New York Post

IT'S WRITE & WRONG, YOU IDIOT!

- By SNEJANA FARBEROV and AMANDA WOODS

An anti-Israel protester and New York Times contributo­r was busted for scrawling graffiti in a Park Slope subway station, then complained he had no idea defacing public property was illegal.

Kyle Turner, 30, a Brooklynba­sed author and editor, moaned in an X thread Friday he was “annoyed and tired” after his run-in with cops.

“I spent last night in jail because i wrote ‘ceasefire/free Palestine’ in the 7th Ave F/G subway in Park Slope at 2am,” wrote Turner, whose social-media sites tout his work with the Times and other publicatio­ns such as Slate — including an article titled, “Is There a Place for Torture Porn in 2017?”

He claimed that although he did not resist arrest, an officer — whom he described as “lesbian presenting” — tried to “throw me around . . . It was so stupid.”

Afterward, he said, came “four and a half hours of cops milling about and doing paperwork.”

Turner (inset) wrote: “I sincerely didn’t know graffiti in the subway (which i see all the time) was an arrestable offense. But I also can’t believe our tax dollars go to cops focusing on minor infraction­s.”

The NYPD said he used a “permanent marker” to leave his message and was charged with making graffiti, criminal mischief and possession of graffiti instrument.

Under state law, graffiti is a misdemeano­r punishable by up to a year in a county jail or probation.

Reached by phone Tuesday, Turner told The Post he believed his arrest was “a waste of public resources.”

Ignoramus of the law

Turner said he has been active in a couple of different pro-Palestinia­n groups and has been taking part in protests against Israel’s war with Hamas over the past six months.

“I thought people should be alerted to what was happening in Gaza,” he said of his motive for tagging the subway wall.

At the same time, Turner admitted that his stunt may have been misguided.

“I know that my energy could be going to a more effective form of activism and organizing,” he said.

“It was a maybe misaligned use of my energy, but it was the way I channeled my frustratio­n and my sadness.”

Turner recounted how one of the arresting cops, who he said was a Muslim, allegedly tried to intercede on his behalf by asking his partner to let him go with only a warning, but the partner apparently insisted on an arrest.

Turner, whose only other interactio­n with police happened in 2017 or 2018 when he was ticketed for jumping a turnstile, added that he was stunned that “they will use all these time and resources and labor over a Sharpie.”

Turner was ultimately turned loose with a desk appearance ticket. Turner said he is hopeful that owing to his otherwise clean record he will be spared jail time when he faces a judge May 2.

“I’m totally okay, btw. Just annoyed and tired,” Turner summed everything up on X. “And so mad at the structures and institutio­ns in our society teehee.”

His arrest came just days after the Big Apple was plunged into chaos unleashed by an anti-Israel mob that burned US flags, displayed a Hezbollah banner in the middle of lower Manhattan and yelled “Death to America!” to protest the Biden administra­tion’s support of Israel in its war against Hamas.

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