An NYPD lieutenant with the Internal Affairs Bureau
repeatedly hit on a female sergeant who works under him, telling her she has “a
nice rack” and demanding a lap dance, according to a new lawsuit.
Sgt. Fizgeralda Sanchez joined the department in 2007 and
went to work for IAB Lt. Ronald Reynolds in November 2024 at a unit in the
Bronx. He immediately began asking Sanchez, 46, out to “breakfast, lunch and
dinner” and quizzing her on her relationship status, according to the suit.
One day when she wore a tighter top to work, he told her she
had “a nice rack,” according to court papers.
The harassment was so pervasive she was careful “never to be
left alone with him,” according to the lawsuit.
But his alleged behavior continued, escalating at the unit’s
Christmas party at Russo’s on the Bay in Queens on Dec. 12, where he told her
she was “good looking, hot and beautiful,” according to the lawsuit.
“At the table he’s like, ‘You look so beautiful, you look so
hot. Hey, do you want to go to a strip with me?'” Sanchez alleged. “I was like,
‘Absolutely not.’ He came back a couple minutes later and he’s like ‘Come to
the strip club and you can give me a lap dance.’”
After the party, Sanchez began wearing different clothing to
cover her back and her front, the suit claims.
“I’ve been wearing long sweaters ever since,” she
said.
About a week before the Christmas party, he asked her to
come to his office. When she arrived, he was watching a TV program that showed
two people having sex, according to the suit.
She “ran out of the office.” A week after the Christmas
party he winked and asked her if she wanted to come to his office again, she
alleged.
“It’s clear to her that he’s asking her to have sex with him
in his office,” according to the suit.
But she refused to go back to the office, and that’s when
the retaliation began, according to the lawsuit.
Up to that point, Sanchez, who came to the unit after her
24-year-old daughter died, had Sunday and Monday off each week so she could get
grief counseling at her church, she said.
But Reynolds told her he was changing her regular days off
to Fridays and Saturday, when the counseling was not available. When she
objected, he told her she should “transfer to the NYPD Records Room” downtown
if she wanted to keep her shift, according to the suit.
In her lawsuit, Sanchez, who has 18 years on the job, asks
for an undisclosed amount of money for pain and suffering. She remains on the
job at IAB.
“After tragically losing her daughter, our client sought a
safer environment in Internal Affairs, only to face relentless sexual
harassment and retaliation,” lawyer John Scola said.
“When she rejected her supervisor’s advances, he attempted
to transfer her, disrupting the therapy where she grieves — a transfer she was
only able to stop by filing this lawsuit.”
She called the NYPD Equal Employment Opportunity unit twice
to file a complaint but they never returned her call, she said.
Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch performed an overhaul at
IAB in December, making major changes to the bureau’s leadership.
Reynolds refused to comment on the lawsuit. He has been
transferred out of the unit, police sources said.
The Lieutenants Benevolent Association President Lou Turco
defended Reynolds and called the allegations “categorically untrue.” The NYPD
released a statement saying it “does not tolerate sexual harassment” and is
reviewing the lawsuit.
No comments:
Post a Comment