NYPD’s top cop abruptly resigns after allegedly demanding underling perform sexual favors — including ‘kiss his penis’ — in exchange for overtime

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He probably is at retirement and his pension, but losing a $400,000 job over some pussy....and you're married and your wife might come after your money :smh:

This is why you don't fuck with subordinates
SHE got $400K in pay not him. It was good until her business was put in the paper and now it’s time to play victim. Naw she benefited too. Nigga sound like he should be running for NC governor though.
 

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NYPD Former Chief DENIES sexual accusations made by co-worker | LiveNOW from FOX​

 

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He must be a BGOL Zod worshipper, she said he all he talked about was having anal sex with her. chick said at first she was telling him stop when he was forcing it in her ass then she stopped telling him stop and was telling him just to slow down :oops:

:dance::fucking:
Slowww doooown, and grab that jar of grease, slowww doowwn..
Slowww dooown, (we in the back room now) before you split these cheeks, slowww down..
Slow doooowwn, ooh-woooo..
HOOH!
Is this the part you take your shirt to wipe the skeeeet off?
 
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Hot-headed NYPD deputy commissioner — who called Post reporter a ‘f–king scumbag’ — has been demoted: sources​

By
Tina Moore
Published Dec. 28, 2024, 8:20 a.m. ET
330 Comments
Tarik Sheppard, NYPD Commissioner of Public Information, standing outside Federal Court in Manhattan
Hot-headed Tarik Sheppard has been demoted to assistant chief and commanding officer.William Farrington
The NYPD’s hot-headed Deputy Commissioner of Public Information — who once called a New York Post reporter a “f–king scumbag” — was demoted this week, police sources said.
Tarik Sheppard, a 21-year veteran of the NYPD, will be an assistant chief and commanding officer at the Interagency Operations Division as of Dec. 26, NYPD paperwork shows.
“That’s definitely a downward move but a soft landing,” a police source said of Sheppard, a friend of Mayor Adams.
Mayor Eric Adams and NYPD Interim Commissioner Thomas Donlon holding a public safety announcement at One Police Plaza on October 8, 2024
Sheppard once called a New York Post reporter a “f–king scumbag” while reporting on the raids against former NYPD Commissioner Edward Caban.Paul Martinka
It’s not clear exactly why he was booted from his post, but Sheppard, 48, got into a kerfuffle with then-acting Police Commissioner Tom Donlon at the NYC Marathon in November and has had run-ins with the media.


Sheppard, who was once commander of the 28th Precinct in Harlem, was appointed DCPI by former Police Commissioner Edward Caban in August 2023 and brought a cadre of his own people with him.
He expanded the office from about 40 employees to 86.
Some of them are now being transferred out of the office too, police sources said.


In one of his controversial moves, Sheppard moved reporters who cover the NYPD and worked for decades in a second-floor warren of offices nicknamed “The Shack” to a modular building outside police headquarters.
e0dd2acd3574679864cd76965aa5dce2.png


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He claimed it was to make more room for “ethnic media,” but the space is usually utilized by the same handful of journalists who previously worked inside the main building.
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Sheppard called a Post City Hall reporter a “f–king scumbag” after the reporter reached out to Chief of Patrol John Chell for comment about a federal investigation of city officials.
 

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Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch ousts dozens of NYPD bosses in shocking purge — one week after sex scandal that rocked department​

By
Tina Moore
Published Dec. 28, 2024, 11:12 a.m. ET


Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch ousted dozens of NYPD bosses in a shocking Saturday purge, beginning with the department’s Internal Affairs Bureau, a week after The Post revealed that top cop Jeffrey Maddrey was allegedly trading overtime for sex at police headquarters.
Deputy Chief Chris Morello, the No. 2 boss at the famed watchdog bureau whose mission is to weed out bad cops, was removed from his post, paperwork obtained by The Post shows.
This comes a week after IAB’s top boss, Chief of Internal Affairs Miguel Iglesias, was ejected the day of the Dec. 21 expose in The Post.
Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch 5
Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch ousted dozens of NYPD bosses in a shocking Saturday purge.Michael Nagle
Inspector Joseph Profeta, who was head of IAB’s Group 1, was booted Saturday to Patrol Borough Brooklyn North, the documents show. The group investigates allegations regarding NYPD brass with the rank of captain or above.



