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POLICE BRUTALITY WATCH: BLACK SERGEANT SAYS HE WAS BEATEN BY FELLOW COPS

POLICE BRUTALITY WATCH: BLACK SERGEANT SAYS HE WAS BEATEN BY FELLOW COPS

Siebra Muhammad · Wednesday, December 30th 2009 at 3:42PM · 1370 views
A black off-duty NYPD sergeant carrying takeout food to his girlfriend's apartment claims he was racially profiled and roughed up by aggressive cops in the Bronx.

Sgt. Reginald McReynolds says he was handcuffed for 20 minutes while threatened by a rookie cop with arrest and the loss of his pension.

"I was minding my business," McReynolds told the Daily News. "I can think of no other reason for being stopped but my skin color."

"This incident has opened my eyes," added McReynolds, who's assigned to the Quality Assurance Division, which audits crime statistics.

The Oct. 26 confrontation occurred as Officers Kyle Bach and Joseph Azevedo of the 52nd Precinct were handling a domestic dispute call in the building, official records say.

As McReynolds walked up the stairs with two bags of Chinese food, he says Bach "came right up in my face and said, 'What f------ apartment are you going to?'"

McReynolds pointed to his girlfriend's door and, he said, Bach then threatened to arrest him for criminal trespass.

"He took out his penlight and shined it right in my eyes blinding me," McReynolds said. "I let him know I'm on the job and was looking for my wallet and he struck me in the neck with his [baton]."

McReynolds' girlfriend called 911 and snapped photos with her cell phone camera.

"[Bach] said to me, 'I'm gonna take your pension today,'" McReynolds said.

Official reports say the cops claim they stopped McReynolds because they thought he might be the boyfriend of the woman in the domestic case.

McReynolds is 42 years old and weighs 275 pounds. He says the woman's boyfriend is also black, but is in his late 20s and weighs about 150 pounds.

"There's no way in the world I fit the description of that guy," he said.

In his 19-year career, McReynolds has never received a command discipline or civilian complaint. Now he's been slapped with charges accusing him of stonewalling the cops, pushing Azevedo and telling his girlfriend to say he was assaulted.

"The cops' story is an afterthought to justify their unconstitutional stop," said the sergeant's lawyer, Eric Sanders, of the Law Firm of Jeffrey Goldberg in Lake Success, L.I.

A police spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

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Siebra Muhammad New Orleans, LA

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Comments (3)

V
Valerie Bock Wednesday, December 30th 2009 at 4:09PM

WHY are police departments still stupid enough to handle something like this by further attacking the victim? If McReynolds had received an apology and the "rookie" cop had received discipline, these headlines probably wouldn't even be here. They're so afraid they'll get sued that they do the exact thing most calculated to get them sued. May the verdict be extremely LARGE!

Siebra Muhammad Wednesday, December 30th 2009 at 4:54PM

This is just WRONG...WRONG...WRONG!!!

Richard Kigel Wednesday, December 30th 2009 at 5:48PM

This is the kind of thing that should make EVERYBODY mad. Here in NY they've been trying to do all kinds of quote-(with-heavy-sarcasm) "sensitivity training" . We see how well that worked.

Not too long ago a black undercover cop here was shot dead when he tried to stop someone from breaking into own his car and the uniforms thought he was the criminal. It is just sad. These things should not be happening.

On this case, as soon as the off duty officer pulled out his shield, it should have been over with apologies all around. Hitting the guy for going for his wallet--that's not in any department regs. I would like to see these guys get disciplined.

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