New York Post

OFFICER . . . DOWN?

Scooter cop wipes out in Central Park – and sues city

- By JULIA MARSH Additional reporting by Reuven Fenton, Shawn Cohen

PARK ‘ROW’: NYPD Officer Carmelo Fargas (inset top) crashed his scooter while chasing some kids after hours in Central Park — and he’s suing the city over his injured knee because the grassy field where he wiped out is “unlevel, gapped, depressed and uneven.” An NYPD officer who apparently thinks the fields in Central Park should be perfectly flat is suing the city because he crashed his scooter after rolling over a rut while patrolling the green space last year. “Police Officer Carmelo Fargas was on routine patrol inside of Central Park on a two-wheeled Piaggio scooter, when he observed a group of kids running inside of the park after hours,” according to a line-of-duty injury report of the Sept. 4, 2016 accident. “PO Fargas went to assess the situation and, while doing so, he hit a ditch in the path, causing him to unexpected­ly loose [sic] control of the scooter,” the report says.

“In order to prevent himself from falling, PO Fargas extended his left leg which caused severe pain to his left knee, causing both PO Fargas and the scooter to fall to the ground,” the report reads.

The suit, filed Thursday, claims the city had a duty to keep the turf level.

Fargas blames Parks Department officials for “permitting the grassy field to remain unlevel, gapped, depressed and uneven.”

He says they “negligentl­y and carelessly maintained the afore-described premises.”

Fargas, 32, was off-roading through wet grass on the scooter near Central Park West and West 85th Street when he spotted the troublemak­ers at around 2:20 a.m., according to his Manhattan Supreme Court lawsuit.

The rut was apparently caused by heavy water runoff, according to court papers.

He was seriously injured in the accident, which left him with a ruptured left knee requiring surgery.

A resulting infection has the nine-year veteran officer laid up in his Queens home on medical leave. He is suing for unspecifie­d monetary damages including lost overtime.

He declined to comment, as did the NYPD.

A police source said that Fargas did not violate department­al guidelines by taking the scooter off-road — but noted that officers are warned not to take the vehicles out in the rain or snow.

A city Law Department spokesman said the complaint will be reviewed.

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