The Coffey Files (24 page)

Read The Coffey Files Online

Authors: Jerry; Joseph; Schmetterer Coffey

According to plan, the Triborough Bridge and Tunnel Authority, upon being notified of a “Code .44,” forced all traffic crossing the Throgs Neck and Whitestone Bridges into one toll booth. On the Bronx side of the toll booth two women detectives were stationed. Their orders were to stop and search any lone male crossing into the Bronx following a “Code .44.” Many weeks later, David Berkowitz would tell Joe Coffey that the two women detectives let him drive right through. He said his .44 caliber Charter Arms Bulldog was in a paper bag on the seat next to him.

At this point in his career, Joe had a low opinion of women's value in police work, feeling that other than as specific decoys or in undercover operations, they were about as useful as artists' sketches. He eventually approached the two women about Berkowitz's statement. “They told me they were too afraid to stop anyone that night. The tactic was perfect, but two policewomen, too scared stiff to do their duty, blew it,” Coffey says. The sympathy he has for the two male detectives who walked away from Berkowitz does not carry over to their female counterparts. The difference? “The two guys made a mistake; they acted before they thought. The two women were cowards.” Case closed.

In the same conversation with Berkowitz, Coffey learned that he too was within striking distance of the killer that night in Bayside. He and George Moscardini were on the Clearview Expressway service road heading away from the Throgs Neck Bridge deeper into Queens when the “Shots fired … 211th and 45th Road,” squealed from their police radio.

Fifteen minutes earlier they had circled the Elephas, noticing the crowd was breaking up early for a Saturday night.

“Holy shit, that's him. We missed him,” Coffey yelled as Moscardini raced to the next street to turn around so that they could head for the scene. Within a minute the “Code .44” was broadcast over the detective band as units at the scene identified the m.o.

Coffey grabbed Moscardini's arm, almost causing him to ram a parked car. “I've got an idea, George,” Joe screamed over the wail of the electronic siren. “Back up the service road toward the Northern Boulevard entrance ramp. If he's headed for the Bronx he'll get on there.”

Coffey was right but too late. Berkowitz would eventually tell him that he saw a police car heading backward on the service road, but he was far in front of it heading for the bridge where the two women detectives would let him pass. Luck was on the killer's side.

Finally at the scene, Coffey remembers mayhem. Judy Placido had been taken to the hospital and Sal Lupo was wandering around in a frantic state, blood pouring from his arm. He apparently did not realize that he had been shot.

The newspaper columnist Jimmy Breslin, who had received a letter from Son of Sam, was there. Coffey, who usually admired Breslin's writing and had for many years maintained an excellent relationship with the city's tabloid reporters, resented Breslin's presence. “Headquarters, after he got the letter from Son of Sam, gave him total access to the investigation. Now here he was at the scene and, completely without basis in fact, going around telling people the killer was a priest. Breslin was making himself the story, and that sucked,” Coffey said.

While he remained at the scene, Coffey dispatched Moscardini to Flushing Hospital to find out what the two victims might be able to add to the pitifully empty Son of Sam evidence container. Shortly after he arrived, Moscardini watched as the doctors removed a .44 caliber bullet from Sal Lupo's right forearm. The detective, who had become a second set of eyes and ears for Coffey, took the bullet and placed it in an envelope designed for just that kind of evidence. Lupo and Placido could not identify their assailant. It was another successful attack by a devil living in the shadows of the night.

“As the case built up and we continued without gathering evidence, it became increasingly apparent to us on the front lines that we would have to kill Son of Sam in order for any kind of justice to be dealt out,” Coffey says. “Judging from the letters, he was clearly insane and we had no kind of court case.” The overworked, undernourished criminal justice system had no way of dealing with the killer, but on the street cops were prepared to take him down. “If he came into our sight, he was dead,” Coffey says.

These are unusually harsh words from a man who disliked firing his gun, even at the police range, but Son of Sam had taken over his life. As surely as the demonic killer had entered the lives of his victims, he had become a dominant force in the thoughts of the detectives charged with bringing him to justice. Barracks humor disappeared from the crowded headquarters squad room. Cops and reporters got into violent arguments. Marriages, already strained by the pressures of everyday police work, were now at the breaking point. Detectives had to be ordered to take their time off. Dowd, Borrelli, Power, Coffey, Gorman, and Conlon had to be pried from their desks and yanked from their patrol cars.

