By HENRI E. CAUVIN
Daily News Staff Writer
<Picture>he Battle of the Badges turned ugly last night when a bunch of drunken
firefighters at a midtown restaurant attacked a cop who came to aid the
eatery's besieged bouncer, police sources said.
The officer sustained a broken rib and a sprained back when he was thrown over
a wall and down a hill in the fracas at the Bryant Park Grill shortly before 11
p.m., police said.
The cop, whose name was not immediately released, was taken to Bellevue
Hospital, where he was listed in stable condition.
About 40 of the city's Bravest were being questioned in the incident early this
morning at the Midtown South stationhouse.
The firefighters had gone to the restaurant to celebrate the Fire Department
Medal Day ceremony, held earlier at City Hall.
As the partying continued, the firefighters began disrobing and barging into
the restaurant's kitchen and women's rest room while stunned patrons looked on,
sources said.
About 10:30 p.m., when the restaurant was trying to close for the night, the
security guard became involved in a physical confrontation with the
firefighters and that's when the cop showed up and ended up getting attacked
himself, police said.
The Fire Department had no comment on the incident.
Back to City Central Index | Back to Top | Next Story
I response to a seemingly germane (but yes, rather embarrassing) message in
this newsgroup (which if I recall, was initially posted verbatim from a news
story without "comments"),
YOU wrote...
>Hey Ambulance Driver. I wonder if one of the NYFFs in this brawl were on
>of the one's that pissed you off when you were wiping some ass, or
>cleaning up puke.
While it may surprise you, *I* was going to post the story verbatim (like I
have news stories regarding FF arsonists and others that have put us in a
bad light). I draw no great pleasure in this, but feel that we should be
aware of both the good and less than wonderful things the public is hearing
about us (including my own agency).
Which begs the question:
Would you have been so brash to me or the many other American Firefighters
who proudly provide full-spectrum care to their communities?
The person who (sadly posts anonymously) as "FDNYLies" may have touched a
chord with you in the past, but in this case, it is you who should be
embarassed. Lashing out in such a manner to a verbatim post from wire copy
means that you simply assumed the light in which it was presented. And you
know how to spell "a-s-s-u-m-e".
If he or she wishes to make a bold statement in which you disagree with,
then fire away! Otherwise, your reply is a churlish and immature slight that
should draw the indignation of any man or woman proud enough to call
themselves a Firefighter or Paramedic.
I like many others, remain proud to say we are BOTH.
Your "ass wiping and puke cleaning" colleague,
Brian Humphrey
Hunter Schappaugh, P&L
Houston, TX FD
FDNYLIES wrote:
> Bunch of drunk losers...
Kind of like the disgruntled guy that wastes are time with these posts...
--------------------------------------------
To reply to this message, please remove the
no.spam from the end of the return address.
By US Code Title 47, Sec.227(a)(2)(B), a computer/modem/printer
meets the definition of a telephone fax machine. By Sec.227(b)
(1)(C), it is unlawful to send any unsolicited advertisement to
such equipment, punishable by action to recover actual monetary
loss, or $500, whichever is greater, for EACH violation.
THOE1 wrote in message <199806071930...@ladder01.news.aol.com>...
>I geuss you won't be calling those drunkin loosers when yourhouse is
burning
>down!! Or when you need an ambulance !!!!!!
"Drunken Losers" or not...
My guess is, that you wouldn't normally be calling anyone who is off
duty anyway would you?
Jon Pearl L-747
"The Second Amendment, really should be the first,
in that it is the one that protects all the others."
Charleton Heston - Vice President NRA
By JOHN MARZULLI and HENRI E. CAUVIN
Daily News Staff Writers
<Picture>ne of the city's Bravest got the ax and two others were suspended last
night for their roles in the restaurant brawl involving a mob of drunken
firefighters.
In the first disciplinary action stemming from the June 3 melee at the Bryant
Park Grill, James Bruno of Engine Co. 34 in midtown, a rookie still on
probation, was fired for not cooperating with investigators.
Francis Morrisey of Engine Co. 319 in Maspeth, Queens, was suspended, also for
being uncooperative. Jean Paul Augier of Engine Co. 89 in the Bronx was
suspended for "conduct reflecting discredit on the department."
A city cop was injured in the mayhem, which occurred when dozens of
firefighters in dress uniforms went to the tony Manhattan restaurant after a
City Hall awards ceremony.
