New York Daily News

Cop axed for dissing boss

Called 311 repeatedly to slam lieutenant as transgende­r & ‘nasty’

- BY THOMAS TRACY

An NYPD cop was fired after he was accused of making multiple 311 calls against his lieutenant, claiming that the female officer was transgende­r and “mean,” the Daily News has learned.

Police Commission­er Edward Caban signed off on Police Officer Amar Bhairam’s dismissal from the department after he was found guilty during an administra­tive proceeding of prohibitiv­e conduct and falsifying business records following his three-week-long 311 tirade against NYPD Lt. Marlene Hernandez, according to recently released court papers.

“Please tell the tranny-looking lady in the white shirt put her mask on, she’s scaring my dogs as I walk by the precinct,” Bhairam, pretending to be a Chelsea resident, grumbled to 311 on Feb. 1, 2022.

The bizarre complaint was one of eight he had texted to 311 between Jan. 14 and Feb. 1, 2022, the NYPD’s Internal Affairs Bureau discovered after the rants were forwarded to the NYPD and the department launched an aggravated harassment investigat­ion.

All of the 311 reports complained of a “white shirt” at the 10th Precinct, where Bhairam and Hernandez were both assigned.

“I’m not one to complain but this needs to be corrected,” the 12-year NYPD veteran texted to 311 on Jan. 19, 2022. “I had to go to the 10th Precinct the other day to file a report for my stolen cell phone but the more troubling issue was the way I was addressed by a transgende­r officer wearing a white uniform that was sitting behind the high pharmacy-like counter.”

Bhairam also called Hernandez a “nasty woman.”

“Poor NYPD,” he wrote to 311 while on duty. “No wonder morale is low.”

He even requested that an ambulance be sent to the 10th Precinct to cart Hernandez away.

Bhairam filed his 311 complaint anonymousl­y, but made them on his own personal cell phone, making it quite easy for Internal Affairs Bureau to track him down.

The NYPD’s Department Advocate’s Office charged him with prohibited conduct for making the bogus, derogatory 311 calls. He was also accused of falsifying business records after he made about 500 inquiries to the NYPD’s computer system “unrelated to the official business of the department.”

During his department trial on Nov. 3, 2023, Bhairam pleaded guilty to sending the 311 texts, but pleaded not guilty to accessing the NYPD records.

Internal Affairs Bureau investigat­ors said he repeatedly accessed department computers between Dec. 3, 2020, and May 12, 2022, checking license plates and arrest histories without a legitimate reason.

He later admitted that he made the computer inquiries about “former and current romantic partners” to see if they had been arrested. He also ran his family and friends’ names through the database to see if they had any outstandin­g summonses.

Regarding his hate-filled texts about Hernandez, Bhairam told investigat­ors that his superior had a “negative” supervisor­y style and “a lot of cops weren’t happy” with her directives.

He accused her of giving him “unnecessar­y” command discipline­s, which his previous supervisor didn’t do. He also claimed that she had made inappropri­ate comments about his skin condition, which left him with white spots on his face, and made fun of him behind his back.

Bhairam said he had seen other cops file anonymous complaints to 311 against supervisor­s, so he decided to do the same.

“It was stupid,” he admitted. “I was just frustrated with what was going on personally, you know, with her,” he said at his department­al trial, according to court papers.

He said that he accused Hernandez of being transgende­r “to be funny.”

“All the other cops were calling her that at the precinct,” he said, admitting that he knew she wasn’t transgende­r. He also said he knew Hernandez would see the complaints because part of her duties was to assign the 311 jobs.

Bhairam’s attorney Peter Brill said at trial that his client’s actions were “immature” and “juvenile” but didn’t warrant terminatio­n, but Assistant Deputy Commission­er of Trials Anne Stone strongly disagreed.

“[His] attempt to defend his use of derogatory slurs, by repeatedly calling their use a ‘joke,’ trivialize­s his conduct and is compelling evidence of the limited potential for his rehabilita­tion,” Stone wrote about Bhairam while reaching her finding on Dec. 22. “His actions seriously call into question [his] ability to carry out his functions as a police officer.

“The department must trust that members of service will not abuse the city’s resources by making false reports about a supervisor they disagree with,” she wrote, recommendi­ng his terminatio­n.

When reached Friday, Brill said that Bhairam was “a rising star in the Police Department that made some poor choices and had to deal with an abusive supervisor.”

“He admitted his mistakes and received an overly harsh punishment,” Brill said. “He’s accepted that punishment and is moving on to greener pastures.”

An email to Hernandez for comment was not immediatel­y returned.

Since its first call on March 9, 2003 — a noise complaint in Jackson Heights, Queens — 311 has fielded 359 million nonemergen­cy complaints and assisted 525 million people overall, after figuring in mobile app and website exchanges.

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