“Tisch means business,” a high-ranking source said. “She’s cleaning up the mess and putting the department back on track.”


The moves were made because of a “lack of oversight” by IAB, the source said.
Deputy Chief Chris Morello 5
Deputy Chief Chris Morello was removed from his post, paperwork obtained by The Post shows.Chris Morello/Linkedin
Inspector Michael Ricciardi of IAB Special Ops was also ousted and sent to Patrol Borough Manhattan North, the orders show.
Another dozen IAB bosses, ranging from lieutenants to sergeants, were sent packing to far-flung precincts across the city, the documents show.
Six members of Maddrey’s office — five detectives and one police officer — were also booted in the bloodletting, most of them sent to walk the beat in public housing, the documents show.
The sweeping changes come after The Post revealed in a Sunday front-page story that Chief of Department Maddrey was allegedly granting overtime for sex to Lt. Quathisha Epps, who raked in a total of more than $400,000 in 2024.
Joseph Profeta 5
Inspector Joseph Profeta, who was head of IAB’s Group 1, was booted Saturday to Patrol Borough Brooklyn North, the documents show.NYPD83Pct/X
“If you want to show that you are genuinely trying to change the face of the department and get rid of all of Maddrey’s cronies, this is the best way to do it,” a police officer with more than 20 years on the job said.
Epps claimed in graphic detail in an exclusive interview with The Post that Maddrey, the highest ranking uniformed officer in the NYPD, coerced her to have sex in his office between eight and 10 times, in exchange for the massive overtime.
'He's a predator' front page 5
The Post revealed that top cop Jeffrey Maddrey was allegedly trading overtime for sex at police headquarters.
Her lawyer, Eric Sanders, filed a discrimination complaint with the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission, a precursor to a lawsuit.
Maddrey abruptly retired the day of The Post report.
Former NYPD Chief Jeffrey Maddrey with his lawyer Lambros Lambrou in Manhattan on Dec. 26. 5
Former NYPD Chief Jeffrey Maddrey with his lawyer Lambros Lambrou in Manhattan on Dec. 26.Brigitte Stelzer
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He claimed through his lawyer on Friday that he had a “consensual, adult relationship” with Epps, but denied her accusation of “coercion.” The lawyer, Lambros Lambrou, said Maddrey had no authority to sign off on overtime pay.
In response, Epps’ attorney told The Post, “This clown is a f–king disgrace. We have a treasure trove of digital data that will hopefully bring this degenerate to justice.”
 

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Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch ousts dozens of NYPD bosses in shocking purge — one week after sex scandal that rocked department​

By
Tina Moore
Published Dec. 28, 2024, 11:12 a.m. ET


Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch ousted dozens of NYPD bosses in a shocking Saturday purge, beginning with the department’s Internal Affairs Bureau, a week after The Post revealed that top cop Jeffrey Maddrey was allegedly trading overtime for sex at police headquarters.
Deputy Chief Chris Morello, the No. 2 boss at the famed watchdog bureau whose mission is to weed out bad cops, was removed from his post, paperwork obtained by The Post shows.
This comes a week after IAB’s top boss, Chief of Internal Affairs Miguel Iglesias, was ejected the day of the Dec. 21 expose in The Post.
Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch 5
Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch ousted dozens of NYPD bosses in a shocking Saturday purge.Michael Nagle
Inspector Joseph Profeta, who was head of IAB’s Group 1, was booted Saturday to Patrol Borough Brooklyn North, the documents show. The group investigates allegations regarding NYPD brass with the rank of captain or above.



“Tisch means business,” a high-ranking source said. “She’s cleaning up the mess and putting the department back on track.”


