Albany Times Union

Officer slams ‘courtesy cards’

- By Jake Offenhartz

NEW YORK — A New York City police officer is speaking out against the use of “courtesy cards” by friends and relatives of his colleagues on the force, accusing department leaders of maintainin­g a sprawling system of impunity that lets people with a connection to law enforcemen­t avoid traffic tickets.

Though not officially recognized by the NYPD, the laminated cards have long been treated as a perk of the job. The city’s police unions issue them to members, who circulate them among those who want to signal their NYPD connection­s — often to get out of minor infraction like speeding or failing to wear a seat belt.

In a federal lawsuit filed in Manhattan this week, Officer Mathew Bianchi described a practice of selective enforcemen­t with consequenc­es for officers who don’t follow the unwritten policy. Current and retired officers now have access to hundreds of cards, giving them away in exchange for a discount on a meal or a home improvemen­t job, he said.

In the Staten Island precinct where he works, a predominan­tly white area with a high percentage of cops and other city workers, Bianchi said multitudes of people he pulled over for traffic infraction­s flashed him one of the cards.

“I see card after card. You’re not allowed to write any of them (up),” he told The Associated Press. “We’re not supposed to be showing favoritism when we do car stops.”

Bianchi said he was reprimande­d on numerous occasions for writing a ticket to a relative or parent of an officer. In some cases, his commanding officer would personally review body camera footage to see if he was giving those with cards a “hard time,” the lawsuit states.

The final straw came last summer, when Bianchi wrote a ticket to a friend of the NYPD’S highestran­king uniformed officer, Chief Jeffrey Maddrey, according to the lawsuit. Three days later, Bianchi said he was ousted from his job in the traffic unit and moved to a night patrol shift.

The top chief, a longtime ally of New York City Mayor Eric Adams, is currently facing a department trial over allegation­s that he improperly voided the arrest of a former officer accused of menacing children with a gun.

A spokespers­on for the NYPD said the department would review the lawsuit. Inquiries to Maddrey were not returned.

John Nuthall, a spokespers­on for the Police Benevolent Associatio­n, the NYPD’S largest union, didn’t deny the existence of courtesy cards but said it was up to management to decide department policy.

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