New York Daily News

Nix cop rape rap

Charges dropped vs. 2 who busted woman, had sex

- BY TREVOR BOYER AND THOMAS TRACY

Brooklyn prosecutor­s dropped rape charges Wednesday against two disgraced ex-NYPD detectives accused of having sex with a woman in their custody.

Former cops Richard Hall and Eddie Martins now face only bribery and official misconduct charges for letting a prisoner go after receiving a benefit — sex — from the young woman.

Assistant District Attorney Frank DeGaetano on Wednesday moved to dismiss all charges not listed in a new supersedin­g indictment. Under the old indictment, the pair faced charges of rape, kidnapping, unlawful imprisonme­nt, sex abuse and sexual misconduct.

Judge Danny Chun agreed to dismiss the earlier indictment, and Hall and Martins pleaded not guilty to the new string of accusation­s. They're expected to answer the charges in court at a later date.

In the controvers­ial case, Martins and Hall arrested a woman, who goes by the name Anna Chambers on social media, on a minor drug charge at Calvert Vaux Park in Gravesend in September 2017. Chambers, now 20, alleged the cops took turns raping her in a police van.

The detectives quit the NYPD in November 2017, and said through their lawyers that the sex was consensual.

Chambers didn't testify in front of the new grand jury, and the Brooklyn district attorney's office won't call her to testify if the case goes to trial, prosecutor­s said.

“We do believe however that the charges are still serious,” DeGaetano said. “We believe that it's a strong case, with compelling scientific evidence.”

A law enforcemen­t source said prosecutor­s still believe Chambers is a victim, although she's stopped cooperatin­g with the DA's office.

A spokesman for the DA couldn't say if prosecutor­s asked the grand jury to file rape charges this time around, citing grand jury secrecy rules.

“We are fully committed to holding these defendants accountabl­e by vigorously pursuing the charges in this case that can be proven with independen­t and reliable evidence,” the spokesman said. “We believe — as the newly created statute recognizes — that any sexual conduct between police officers and a person in their custody should constitute a crime. However, that was not the law at the time of the incident.”

“Because of this and because of the unforeseen and serious credibilit­y issues that arose over the past year and our ethical obligation­s under the rules of profession­al conduct, we are precluded from proceeding with the rape charges,” the spokesman added.

It's not believed Chambers will face bribery charges.

The two ex-partners were about to go to trial for rape when their lawyers and the Brooklyn DA's office asked for a special prosecutor take over the case.

In the letter requesting a special prosecutor, the DA's office claimed Chambers “made a series of false, misleading and inconsiste­nt statements about the facts of this case and about collateral or unrelated matters. Most troubling, she made some false statements under oath…. We have had to confront (her) many times about these statements.”

A judge refused to allow a special prosecutor, forcing the DA to go back to the grand jury for new charges. Chambers wasn't in court Wednesday when the new charges were filed.

“She's so fed up and depressed about this whole situation, that she's in a state of hopelessne­ss right now," said her lawyer Michael David, who plans to take the case to the U.S. attorney's office, and request that federal civil rights charges be lodged against the two former officers.

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