Angry that they could not set up a band and then that the restaurant was
cutting off the booze, the firefighters turned the place upside down, witnesses
said.
Some raided the ladies' room. Others paraded into the kitchen, smoking cigars.
Still others urinated in the potted plants.
The firefighters started fighting, squaring off against one another and almost
anyone else in their way, according to witnesses' accounts.
By the next morning, however, after more than a dozen firefighters were brought
in for questioning, only the restaurant's guard, Ethan Kemp, was arrested.
"I have made it clear that the reported behavior at the Bryant Park Grill was
unacceptable," Fire Commissioner Thomas Von Essen said last night. "These
people embarrassed my department."
Dan Lynch, the Uniformed Firefighters Association's Manhattan trustee, decried
the department's actions, saying they were premature.
"The UFA is not happy with the suspensions when the investigation is not
complete," Lynch said. "Obviously, the Fire Department is trying to put
pressure on people to come forward with information about the incident."
The Fire Department's probe is continuing, and investigators intend to track
down everyone involved, Von Essen said.
"We will find those responsible and we will punish them," he said.
So far, however, investigators from the Fire Department as well as the Police
Department and the Manhattan district attorney's office have been largely
stymied in their efforts.
Unable to distinguish among the throng of uniformed men, witnesses have been of
little help to investigators trying to determine who was involved and who
wasn't.
Kemp, arrested for alleged assault and resisting arrest, remains the only
person facing criminal charges.
The two suspended firefighters likely will face internal disciplinary
proceedings, fire officials said.
You have made your point. You are better than everybody that you slam.
You have made this abundantly clear to us, what a great guy you are.
While I'm on the subject of "WHO YOU ARE!"
I have read the names of the FDNY firefighters that got into trouble.
Is there any chance that you might have gotten trouble in your "self
appointed great life?"
Of course we wouldn't know now would we? You fail to have a name.
Fraternally, (where it applies)
Jon Pearl L-747
"The Second Amendment, really should be the first,
in that it is the one that protects all the others."
Charleton Heston - Vice President NRA
FDNYLIES wrote in message
<199806140652...@ladder03.news.aol.com>...
I just hope you never need any hlep from any firefigher or EMS worker in the
United States or Canada. We don't soon forget attitudes such as yours.
Hunter Schappaugh
Houston Fire Department
Hosuston, TX
In keeping with his campaign promises, Mayor Rudolph Giuliani has given New
Yorkers strict law enforcement. Ordinary citizens get ticketed for jaywalking.
Taxi drivers and street vendors are under close scrutiny from the New York City
Police Department. Given such enforcement policies, Mr. Giuliani and the police
have been troublingly quiet about the drunken brawl staged by New York City
firefighters last week at the Bryant Park Grill. The melee included between 50
and 100 uniformed firefighters who trashed the restaurant, harassed patrons,
exposed themselves and fought for five hours. Despite a wealth of witnesses,
the only person arrested was the restaurant's bouncer.
If Mayor Giuliani wants to keep his credibility, he needs to condemn the
rioters openly and make sure there is no double standard for public-safety
employees who brawl in public.
Our bet is that if 50 to 100 plumbers, lawyers or schoolteachers tore up a
restaurant, they would be denounced in press conferences and arrested by the
score.
The disorder at the Bryant Park Grill followed a celebration in which the
Mayor praised the firefighters for risking their lives for their fellow
citizens. The first accounts of the brawl indicated that about 40 firefighters
had drunk too much and gotten rowdy in the restaurant. But a quick pass by city
investigators showed that the number of firefighters involved might actually
have approached 100 and that the situation was worse than initially reported.
Mayor Giuliani gives regular New Yorkers an earful when they misbehave. But
so far this year there has been no more flagrant breach of his civility
campaign. An official said Mr. Giuliani had kept quiet out of respect for the
family of another firefighter who died in the line of duty two days after the
brawl. That show of respect is proper, but it cannot become an excuse for
letting so many laws be so flagrantly violated without a strong investigative
and prosecutorial response.
Over the weekend, law enforcement officials raised the troubling possibility
that none of the firefighters would be criminally charged but would face
departmental charges instead. Today the Police Department was talking about
pursuing the investigation wherever it leads, and that sounds better.
New Yorkers will be understandably perplexed if there is a loophole in the
Mayor's civility campaign big enough to drive a busload of brawling
firefighters through.
