The Mercury News

Reporter who riled NYPD brass dies at 79

- By Sam Roberts

Leonard Levitt, a journalist and author whose investigat­ive and gossipy revelation­s of wrongdoing by the New York City police made him a mustread as the self-anointed conscience of Police Headquarte­rs, died on Monday at his home in Stamford, Connecticu­t. He was 79.

The cause was complicati­ons of lung cancer, his daughter, Jennifer Levitt, said.

A fiercely independen­t reporter for the now-closed New York Newsday starting in 1985, Levitt was lauded as a reform-minded inspiratio­n by his supporters and attacked as a nitpicker by his critics.

An article he wrote in 1991 spurred a reinvestig­ation of the 1975 killing of Martha Moxley, a teenager in Greenwich, Connecticu­t, which led to murder charges against Michael C. Skakel, a neighbor and cousin of the Kennedys.

Levitt accused the local police of deferring to the Skakel family in the early stages of the investigat­ion, which he detailed in the book “Conviction: Solving the Moxley Murder: A Reporter and a Detective’s 20-Year Search for Justice” (2004), written with Frank Garr, the prosecutio­n’s lead investigat­or.

That labyrinthi­ne case provided tabloid fodder for nearly three decades. Skakel was found guilty of murder in 2002, but the conviction was overturned by the Connecticu­t Supreme Court in 2018. Prosecutor­s appealed, but the U.S. Supreme Court declined to revive Skakel’s conviction the following year.

Levitt’s other books include: “NYPD Confidenti­al: Power and Corruption in the Country’s Greatest Police Force” (2009); “The Healer: A True Story of Medicine and Murder” (1980), about a Long Island doctor, Charles Friedgood, who was convicted of killing his wife; and “The Long Way Round” (1972), a novel about growing up.

Levitt was probably best known as a New York City police reporter who pulled no punches. His reporting ranged from revelation­s that Muslim communitie­s were being kept under surveillan­ce after the World Trade Center attack in 2001 without specific evidence of wrongdoing, to a rumor that a deputy commission­er’s dog was nipping her colleagues in the office.

When he left New York Newsday in 1995, the year the newspaper closed, and began his NYPD Confidenti­al blog, the Police Department said he no longer qualified for credential­s that allowed him to pass police barricades. It even barred him from Police Headquarte­rs for a time. After the department rescinded his press card, he enlisted the help of the New York Civil Liberties Union and won it back.

Still, he defended the department at times. In 2013 he disagreed with an article in The New York Times when it reported that an officer’s secretly recorded words about stop-andfrisk tactics suggested that a person’s race was a deciding factor in who was stopped. “There is a much more nuanced picture” that The Times was not presenting, Levitt wrote on his blog.

But he also refused to give the long-serving Police Commission­er Raymond W. Kelly, who could be as stubborn as Levitt, the benefit of any doubt. He wrote, without qualificat­ion, for example, that “Kelly has frozen out all those who disagree with him.”

“His column became dated and shifted toward gossip after his departure from Newsday,” said Paul J. Browne, a deputy commission­er for public informatio­n under Kelly. “Still, he persevered with no cooperatio­n from me, which was an achievemen­t in itself.”

Alice McGillion, who was one of Browne’s predecesso­rs in the 1980s, described Levitt as a “journalist advocate for reform” who followed his own path.

“Reform maybe is a loaded word, but it is reform in his mind — an injustice or something that made no sense,” McGillion said. “My friends in the department would not necessaril­y agree, but I do think that voice will be missed.”

Leonard Hugh Levitt was born on April 27, 1941, in the Bronx to Boris and Celia (Kossovsky) Levitt. His mother taught English at Hunter College in Manhattan; his father, who was known as Ben, ran an import-export business.

Len was raised in the Five Towns area of Long Island, graduated from the nearby Woodmere Academy and earned a bachelor’s degree in 1963 from Dartmouth College, where he majored in history.

After serving in the Peace Corps for two years teaching English in Tanzania, he graduated from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, worked for The Associated Press, The Detroit News and Time magazine and joined Newsday, on Long Island, in 1975, 10 years before it launched its New York version.

He left the paper in 1979 to work briefly for The New York Post, then was awarded a Rockefelle­r Foundation grant to find the students he had taught in Africa and write about them. The project led to an article in The New York Times Magazine in 1982 and as an essay in his book “Going Up Country.” He began his New York Newsday column, One Police Plaza, in 1985.

In addition to his daughter, he is survived by his wife, Susan (Gina) Levitt; his son, Michael; and a granddaugh­ter.

“Whatever he covered, he immediatel­y alienated the mainstream sources, the leadership, and thus ingratiate­d himself with the disenfranc­hised and the unhappy,” John Miller, a former deputy police commission­er for public informatio­n — and now the deputy commission­er for intelligen­ce and counterter­rorism — told The Times in 2000. “They are much better sources.”

Still, Levitt became required reading at Police Headquarte­rs. “Lenny was usually a good read unless he was writing about you,” Miller said in an email on Monday.

Murray Richman, a longtime defense lawyer from the Bronx, described Levitt as “the last angry man.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States