
Frank Serpico was 23 years old when he joined the New York City Police Department in 1959.
He was the son of Italian immigrants. He grew up in Brooklyn. He had served in the Army in Korea before signing up. He had idolized the cops on his block as a kid. He wanted, in the most uncomplicated possible sense of the phrase, to be one of the good guys.
He made it to plainclothes. Vice squad. Brooklyn. The Bronx. Manhattan.
That was where he found out.
Every officer in his unit was on the take. Bribes from gamblers. Payoffs from drug dealers. Protection money from pimps. Hundreds of dollars a month. Sometimes thousands. The system had a name. They called it “the pad.“ Every plainclothes officer got a share. You did not ask. The envelope just appeared.
Serpico refused.
His partners did not trust him. If he would not take the money, he could not be controlled. If he could not be controlled, he was dangerous.
They stopped backing him up. Stopped talking to him. Stopped eating with him. The blue wall went up around him.
In 1967, Serpico reported the corruption to his superiors. He gave names. Dates. Amounts.
Nothing happened. He went higher. The Police Commissioner’s office. The Mayor’s office. Still nothing.
Everyone knew. Nobody acted.
What changed the trajectory was another cop. *David Durk* was an Amherst College graduate who had quit law school to join the NYPD in 1963. Durk was as horrified by the corruption as Serpico was, and he knew people Serpico did not — people in city government, people in the press. The two of them, together, pushed for years against a wall that would not move.
In April 1970, after years of going through internal channels and getting nowhere, Serpico and Durk took everything they had to a New York Times investigative reporter named *David Burnham*. On April 25, 1970, the Times ran the story on its front page. Millions of dollars in police bribes. Corruption at every level of the NYPD.
Mayor John V. Lindsay, his hand finally forced, appointed a five-member panel to investigate. Chaired by federal judge Whitman Knapp, it became known as the Knapp Commission — the first serious investigation of NYPD corruption in the department’s history.
Serpico’s partners had figured out he was the source. The threats began.
“You know what happens to rats, Frank?“
He started carrying his service revolver everywhere. Off duty. On dates. To dinner.
On February 3, 1971, he walked into a building at 778 Driggs Avenue in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn. Four officers from the Brooklyn North command had a tip about a heroin deal. Serpico spoke Spanish, so he was sent to the apartment door first. Two of the four officers, Gary Roteman and Arthur Cesare, stayed outside. The third, Paul Halley, stood in front of the building.
Serpico was alone.
He knocked. The dealer, a man named Edgar Echevarria, opened the door a few inches. Serpico tried to wedge himself in.
Echevarria fired point-blank. The bullet hit Serpico in the face just below the left eye. Fragments lodged near his brain.
Serpico managed to draw his revolver and return fire, wounding Echevarria, before collapsing.
No “10-13“ call went out over the police radio. That is the NYPD’s call for an officer needing immediate assistance. It is the call that brings every cop within miles. Nobody made it.
An elderly Hispanic neighbor heard the gunshot, came out into the hallway, saw Serpico bleeding on the floor, and called an ambulance. The man on the phone with the ambulance dispatcher was the only person in that building who acted like a fellow human being mattered.
Serpico survived. Barely. He suffered permanent hearing loss in his left ear, chronic pain, and bullet fragments still lodged in his head today.
In December 1971, ten months after the shooting, he testified publicly before the Knapp Commission. The bullet was still in his head. His attorney, sitting beside him, was former United States Attorney General Ramsey Clark. Serpico spoke calmly. He named names. He described the system. He delivered one sentence that would echo for fifty years.
“The atmosphere does not yet exist in which an honest police officer can act without fear of ridicule or reprisal from fellow officers.“
The country was stunned.
In May 1972, Serpico was awarded the NYPD Medal of Honor, the department’s highest commendation. There was no ceremony. No speech. No photographs. A clerk handed it to him over a desk. He later described it: *“like a pack of cigarettes.“* They did not even give him the certificate that was supposed to come with it.
He retired one month later, on June 15, 1972.
He left the country. He lived in Switzerland. He lived in the Netherlands. He came home after nearly a decade in Europe and settled quietly in Stuyvesant, in upstate New York. He raised chickens. He gave lectures on police ethics. He prefers the term “lamplighter“ to “whistleblower,“ because lamplighter is what they called Paul Revere.
In December 2021, Eric Adams, then mayor-elect of New York and a former NYPD officer himself, saw a Daily News article about the 50th anniversary of Serpico’s Knapp Commission testimony. Serpico had still never received the certificate. Adams tweeted: “Frank — we’re going to make sure you get your medal.“
On February 3, 2022, exactly 51 years to the day after he was shot at 778 Driggs Avenue, the certificate finally arrived at Serpico’s home in the mail. He was 85 years old.
He celebrated by popping bubble wrap on camera and calling it his 21-gun salute.
Asked once, at the age of 74, whether anything had really changed in the NYPD since the Knapp Commission, Serpico answered:
“An honest cop still can’t find a place to go and complain without fear of recrimination. The blue wall will always be there because the system supports it.“
He is still alive. He is 89 years old.