The moves were made because of a “lack of oversight” by IAB, the source said.
Deputy Chief Chris Morello 5
Deputy Chief Chris Morello was removed from his post, paperwork obtained by The Post shows.Chris Morello/Linkedin
Inspector Michael Ricciardi of IAB Special Ops was also ousted and sent to Patrol Borough Manhattan North, the orders show.
Another dozen IAB bosses, ranging from lieutenants to sergeants, were sent packing to far-flung precincts across the city, the documents show.
Six members of Maddrey’s office — five detectives and one police officer — were also booted in the bloodletting, most of them sent to walk the beat in public housing, the documents show.
The sweeping changes come after The Post revealed in a Sunday front-page story that Chief of Department Maddrey was allegedly granting overtime for sex to Lt. Quathisha Epps, who raked in a total of more than $400,000 in 2024.
Joseph Profeta 5
Inspector Joseph Profeta, who was head of IAB’s Group 1, was booted Saturday to Patrol Borough Brooklyn North, the documents show.NYPD83Pct/X
“If you want to show that you are genuinely trying to change the face of the department and get rid of all of Maddrey’s cronies, this is the best way to do it,” a police officer with more than 20 years on the job said.
Epps claimed in graphic detail in an exclusive interview with The Post that Maddrey, the highest ranking uniformed officer in the NYPD, coerced her to have sex in his office between eight and 10 times, in exchange for the massive overtime.
'He's a predator' front page'He's a predator' front page 5
The Post revealed that top cop Jeffrey Maddrey was allegedly trading overtime for sex at police headquarters.
Her lawyer, Eric Sanders, filed a discrimination complaint with the Equal Opportunity Employment Commission, a precursor to a lawsuit.
Maddrey abruptly retired the day of The Post report.
Former NYPD Chief Jeffrey Maddrey with his lawyer Lambros Lambrou in Manhattan on Dec. 26. 5
Former NYPD Chief Jeffrey Maddrey with his lawyer Lambros Lambrou in Manhattan on Dec. 26.Brigitte Stelzer
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He claimed through his lawyer on Friday that he had a “consensual, adult relationship” with Epps, but denied her accusation of “coercion.” The lawyer, Lambros Lambrou, said Maddrey had no authority to sign off on overtime pay.
In response, Epps’ attorney told The Post, “This clown is a f–king disgrace. We have a treasure trove of digital data that will hopefully bring this degenerate to justice.”
The money saved in OT can probably keep the libraries open for 10 years.
 

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Statement from Attorney Eric Sanders Regarding Allegations and Former NYPD Chief Jeffrey B. Maddrey’s Admissions​

Posted on December 28, 2024 by Eric Sanders
Lieutenant-Quathisha-Epps-e1734874024269.jpg

