OPINION
MAUREEN
DOWD
Live by RICO, Die by RICO
Aug. 19,
2023
Donald
Trump and Rudy Giuliani shake hands on a stage.
Maureen
Dowd
By Maureen
Dowd
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/19/opinion/rudy-giuliani-donald-trump-rico.html
WASHINGTON
— I first met Rudy Giuliani in 1986 when I was a Times reporter writing about
corruption cases in New York. Gotham was awash in so much municipal sleaze, a
detective joked that city employees were streaming into the F.B.I. office with
their hands up.
Giuliani,
the U.S. attorney for the Southern District of New York, got in a kerfuffle
with Robert Morgenthau, the storied Manhattan district attorney who was a model
for the D.A. in “Law & Order,” because Rudy considered the local prosecutor
to be superfluous, so he wasn’t sharing information.
Giuliani,
41, was already renowned as a scourge of organized crime. (The next year he
would become the scourge of Wall Street, perp-walking white-collar criminals in
handcuffs in tableaus of virtue conquering vice, even though the charges
sometimes failed to stick.)
Morgenthau
favored a sweater with a hole in it. Giuliani was bandbox-perfect, feral and
ready to pounce. Morgenthau had an understated tenacity. Giuliani was like a
cult leader among acolytes.
He grew up
thinking he would be a priest — until he decided he didn’t want to be celibate.
When I met him, he was still speaking passionately about good and evil, right
and wrong. His eyes gleamed when he talked about routing blackguards who had
breached the public trust. He was following a Thomas Dewey model: Clean up
corruption and parlay that into higher office.
The phone
rang as I came into the paper the morning my story ran. Giuliani was demanding
to talk to my editor — the story made him seem holier-than-thou!
He didn’t
know how good he had it. Now he just seems crazier-than-thou. It’s a Puccini
opera, really, about an opera-loving federal prosecutor and heroic mayor who
spirals into lawlessness, as well as multiple divorces, depression, drinking,
money problems, sexual harassment claims, Cameo cameos and “Borat” humiliation.
Giuliani
went from cleaning up corruption to ginning up corruption, from crimebuster to
criminal defendant in Georgia and unindicted “Co-Conspirator 1” in D.C. Rudy,
the prosecutor who made his reputation aggressively pursuing RICO cases, is now
Rudolph William Louis Giuliani, a defendant in the Georgia RICO case about the
deranged plot to steal the election.
We have
seen many cases of mobsters turning state’s evidence for prosecutors. But now
we have the rare experience of seeing a prosecutor turn into a mobster.
After all
those years spent prosecuting the Five Families in New York, Giuliani
surrendered himself to the lamest mob boss there ever was: Don Trump.
We saw the
coup attempt play out, but it’s startling to see the Georgia indictment refer
to “this criminal organization,” “members of the enterprise,” “corruptly
solicited” and “acts of racketeering activity.”
Trump,
mentored by mob lawyer Roy Cohn, always loved acting like a mobster, playing
the faux tough guy, intimidating his foes, swanning around like John Dillinger,
Al Capone and John Gotti. He told Timothy O’Brien, the author of “TrumpNation:
The Art of Being the Donald,” that he admired Gotti because the mobster sat
through years of trials with a stone face. “In other words, tough,” Trump said.
As Trump’s
former lawyer Michael Cohen testified to Congress, Trump ran his family
business “much like a mobster would do,” using “a code,” letting capos do the
dirty work and expelling rats.
“Trump both
fetishized mobsters and did business with them,” O’Brien told me. “The way he
fetishizes mobsters informs this fascination he has about Putin and Kim
Jong-un. He loves ‘bad-ass’ guys who roll like they want to roll. He sees
himself the same way.”
True to his
longtime practice of stiffing the help, Trump is turning a deaf ear to
Giuliani’s desperate pleas, in a tin-cup trip to Mar-a-Lago, to pay his legal
bills.
Desperate
to stay relevant, Giuliani made himself Trump’s legal button man, pressing the
conspiracy theories his boss wanted to hear on Ukraine and the Bidens, and then
on election fraud. Giuliani can take credit for helping spur both Trump
impeachments.
As the
great Village Voice reporter Wayne Barrett wrote in his 2000 book, “Rudy: An
Investigative Biography of Rudolph Giuliani,” Rudy had his own family history
with wiseguys. Although Giuliani’s father, Harold, taught him to hate the mob,
some cousins had mob connections. Barrett wrote that Rudy’s father had broken
legs and smashed kneecaps for his brother-in-law’s loan-sharking in the ’50s.
Barrett also revealed that Rudy’s dad went to Sing Sing for robbing a milkman
at gunpoint.
Rudy told
The Times’s Sam Roberts his family moved to Long Island from Brooklyn to avoid
his mobbed-up relatives, and it was a reason he got into law enforcement.
“Rudy wants
to be the mob slayer and then he winds up doing mobster-like things and getting
in bed with a wannabe mobster,” O’Brien said, “and neither one of them can
shoot straight, and they end up getting in trouble with the law. It’s a
dime-store psychodrama that is both comic and grotesque at the same time.”
Maureen
Dowd, winner of the 1999 Pulitzer Prize for distinguished commentary and author
of three New York Times best sellers, became an Op-Ed columnist in 1995.
@MaureenDowd • Facebook
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