Imperial Valley Press

NYPD commander who took Son of Sam’s confession dies at 99

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NEW YORK (AP) — John Keenan, the police o cial who led New York City’s manhunt for the Son of Sam killer and eventually took a case-solving confession from David Berkowitz, has died.

His death Thursday at age 99 was announced by the police department and Keenan’s family. He had been in declining health in the past two months and died of heart failure, said his grandson, Kevin Brennan.

Keenan was the New York Police Department’s chief of detectives during the killings, which terrified the city in 1976 and 1977 as an unknown gunman stalked his victims with a .44-caliber handgun, killing six and wounding seven others.

When a parking ticket, issued to a car seen parked near the scene of one slaying, finally led detectives on Aug. 10, 1977, to the Yonkers home of Berkowitz, a 24-year-old postal worker, Keenan was there to confront him.

It was a climactic scene Keenan later recounted many times for journalist­s.

“I know you. You’re Detective — Chief Keenan,” said Berkowitz, who had publicly taunted the police with notes during the hunt.

“Who are you?” Keenan asked.

“I am the Son of Sam,” Berkowitz replied.

Keenan’s work on the case came near the end of a 37-year career with the police department. He announced his retirement five months later when a new commission­er took office and wanted to appoint his own top deputies.

During World War II, Keenan was a lieutenant in the Army’s Counter Intelligen­ce Corps. He landed on Utah Beach in the D-Day invasion and participat­ed in the Battle of the Bulge and the liberation of Paris.

Author J.D. Salinger, who was writing “Catcher in the Rye” between battles, was in Keenan’s infantry division and became a lifelong friend.

After leaving the NYPD, Keenan became vice president for operations at the New York Racing Associatio­n, which operates the Belmont Park, Aqueduct and Saratoga thoroughbr­ed horse tracks.

Keenan and his wife, Sara, were married for 73 years. They had met during the war at an Army headquarte­rs where she was working on New York’s Governors Island and wed soon after he returned from overseas, Brennan said. Two of their three daughters preceded him in death.

Sara and their surviving daughter were at Keenan’s bedside at a hospital near their Rockville Centre, Long Island, home when he died, Brennan said. Years earlier, Keenan had beaten lung cancer, his grandson said. He would have turned 100 in December.

“Truly saddened to learn that former Chief of Detectives John Keenan has passed,” the current chief of detectives, Dermot Shea, tweeted Friday. “A life of epic heroism, he stormed Normandy on D-Day, fought in the Battle of the Bulge & later, as the NYPD Chief of D’s, took the confession from the Son of Sam. We salute you, sir. #FidelisAdM­ortem.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/RAY HOWARD, FILE ?? In this 1977 file photo, John Keenan, chief of detectives, speaks at a press conference at New York City Police headquarte­rs after two new sketches of the “Son of Sam” were unveiled.
AP PHOTO/RAY HOWARD, FILE In this 1977 file photo, John Keenan, chief of detectives, speaks at a press conference at New York City Police headquarte­rs after two new sketches of the “Son of Sam” were unveiled.

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