoenix-like, eyeglasses often crazily askew — from the political netherworld into which he slithered upon leaving the New York City Mayor’s office and failed bids for the U.S. Senate and the presidency.

Without question, during Mr. Giuliani’s first few years as Mayor, he enforced arcane laws and statutes to clean up New York City. In that, he proved to be an unabashed success. Unfortunately for Mr. Giuliani, he was unable to sustain the popularity, good-will and achievements of his first term throughout the entirety of his reign.

And then came the fall of the Twin Towers, after which Mayor Giuliani was catapulted onto the national stage. It was a public redemption that even the most callous of politicians could appreciate. Giuliani stood amidst the rubble of Wall Street almost godlike. He was a hero for our time. What happened to that guy? The answer: that guy never existed.

Rudolph Giuliani was and is a figment of his own imagination. To many, however, he was and is one nasty son-of-a-gun. Granted, those who share those feelings most might include his two (soon-to-be three) ex-wives; discarded advisors and confidantes; former colleagues; political opponents; mob bosses; and white collar criminals.

While not inventing the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization (RICO) statute, as U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Rudy Giuliani used it in an innovative and highly-effective manner against New York’s Mafia families, drug traffickers, wayward politicians, and Wall Street manipulators alike; who, as Mayor, punished scofflaws to the fullest extent possible.

This former standard-bearer for law and order now believes, however, the president of the United States can get away with murder — of fired FBI Director James Comey, one of Mr. Giuliani’s former subordinates — without facing the same consequences that we mere mortals could expect to face. Like arrest, incarceration, prosecution, conviction and, in some instances, execution. He doesn’t believe the president can be subpoenaed. Or indicted.

President Trump may sound a bit crazy when he voices opinions such as this. But he’s crazy like a fox; his are Machiavellian efforts to retain power.

Rudy Giuliani, on the other hand, appears to be as crazy as a loon.

Giuliani has vilified Mr. Comey. He’s launched attacks on the FBI and the Justice Department, institutions he claims to have once respected. Not anymore. As early as 2016, Mr. Giuliani told Fox News’ Sean Hannity that he was “so ashamed of the Justice Department.”

Shamelessness, however, was clearly his Modus operandi when he served in that very same Justice Department.

As reported in The New York Times on July 11, 1989, Walter S. Mack Jr., once a senior prosecutor and chief of the organized crime unit in the Southern District until he was relieved by Mr. Giuliani said, “The overwhelming perception was that what was good for him was what was going to be done. If it was going to put him in the most positive light and give him the image he wanted, it was going to be done.”

That point was reiterated 29 years later in Comey’s book “A Higher Loyalty,” when Comey noted there was an unwritten code among those working for Mr. Giuliani back then that “Rudy was the star at the top and the successes of the office flowed in his direction.”

Now, he is a man in search of relevance and, once again, the limelight.

In another era, Rudy Giuliani might have used the RICO statute against Donald Trump and his “Organization” much as he did when combating organized crime, Ivan Boesky, Michael Milken, and the Wall Street firm of Drexel Burnham Lambert. Instead, he is a man who appears to be hellbent on taking down the institutions he once served and the Constitution he once swore to uphold by propagating the lies and obfuscations of the Trump administration to whoever will listen.

So much for truth, justice and the American Way.

BLAIR BESS is a Los Angeles-based television writer, producer, and columnist. He edits the online blog Soaggragated.com, and can be reached at BBess.soaggragated@gmail.com.