Four high-ranking NYPD cops are suing the city claiming they
were scapegoats forced into retirement to protect Mayor de Blasio and former
Police Commissioner Bill Bratton from a federal bribery investigation and
denied due process.
Former Inspector Peter DeBlasio and ex-Deputy Chiefs Andrew
Capul, David Colon and Eric Rodriguez were booted from the department in 2016
after being linked to a bribes-for-favors scandal revolving around de Blasio
donors Jona Rechnitz and Jeremy Reichberg.
“At the end of the day you always need sacrificial lambs.
But we don’t know why. Why us?” Capul told the Daily News. “That job we love so
much – they took it away from us. We want someone to step up and tell us why.”
“The police department would not tell us what we allegedly
did wrong,” Capul said.
The four cops with nearly 120 years of combined experience
were mentioned in testimony and court documents but never charged. Their
lawsuit will be filed in Manhattan Federal Court on Monday.
In April, they and former Deputy Chief John Sprague settled
a grievance with the city Office of Labor Relations after an arbitrator found
they had been “blackmailed” out of their jobs. A source told The News the
settlement from the city was in excess of $1 million.
In a nearly two-month trial, Rechnitz testified that he and
Reichberg received special treatment from City Hall after donating over
$100,000 to de Blasio’s favorite causes. They showered cops with fancy meals,
gifts and vacations in exchange for official favors that made them look like
big shots, Rechnitz said.
The investigation resulted in two years’ probation for
former Deputy Chief Michael Harrington, who copped to misusing police resources
as favors for Reichberg and Rechnitz. Ex-Deputy Inspector James (Jimmy) Grant
was acquitted at trial of taking bribes. Rechnitz testified for the government
and is awaiting sentencing. Reichberg will be sentenced on Monday for bribing
police officers.
“Because the allegations led to the highest-ranking NYPD
officials, and perhaps directly to the Mayor, who the NYPD was trying to
protect, the NYPD believed it needed to take immediate action, at least for
public relations purposes," the new lawsuit charges.
"Because the corruption allegations reached the Mayor’s
office, the Mayor, the City, and NYPD top leaders, such as the Commissioner and
Chief (Philip) Banks, they had an interest in insulating themselves from the
allegations ... Accordingly, the NYPD implicated ‘expendable’ deputy chiefs and
inspectors – career police officials with impeccable records – while protecting
politically tied officers from implication in the Corruption.”
The lawsuit seeks damages to be determined at trial,
including reinstating the men to their jobs.
“These four officers’ lives have been changed forever by the
City’s unlawful actions, and by the NYPD’s apparent need to find fall guys to
cover up the vast ongoing corruption at the Department’s highest levels,” the
cops’ attorneys, Yale Pollack and Matthew Weinick, said in a statement.
Capul, Colon and Rodriguez were among the unindicted
co-conspirators in the explosive case. Some of them received “friendship”
trophies from Rechnitz and Reichberg during an Oct. 20, 2013, ceremony in a suite
at MetLife Stadium for a Jets-Patriots game, which was raised at trial.
Colon said he doesn’t even like football and went to the
game as part of his duties in community affairs. “How are we to know who is
unsavory? That was our job – go meet people and make them feel good about the
Police Department. Then this happens and no one is sticking up for us,” he
said.
“If we had any idea what these gentlemen were involved with
we never would have associated with them," Capul added.
The lawsuit says the four ousted officers were victims of an
arbitrary process orchestrated by Bratton to protect himself and de Blasio.
Those with the right political connections survived the scandal while those who
didn’t have those sorts of connections left the police department with
blemished badges, the complaint charges.
They charge they were all deemed “fall guys” and forced into
retirement in the summer of 2016 by Deputy Commissioner for Legal Matters Larry
Byrne, who was acting on Bratton’s orders.
“I was heartbroken, saddened, angry,” DeBlasio said, adding
that his forced retirement devastated his wife, who was a committed participant
at NYPD events.
Captains Endowment Association President Roy Richter told
The News he was surprised to hear the men were suing but declined further
comment. Bratton and Byrne, who are named as defendants in the lawsuit, did not
return phone calls.
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