Tuesday, June 9, 1998
Copyright 1998 The New York Times
By KIT R. ROANE
NEW YORK -- A police investigation into a brawl by firefighters at a
restaurant in Bryant Park last week appeared to have stalled Wednesday, with
Police Commissioner Howard Safir saying that witnesses had been unable to
identify any suspects.
"The only information we have is people alleging that firefighters in uniform
were drinking, urinating in public and going into the ladies room," he said.
He added that none of the civilians or firefighters who witnessed the
misbehavior at the Bryant Park Cafe on June 3 had filed criminal complaints.
Scores of firefighters had gone to the cafe to celebrate after a midmorning
ceremony at City Hall honoring their acts of heroism.
The cafe's bouncer, Ethan Kemp, who apparently mistook an intervening police
officer as a brawler and tossed him over a flower pot, was the only person
arrested. He has been charged with assault, resisting arrest and obstruction of
governmental administration, the Manhattan district attorney's office said.
"The information we have is that if any assaults took place, they were
between firefighters, not with civilians," Safir said.
If the criminal investigation stalls, the firefighters who took part in the
brawl and other public indiscretions could face administrative charges brought
by the fire department.
The district attorney's office granted the fire department's request to begin
an administrative investigation Wednesday. While refusing to comment on the
evidence gained so far, Michael Regan, a department spokesman, said that the
internal investigation would include interviews with firefighters.
Two firefighters have been interviewed by the department's investigative
panel, said a fire official who spoke on the condition of anonymity. He said
that more interviews had been scheduled for Thursday.
Thursday, June 11, 1998
By RANDY KENNEDY
NEW YORK -- The New York City Fire Department, frustrated in its
investigation of a drunken brawl among its members at a Manhattan restaurant
last week, fired one firefighter and suspended two others without pay Friday
because, investigators say, they were involved in or witnessed the fight and
are telling less than they know.
Senior fire officials also disputed accounts of the brawl from some
law-enforcement officials, who said that it lasted for hours and involved 50 to
100 firefighters. Instead, the fire officials said, more than a dozen witnesses
reported that the fight began at about 10:20 p.m. and that perhaps four to six
bloodied men exchanged punches for 20 minutes before the police arrived.
The fire officials also said that no witnesses reported seeing firefighters
expose themselves, and that only one witness, a bartender, told investigators
she had seen firefighters urinating in the bushes around the Bryant Park
Grill's cafe, where many firefighters gathered the evening of June 3 after
attending a ceremony at City Hall to honor acts of bravery.
Even so, the fire officials said that accounts from as many as 18 civilian
witnesses they interviewed, and transcripts from hundreds of police interviews,
painted a scene of the uniformed firefighters drinking heavily, disrupting the
cafe's patrons and refusing to quiet down or leave.
"We know these three firefighters were there, and that at least two of them
were involved in the fight," said a senior fire official who spoke on the
condition of anonymity. "And the two that we interviewed have not been
completely forthcoming about what happened, which is unacceptable."
Though officials believe he was only a witness, James Bruno, 26, a rookie
firefighter who had been on the force only a few months at Engine 34 in
Manhattan, was fired because investigators concluded that he was withholding
the names of those he knew to be involved.
"For him not to have seen anything and not to know anything is just not
believable," the senior official said, adding that the department has more
latitude to dismiss probationary firefighters for misconduct.
Suspended indefinitely without pay were Francis Morrisey, 26, who has been on
the force for a year and a half at Engine 319 in Queens, and Jon-Paul Augier,
24, who has been a firefighter for the same amount of time at Engine 89 in the
Bronx.
Morrisey told investigators that he had been punched unprovoked by another
firefighter as he sat at a table at the cafe and that he had not fought back.
Fire investigators have been unable to interview Augier because the Manhattan
district attorney's office, for reasons that remained unclear Friday night,
instructed them not to. But fire officials said he was suspended because the
accounts of civilians and cooperating firefighters placed him at the center of
the fights.
"As I said last week when we had this unfortunate incident, I'm making every
effort to get to the bottom of it," said Fire Commissioner Thomas Von Essen,
who took the action against the firefighters Friday evening.
Attempts to reach the three firefighters by telephone at home Friday night
were not successful.
Dan Lynch, the Manhattan trustee for the firefighters' union, criticized the
disciplinary actions. "We believe the Fire Department's actions are to put
pressure on people to come forward with information about this incident," said
Lynch, who added that, if necessary, the union will fight in court to win back
the jobs.
