Bernard Kirik, who was New York City Police Commissioner on September 11, and later, he was guilty of tax fraud before pardoning him. It was 69.
The FBI director, Cash Patel, confirmed his death on Thursday on social media, saying that it came “after a special battle with the disease.”
Former New York City mayor, Rudi Juliani, was reflected in his long history with the former police commissioner Its presentation Thursday.
Juliani said through tears: “We were together from the beginning. It is like my brother.” “I was a better man because of Bernie. I was definitely a brave and stronger man.”
Kirik, an inventor of the army warriors, ascended to the summit of law before falling so slope that even the city’s prison was named after him.
In 2010, he admitted that he was guilty of federal tax fraud and the charge of the wrong statement, which stems partly from more than $ 250,000 in apartment renovations he received from a construction company that the authorities that were calculated on Kirrick to persuade New York officials have not had links to organized crime. He spent three years in prison before his release in 2013.
President Donald Trump, sorry for Kirik during the good 2020. Kerik was among the guests wandering in Trump after his first appearance in the Federal Federal Court in a case related to dealing with classified documents, where he attended the statements of the former president at Pepmster Club, New Jersey.
Kirik was appointed by Juliani to work as a police commissioner in 2000 and was on his position during September 11, 2001.
He later worked with the former mayor of New York about the efforts to pick up Trump’s 2020 loss.
Patel Kirik described in a post on social media as “a warrior, national, and one of the most courageous public employees that this country has ever known.”
He said: “He was decorated more than 100 times for courage, courage and service, after he saved the victims from the burning buildings, they survived the assassination attempts, and brought some of the most dangerous criminals of the world to justice.” “His legacy is not only in medals or titles, but in the life he saved, the city that helped rebuild, and the country that served with honor.”