Yesterday, during a hastily arranged press conference, former NYPD Chief of Department Jeffrey B. Maddrey, through his attorney, admitted to having a “consensual” sexual relationship with my client, Lieutenant Quathisha Epps. This shocking admission comes on the heels of Maddrey’s prior denials of all allegations and his abrupt resignation on December 20, 2024, as his sex-for-overtime scandal unraveled. While his legal team attempts to frame this as a consensual relationship, the facts and evidence tell a far more troubling story of abuse of power, manipulation, and predatory behavior within the NYPD.
Let me be unequivocally clear: there can be no “consent” in a workplace where one individual wields immense power over another’s livelihood. As Lieutenant Epps’s direct supervisor, Maddrey leveraged his position as the highest-ranking uniformed officer in the NYPD to prey upon her financial and emotional vulnerabilities. He demanded sexual favors, money—referred to as “envelopes”—and even gifts, including one that was delivered to his spouse at their home. These demands were not the actions of a man engaging in a consensual relationship; they were acts of coercion and quid pro quo sexual harassment.
Maddrey’s use of his authority to exploit vulnerable female officers—enabled by systemic failures within the NYPD for more than thirty years, now under Police Commissioner Jessica S. Tisch and Mayor Eric L. Adams—is abhorrent. The notion that Maddrey, a man with full access to the NYPD’s employee profile database and other internal tools, did not target and manipulate subordinates is simply implausible. This behavior is not just unethical; it is a flagrant violation of Supreme Court precedents on quid pro quo sexual harassment under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act and other anti-discrimination laws.
Equally disingenuous is the claim that Maddrey was unaware of Lieutenant Epps’s overtime earnings or had no involvement in the overtime process. Maddrey and his legal team’s suggestion that he “never approves, gives, or signs overtime” is a red herring designed to mislead the public. The NYPD has strict protocols for reviewing, flagging, and approving overtime submissions, both pre-and post-payment. As the highest-ranking uniformed officer, Maddrey was well aware of these systems and, as evidence shows, used his position to manipulate them to his advantage. To suggest otherwise insults the public’s intelligence and undermines the integrity of the NYPD’s internal controls.
Furthermore, Maddrey’s lawyer’s attempts to malign Lieutenant Epps by focusing on her personal life and making baseless claims about her character are reprehensible. These tactics are nothing more than an effort to distract from the indisputable facts: Maddrey exploited his power to demand sexual favors, money, and gifts, and when Lieutenant Epps began to assert her independence, he retaliated by weaponizing the department’s Internal Affairs Bureau to smear her reputation.
Let us also address the personal attacks against me and my law firm. To insinuate that I somehow concocted these allegations or had prior knowledge of them before accepting Lieutenant Epps’s representation is both defamatory and unethical. I represent my client in good faith based on the overwhelming evidence of misconduct committed by Maddrey. To Maddrey’s legal team, I remind you and Maddrey, as a newly admitted member of the bar, of your ethical obligations as officers of the court. Should you continue to engage in baseless accusations and dilatory tactics, I will not hesitate to file a complaint with the bar association.
For decades, Maddrey has been allowed to operate with impunity, preying on vulnerable women inside and outside of the NYPD. The department’s repeated failures to hold him accountable, even after prior allegations and lawsuits, reflect a systemic culture of complicity. Lieutenant Epps’s courage in coming forward shines a light on this pervasive misconduct. Her unblemished record as a supervisor, her resilience as a survivor of childhood trauma, domestic violence, and cancer, and her steadfast commitment to justice speak to her credibility and strength of character.
As for Maddrey’s threats of civil litigation, I say this: bring it on. If Maddrey and his legal team believe that filing a SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation) defamation claim will silence us, they are mistaken. Such bad-faith legal actions are not only sanctionable by the courts but will also serve to expose Maddrey’s predatory behavior further.
Maddrey’s admissions, the extensive evidence we have collected, and the digital trail left behind will hold him accountable. Unfortunately for Maddrey, he could not isolate Epps in his office or outside in a park to physically overpower her and delete the digital evidence on her mobile device as he did to others. Moreover, the envelopes and gifts he demanded, the sexual favors he coerced, and the retaliatory actions he took against Lieutenant Epps demonstrate a calculated abuse of power. This is not about one victim or one incident—it is about dismantling a culture that has allowed predators like Maddrey to thrive unchecked.
Lieutenant Epps and I remain undeterred. To Maddrey, his legal team, and those complicit in covering up his actions: your tactics will not intimidate us. We will continue to fight for justice—not just for Lieutenant Epps but for every woman who has suffered in silence at the hands of those who abuse their power.
To the public, we stand with you in the belief that no one is above the law, and we are committed to holding those who abuse their positions accountable.
Eric Sanders, Esq.
Attorney for Lieutenant Quathisha Epps
The Sanders Firm, P.C.
 

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Two more female cops close to disgraced NYPD Chief Jeffrey Maddrey, including his driver, raked in massive OT and other perks​

By
Tina Moore
Published Dec. 28, 2024, 12:52 p.m. ET
760 Comments

More female officers in disgraced top cop Jeffrey Maddrey’s orbit pulled down massive overtime and other perks, The Post has learned.
The driver for the former chief of department made an eye-popping $163,414 in OT last year — and resigned days after The Post exposed her boss’s alleged sleazy conduct at police headquarters, records show.
Detective Ingrid Sanders was the seventh-highest overtime earner in the department, boosting her total salary last fiscal year to $352,462, records show.
That put her pay not far behind Lt. Quathisha Epps, the top earner who made $403,515, including $204,453 in OT. Epps filed an explosive Equal Employment Opportunity Commission complaint accusing Maddrey of giving Epps overtime shifts in exchange for sex, The Post revealed in a front-page exclusive Sunday.
Deputy Commissioner Lisa White and Detective Ingrid Sanders holding a promotion certificate with an unidentified woman 4
Detective Ingrid Sanders (center) made over $350,000 last year.instagram @nypddcer