A great, fearful concept began to dominate their thoughts. The first anniversary of the murder of Donna Lauria, Son of Sam's first victim, was approaching. Would the demon create some special event to mark the date?

Everyone agreed he would. The only argument was over which day. The attack on Lauria was on July 29, a Saturday night. In 1977, July 29 would be a Friday. Coffey argued that the attack would come on July 30 or 31 because all his previous attacks, except the one on Voskerichian, occurred late Saturday night or early Sunday morning. It seemed a small thing to be arguing about—the Omega operation would be in force all weekend—but at that point everyone was grasping at straws.

In mid-July a Yonkers man named Sam Carr went to the 109th Precinct to complain about a neighbor named David Berkowitz who had been harassing his family. He thought Berkowitz could be the Son of Sam killer. The information was classified priority two.

It did not go unnoticed in the press that the anniversary was approaching. The media, en masse, demanded answers to their questions about protecting their readers and viewers that weekend. It was then, Coffey believes, that Dowd made a serious mistake. The inspector revealed the bridge plan to the papers, letting the killer know how the police planned to catch him. “I was afraid that we had now driven him out of the Bronx and Queens, perhaps to Brooklyn or the suburbs, and those places were not involved in the task force. If he hit there, we might end up back at square one,” Coffey says.

In the early morning hours of July 31, 1977, David Berkowitz, known to the city as Son of Sam, opened fire with his eighteen-ounce, .44 caliber Charter Arms Bulldog on a car containing Stacy Moskowitz, age twenty, and Robert Violante, also twenty. The couple was parked in a lovers' lane area off Shore Parkway in the Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn.

Stacy Moskowitz was mortally wounded. Robert Violante's eyes were shattered, leaving him legally blind.

Coffey, Moscardini, and O'Connell had cruised Queens Boulevard most of that evening. Dowd had ordered the Omega force to continue to concentrate on Queens. “He called the Elephas shooting right and that made him hard to argue with,” says Coffey. So only the bridges that connected the Bronx and Queens were being covered. Brooklyn's highways were left to the one Omega car and the regular Highway Patrol units.

At 2:35
A.M.
, as they were riding past the West Side Tennis Club in Forest Hills, not far from where Christine Freund and Virginia Voskerichian were murdered, their radio barked with a report of a shooting at Bay 17th and Shore Road in Brooklyn. Coffey knew the area was a favorite parking spot. A follow-up report said to be on the lookout for a single gunman and that it might be a homicide.

Moscardini pulled up to a pay phone and Coffey called Omega Headquarters. He asked to speak to Dowd. He told his boss he wanted to respond to Brooklyn. Dowd said he doubted it would be their man but told Coffey to ride out anyway, because the sole Omega unit in Brooklyn had already gone off duty.

Moscardini broke all his personal driving records as he maneuvered down the Van Wyck Expressway and the Belt Parkway to the scene. This time, the scene was crawling with cops who had no inside knowledge of the Son of Sam case. They had not been included in the task force. All they knew was what they had read in the papers. So they had no special response planned. They reacted like it was just another murder.

But moments after he arrived, Coffey's worst fears were realized. “Son of Sam had left his calling card,” Coffey says. “Right in the middle of the steering wheel of Robert Violante's car was a .44 caliber bullet.”

But there were other forces at work against the demon that night, and though Joe could not know it at the time, Son of Sam's luck was beginning to run out. Stacy Moskowitz was to be his last victim.

Coffey sent Moscardini and O'Connell to the hospital where Stacy and Robert were fighting for survival, and he headed for the local precinct. The first thing he did when he got there was to call Dowd. The inspector would have to get in touch with Brooklyn Homicide brass and make them a part of the task force—fast. Coffey took no satisfaction in the fact that he was right about the date and about having tipped Sam off about the Queens bridges. He was emotionally drained, without a clue about where to go next in the investigation. So he turned to routine detective work and called in the two police officers who patrolled the sector in which the shooting occurred. He asked them a routine question, something all detectives ask local patrol officers: “Did you two guys issue any parking summonses tonight?” The theory was that a killer might have to park illegally to facilitate a quick getaway. The two cops answered, “No Sarge, we didn't write any tickets.”

