New York Post

'TATT'ER TALE AT RIKERS ISLAND

- By REBECCA ROSENBERG rrosenberg@nypost.com

A Rikers Island guard smuggled a tattoo gun to her female prison paramour to help alter a tattoo that linked the accused crook to a string of robberies, prosecutor­s said Wednesday.

Correction Capt. Shantay Dash was arraigned in Manhattan Supreme Court on felony charges of promoting contraband and official misconduct — but is still drawing her salary and likely to get her pension even if convicted.

“The case that is before you now presents an appallingl­y flagrant violation of public trust,” said Assistant District Attorney Aaron Ginandes.

Dash was asked to smuggle the tool by jailbird Robin Hamilton, who wanted to mask a tattoo on her forearm after a judge ordered the ink photograph­ed as evidence in a 2013 robbery, Ginandes said.

The original tattoo read “ERICKA” — and it matched a tattoo that was seen on the arm of the perpetrato­r in a surveillan­ce video.

But when Hamilton appeared at the DA’s office to have her arm photograph­ed, the tat allegedly had a bit of alteration work done.

“She had a brand-new tattoo on her forearm that had not completely healed,” Ginandes told Justice James Burke.

The Department of Correction and the DA’s office launched an investigat­ion that led them to Dash, then working as a supervisor at the Rose Singer jail for female inmates.

Dash — who earned $134,287, including overtime last year — allegedly ordered the tattoo gun on Amazon, delivered it to her lover, and later helped Hamilton dispose of it, according to court papers and public records.

The tattoo revision didn’t save Hamilton. She was convicted of five violent felonies for several Manhattan and Queens robberies and was shipped off to state prison on a sentence of 51 years to life.

Dash was arrested Jan. 25, and allegedly admitted to the forbidden dalliance with Hamilton — along with the tattoo-gun gambit to get her jailbird off.

But she apparently still hadn’t learned her lesson.

The Department of Correction and the DA’s office met with Dash and asked her to help them identify additional suspects in the robberies.

“A few days later, Robin Hamilton’s daughter called her mom in prison and shared the ‘entirety’ of the discussion, including details that only Dash would have known,” Ginandes said.

“The purpose of the call was to warn Robin Hamilton that the state was still investigat­ing her,” added the prosecutor, arguing for $50,000 bail.

Defense lawyer James Frankie told the judge that Dash, who has a young daugh- ter and resides in Brooklyn, was not a flight risk and is still working full time.

“If it’s demonstrab­le that she leaked the informatio­n, isn’t that alone enough to fire her?” the stunned jurist asked.

Union rules protect Dash’s job until she’s actually con- victed of a crime — and even then, she’ll still get a pension, Frankie and the prosecutor said.

Dash, who earns a base salary of $81,000, is on modified duty without inmate contact, said DOC spokesman Peter Thorne.

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