On the day of the Post’s inquiry, Maddrey quit. Sanders was immediately transferred from One Police Plaza to a Queens precinct, and filed for retirement on Dec. 23, The Post found in police documents.
Sanders is a first-grade detective — the top grade — who served in the chief of department’s office since December 2022. She followed Maddrey there from the Patrol Services Bureau. She didn’t return multiple messages.
Maddrey also sought favors for second detective, Ada Reyes, The Post has learned.
Epps, Maddrey’s personnel manager, told The Post that part of her OT was devoted to taking care of Reyes.
“The overtime that he would give me he would tell me to buy her things like get her some towels and things from Walmart, a microwave, and stuff like that so she doesn’t have to come out of her pocket,” Epps said. “I make the overtime and then I give things to her.
Detective Ada Reyes 4
Detective Ada Reyes made $55,923 in overtime.NYPD Hispanic Society/Facebook
“He would have me go apartment hunting with her,” Epps said. “I would be at work and he would tell me to get up and go with her to look for an apartment.”
Eventually, Epps claimed, Maddrey told her to rent an apartment that was in her adult children’s names on the Lower East Side to Reyes and her family because they were having trouble finding housing.
Two sources confirmed the apartment arrangement to The Post.
Reyes made $42,500 in as a new police officer in 2019 but her pay jumped to $154,405 in 2024, including $55,923 in overtime, city records show.
When Reyes came to work at NYPD headquarters in 2023, Maddrey told Epps to put her somewhere other than his 13th-floor office, Epps told The Post.
Lieutenant Quathisha Epps, NYPD's top earner and 19-year veteran, dressed in a black attire 4
NYPD top earner, Lieutenant Quathisha Epps, accused Maddrey of taking advantage of her fragile financial situation.Facebook / Quathisha Epps
“Ingrid [Sanders] and I worked directly for him, and he was very specific not to put Reyes in the office,” Epps said. “He didn’t want her and Ingrid bumping heads.” Reyes was assigned to a domestic violence unit in another part of the building, she said.
Reyes didn’t return multiple phone and text messages seeking comment. Nobody was at the apartment when The Post visited. A neighbor confirmed she and her husband lived there after looking at a photograph of her.


Epps’ alleged overtime agreement with Maddrey began because she was having financial problems and her home was being foreclosed on, she said.
Maddrey, the highest ranking uniformed cop on the force, demanded “unwanted sexual favors in exchange for overtime opportunities” from Epps, between June 2023 and Dec. 16, 2024, the EEOC complaint alleges.
Maddrey would send her text messages telling her to close her door and “strip for me right now.” She would take video and send it to him, she told The Post.
Epps claimed she had sex with Maddrey between eight and 10 times on the couch in his inner office.
The first time, Maddrey told her he dreamed of having anal sex with her and then violently pulled her pants down and did so despite her repeatedly telling him to “stop,” she told The Post.
New York Post cover featuring Lt. Epps' claims 4
“I think he’s a predator,” Epps said.
At a Friday press conference, Maddrey’s lawyer, Lambros Lambrau, called Epps a “self-professed swinger” who is under investigation for “stealing time and putting in for overtime she never worked.
“Now Lieutenant Epps got caught with her hands in the cookie jar and is trying to deflect her own wrongdoing by making these allegations against Chief Maddrey,” Lambrou said.
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“However, the truth is Lieutenant Epps had a consensual adult relationship, albeit for a short time with Jeff,” he said, adding they have a ton of evidence including “X rated and racy videos and photographs from Lieutenant Epps.”
Maddrey didn’t speak during the press conference and ignored questions yelled at him from the media.
 

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Share Open Line - Trouble in the NYPD, Remembering Rickey Henderson and Alfa Anderson (12/22/24)

The Open Line Legacy continues after the loss of the show’s founder Bob Slade on March 23rd of 2019. From it’s beginnings in the early 1980’s on WRKS-FM, Open Line has continued to inform, inspire, educate and call to action, citizens of the Greater NYC Community and beyond.
On this week's episode - Brother Fatiyn Muhammad and Jennifer Jones Austin speak about the passing of Alfa Anderson and Rickey Henderson, NYPD resignations, and Mayor Adams bribery case with guest Corey Pegues, retired NYPD Deputy Investigator.
Recorded on 12/22/24

"https://www.iheart.com/podcast/1300...pen-line-trouble-in-the-251258735/?embed=true"
 