To this day Joe Coffey cannot understand why they answered that way, because about four days later, rechecking every possible area for clues, detectives Ed Blaise and Ed O'Sullivan discovered that a summons for parking at a fire hydrant had been given out that evening for a 1977 Ford Galaxie, registered to a David Berkowitz of 35 Pine Street, Yonkers, New York.

“I can only imagine that the two Uniformed cops were covering their asses. Both had had problems with Internal Affairs, and I think they were afraid of being called on the carpet for missing a killer wandering in their sector,” theorizes Coffey more than a decade later. For their part, the two cops told superiors they were caught up in the excitement of the evening and couldn't even remembering dropping the summonses into the box at the precinct reserved for that purpose.

At any rate, events now began to unfold quickly, and Joe and the men of the Omega Task Force were pretty much left out of them. The detectives of Brooklyn's 10th Homicide Zone seized the Moscowitz-Violante attack and ran with it. Although the department's Intelligence Division was in touch with the Yonkers Police Department about a strange, single man named Berkowitz who was threatening and tormenting his neighbors and although the report filed at the 109th Precinct by Sam Carr about Berkowitz's being a likely suspect was working its way to the top of the pile, it was the guys from the 10th Homicide Zone who ran Son of Sam to the ground.

They were instinctively bothered by the information the summons issued to Berkowitz contained. It was written at 2:05
A.M.
, minutes before the shooting, and they could not understand what a man with a Jewish-sounding name was doing parked illegally in that heavily Italian neighborhood in the middle of the night.

On the morning of August 10, 1977, detectives Ed Zigo and John Longo went to the Pine Street address to interview Berkowitz. When they arrived they saw his car parked in front of the building and looked inside. What they saw made their hearts stop. Behind the front seat was an army duffel bag with the name D. Berkowitz stenciled on it. Sticking out of the top was undoubtably a machine gun.

The two detectives called their office back in Coney Island and were told to take no action. Zigo was ordered to head to Yonkers Police Headquarters and get a search warrant for the car. The Omega force was notified of the find, and Chief of Detectives Keenan, Inspector Dowd, and Borrelli, guessing that they had their man, drove to Yonkers Police Headquarters to coordinate the capture.

By 7:30 that evening Pine Street was crawling with New York City detectives. Local residents, seeing something was going on, came out in beach chairs to view the action. At 10:00
P.M.
, David Berkowitz, a postal worker from the Bronx, left the building at 35 Pine Street and headed for his cream-colored 1977 Ford Galaxie. Zigo was still not back with the arrest warrant, and the cops did not want to move without it. On the other hand they were not going to let Berkowitz drive away.

So as David Berkowitz opened his front door and threw a paper bag containing a .44 caliber Charter Arms Bulldog on the front seat, Longo and Detective John Falotico, who had been sent up by the 10th, aimed their .38 caliber detective specials at his head and put him under arrest.

As police legend has it, Falotico ordered Berkowitz to freeze and the suspect murmured, “You've got me.”

“Who do I have?” Falotico is said to have asked.

“You've got the Son of Sam.”

The most vicious killer in New York's history was taken into custody without a struggle. As he was driven into Yonkers Police Headquarters, he had a childlike smile on his face. The smile would become as much a trademark as the .44 caliber bullet.

Joe Coffey was at home when Berkowitz was arrested. A call from Keenan's office ordered him to go to One Police Plaza, where Berkowitz was to be brought for questioning. Coffey would lead the questioning because he was the only detective familiar with every aspect of the case. He was, after all, the only one who had thought they were dealing with a serial killer from his first day on the job in Queens, when he was sent to Station Plaza in Forest Hills to investigate the murder of Christine Freund.

Berkowitz and a police bodyguard were alone in an interrogation room when Coffey and Sergeant Dick Conlon entered to question him. “I was filled with rage when I went in that room. This was a man I was prepared to kill, a man I thought I hated,” remembers Coffey.

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