USA TODAY US Edition

Feds: Ex-cop in bribery case sent racist text

Statement, video used to argue against bail

- Tom Hays

NEW YORK – A white New York City police officer once bragged about trying to scare Black people for kicks by randomly pointing his gun at them while on the job, federal prosecutor­s said Tuesday in announcing corruption charges against the officer and two others who worked together at the same precinct.

In court papers, prosecutor­s quoted a text that Robert Smith allegedly sent following his retirement in 2020 recounting how he would point his gun out his car window at people he described using a version of the Nword.

He would “watch their reaction and drive away,” he wrote. “Hilarious.”

Smith also exchanged messages about committing numerous robberies and shakedowns, or “shakes” as he called them, prosecutor­s said.

“Bro I robbed everyone,” they said he wrote.

On video, he described himself as “the perp that got away” and “one of the most corrupt cops in the 105,” referring to the 105th Precinct in Queens, where the three defendants served, prosecutor­s added.

On video, he described himself as “the perp that got away” and “one of the most corrupt cops in the 105.”

The texts and videos were not cited as evidence in the bribery case in federal court in Brooklyn. But prosecutor­s used them to argue that Smith should be denied bail.

The former officer pleaded not guilty on Tuesday at an arraignmen­t where a judge agreed he should remain behind bars. His lawyer declined comment afterward.

The court papers accused Smith and current Officer Robert Hassett of hatching a scheme starting in 2016 to take thousands of dollars in bribes to summon a specific tow truck company to car accident scenes, instead of using a system meant to distribute the business at random. Smith allegedly recruited a second current officer, Heather Busch, to join the kickback scam after he retired.

Smith and Hassett also were accused of using restricted police databases to run the names of car accident victims and provide the informatio­n to a person who sold it to physical therapy businesses and personal injury attorneys to solicit business. The middleman paid the officers about $7,000 for informatio­n on more than 100 people, the court papers said.

Smith, 44, was additional­ly facing charges he agreed to transport a kilo (2.2 pounds) of heroin for drug trafficker­s after his retirement. He was paid $1,200 in a deal to carry his gun and retired police identifica­tion for the task, prosecutor­s said.

Hassett, 36, and Busch, 34, were to appear in court by teleconfer­ence later Tuesday. The names of their attorneys were not immediatel­y available.

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