New York Daily News

Report details most-sued officers in NYPD — & biggest settlement­s

- BY GRAHAM RAYMAN

An NYPD cop part of a foot chase that left a 17-year-old boy paralyzed and cost the city $12 million remains on the job. Another cop, known as “Bullethead,” has been sued 48 times, costing taxpayers more than $1 million, but was promoted anyway.

The two cops are named in an analysis released Monday by the Legal Aid Society naming the 10 NYPD cops with the most lawsuits filed against them over the past decade and the 10 involved in the highest legal settlement­s.

Earlier this month, a Legal Aid analysis showed $50.5 million in settlement­s for alleged police wrongdoing so far this year through July 28. At that rate, the city will fork over more than $100 million in NYPD-related settlement­s by year’s end, more than in four of the past five years, the society estimated.

Jennvine Wong, a staff attorney with the society’s Cop Accountabi­lity Project, noted that despite disturbing allegation­s in the lawsuits, the officers in both lists remain on the job and have been promoted to sergeant or higher.

“So long as NYPD leadership continues to allow problemati­c officers to rise through the ranks … our clients will continue to shoulder the consequenc­es and the general public’s trust of the NYPD will remain fractured,” she said in a statement.

But Patrick Hendry, president of the Police Benevolent Associatio­n, the NYPD’s largest union, quickly pointed out that lawsuits aren’t reliable indicators of how well an officer does their job.

“Lawsuits are frequently settled for reasons that have nothing to do with the actions of a specific police officer named in the suit, including cases where the city settles rather than fighting a frivolous suit in court,” Hendry said in a statement.

“The Legal Aid Society knows the truth, but they don’t care. Their goal is to smear police officers with unproven allegation­s to help their criminal clients escape justice.”

The cop known as “Bullethead,” David Grieco, is closing in on 50 lawsuits filed against him. He was promoted to sergeant in 2017. The city has settled lawsuits against him for a total of $1.1 million, The News previously reported.

Grieco is now assigned off the street to a coveted spot in the office of the Chief of Crime Control Strategies, which tracks and compiles crime statistics, NYPD records show.

Pedro Rodriguez remains a police officer and is assigned to the 72nd Precinct in Brooklyn despite his role in the May 2018 foot chase that left Jimmy Alvarado paralyzed.

According to the lawsuit, Rodriguez and his partner Pavel Kuznetsov chased Alvarado and Kuznetsov tackled him, breaking the boy’s neck.

Rodriguez then helped handcuff Alvarado and tried to make him stand up, the lawsuit alleges.

Kuznetsov resigned from the NYPD in 2018 and was hired by the St. Petersburg, Fla., police force. New York City settled Alvarado’s lawsuit for $12 million.

In his affidavit filed as part of the lawsuit, Rodriguez says he tried to chase Alvarado but could not keep up with him and returned to his car without even seeing Kuznetsov tackle the boy. He writes he helped Alvarado to a seated position against a lamppost

John Nuthall, a Police Benevolent Associatio­n spokesman, said Rodriguez was merely present for the incident and was not involved in tackling the boy, yet Legal Aid keeps putting out the officer’s name with the huge settlement attached as if Rodriguez was solely at fault.

The NYPD did not have immediate comment on the Legal Aid report.

 ?? ?? NYPD Officer David “Bullethead” Grieco has been sued 48 times, and also promoted to higher rank.
NYPD Officer David “Bullethead” Grieco has been sued 48 times, and also promoted to higher rank.

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