Because no civilians have said they were hurt or have filed criminal
complaints, and because the owners of the restaurant have not formally alleged
that property was damaged, the case has been difficult to investigate. No
firefighters have pressed charges against each other.
Fire and police investigators have narrowed down the firefighters they
believe were present by using credit card receipts and the accounts of patrons
and restaurant employees.
In an unusual twist, fire officials said they were certain that Bruno was at
the restaurant as early as 7 p.m. that night because he assisted paramedics at
the scene as they treated a male patron who fainted for reasons that appear to
be unrelated to the firefighters' rowdiness.
The officials also said they believed that law-enforcement officials gave too
much credence to the account of Donna Simms, the general manager of the
restaurant, who said that firefighters had fistfights over several hours,
exposed themselves and had turned over furniture. Fire investigators said Ms.
Simms left about 9 p.m., shortly before the restaurant was closed early because
of the noise and disruption.
A man who identified himself as the manager of the Bryant Park Grill but
would not give his name said Friday night that Ms. Simms was not working and
could not be reached until Monday.
Saturday, June 13, 1998
FDNYLIES wrote in message
<199806150739...@ladder01.news.aol.com>...
:Editorial: Policing the Firemen
:Tuesday, June 9, 1998
:
:
FDNYLIES wrote in message
<199806150739...@ladder03.news.aol.com>...
:Inquiry Has No Suspects in Firefighter Brawl
:
:By KIT R. ROANE
:
:
: NEW YORK -- A police investigation into a brawl by firefighters at a
:restaurant in Bryant Park last week appeared to have stalled Wednesday,
with
:Police Commissioner Howard Safir saying that witnesses had been unable to
:identify any suspects.
:
: "The only information we have is people alleging that firefighters in
uniform
:were drinking, urinating in public and going into the ladies room," he
said.
:
: He added that none of the civilians or firefighters who witnessed the
:misbehavior at the Bryant Park Cafe on June 3 had filed criminal
complaints.
:Scores of firefighters had gone to the cafe to celebrate after a midmorning
:ceremony at City Hall honoring their acts of heroism.
:
: The cafe's bouncer, Ethan Kemp, who apparently mistook an intervening
police
:officer as a brawler and tossed him over a flower pot, was the only person
:arrested. He has been charged with assault, resisting arrest and
obstruction of
:governmental administration, the Manhattan district attorney's office said.
:
: "The information we have is that if any assaults took place, they were
:between firefighters, not with civilians," Safir said.
:
: If the criminal investigation stalls, the firefighters who took part in
the
:brawl and other public indiscretions could face administrative charges
brought
:by the fire department.
:
: The district attorney's office granted the fire department's request to
begin
:an administrative investigation Wednesday. While refusing to comment on the
:evidence gained so far, Michael Regan, a department spokesman, said that
the
:internal investigation would include interviews with firefighters.
:
: Two firefighters have been interviewed by the department's investigative
:panel, said a fire official who spoke on the condition of anonymity. He
said
:that more interviews had been scheduled for Thursday.
:
:
:
:
:Thursday, June 11, 1998
FDNYLIES wrote in message
<199806150740...@ladder01.news.aol.com>...
:1 Firefighter Dismissed, 2 Others Suspended
:were involved in the fight," said a senior fire official who spoke on the
:condition of anonymity. "And the two that we interviewed have not been
:completely forthcoming about what happened, which is unacceptable."
:
: Though officials believe he was only a witness, James Bruno, 26, a rookie
:firefighter who had been on the force only a few months at Engine 34 in
:Manhattan, was fired because investigators concluded that he was
withholding
:the names of those he knew to be involved.
:
: "For him not to have seen anything and not to know anything is just not
:believable," the senior official said, adding that the department has more
:latitude to dismiss probationary firefighters for misconduct.
:
: Suspended indefinitely without pay were Francis Morrisey, 26, who has
been on
:the force for a year and a half at Engine 319 in Queens, and Jon-Paul
Augier,
:24, who has been a firefighter for the same amount of time at Engine 89 in
the
:Bronx.
:
: Morrisey told investigators that he had been punched unprovoked by
another
:firefighter as he sat at a table at the cafe and that he had not fought
back.
:
: Fire investigators have been unable to interview Augier because the
Manhattan
:district attorney's office, for reasons that remained unclear Friday night,
:Saturday, June 13, 1998