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Law enforcement searches home of ex-NYPD department chief Jeffery Maddrey​


Then-NYPD Chief of Department Jeffrey Maddrey in 2023


Photo by Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images


By
Charles Lane
Published Jan 2, 2025 at 8:26 a.m. ET
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Law enforcement has searched the home of former NYPD Chief Of Department Jeffery Maddrey and other locations, new Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch said.
Maddrey resigned last month following allegations that he traded sex with a subordinate in his office for overtime. Maddrey said the relationship was consensual and denied wrongdoing.
In a social media post early Thursday, Tisch said Maddrey, who was still on track to retire after his resignation, was suspended. Tisch said NYPD’s internal affairs department is assisting other agencies in investigating Maddrey.
Tisch didn't say what agencies were involved in the searches. The Manhattan district attorney’s office previously said it had launched an investigation, but Thursday, Tisch directed all questions to the U.S. Attorney Office for the Southern District of New York.
Messages left for federal prosecutors and the FBI were not returned.
This is a developing story and will be updated.
 
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Loophole allowed top NYPD official to reap tens of thousands in OT despite department rules barring it​

By
Craig McCarthy
Published Oct. 10, 2024, 7:45 a.m. ET


A top NYPD official quietly pocketed tens of thousands of dollars in overtime pay last year — despite department rules barring managers from collecting such compensation, The Post has learned.
Deputy Commissioner of Operations Kaz Daughtry — an NYPD liaison to City Hall — made $60,000 more than the department’s top cop in 2023, thanks in part to a payroll loophole that allowed him to reap time and a half.
“Welcome to Mayor [Eric] Adams’ NYPD,” one source quipped of how Daughtry was apparently allowed to game the system.
Deputy Commissioner Kaz Daughtry 3
Deputy Commissioner Kaz Daughtry earned more than $140,000 in overtime last year.Paul Martinka
“While the lower ranks have their overtime scrutinized down to the minute, Kaz parades around and abuses the very system he claimed to be fixing.”


The NYPD’s Administrative Guide bars manager-level employees from being paid beyond their 80-hour workweek.


But after being promoted from first-rank detective to an assistant commissioner role last July, Daughtry continued to put in for OT.
His paystub for the final full period of last year shows he logged nearly 80 extra hours between Dec. 9 and 22 — racking up just under $15,000 in bonus cash.
He even put in for bonus pay for working the night shift — an added perk usually reserved for rank-and-file cops forced to pull one of the most undesirable shifts — for an added $1,000.
Mayor Eric Adams and ex-Police Department Commissioner Edward 3
Police Commissioner Edward Caban promoted Daughtry to the civilian role in which he collected his detective salary.Getty Images
“He made what?!” fumed one former NYPD chief while reviewing the paystub, which The Post obtained via the Freedom of Information Law.
“No one should be making overtime as an executive,” the former chief said, echoing the sentiment of more than a half-dozen police sources who were appalled by the extra pay.
Uniformed cops often point to the pistol-packing civilian official as epitomizing a troubled culture at the NYPD under the Adams administration — where cowboy antics and crony connections seem to carry more weight than accomplishments.
“The fact that a man who never supervised anyone in his entire career is now bringing in more money than the police commissioner is laughable irony,” the first source railed.
In total, Daughtry pulled in $311,000 last year, compared to the NYPD commissioner’s $243,000, the records show.

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More than $141,000 of that came from overtime, with another $5,600 from added night-shift pay. It’s unclear how much of that was filed between his July 17 promotion — to a civilian role not eligible for overtime — and the last pay period of the year.
Daughtry declined to comment when reached by The Post.
An NYPD spokesperson confirmed that he had been allowed to continue to collect his detective salary after the promotion, making the overtime completely aboveboard.
“This designation did not change his civil service title as a first-grade detective, and he continued to receive the salary and overtime rate of a first-grade detective,” the rep said in a statement.
It was unclear who approved the deal, but according to the department’s administration guide and to sources, top officials, such as Chief of Department Jeffrey Maddrey or then-Police Commissioner Edward Caban, would have had to sign off on it.
[IMG alt="Chief of Department
Jeffrey B. Maddrey."]https://nypost.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2024/10/30pm-today-nyc-mayor-eric-90893227.jpg?w=1024[/IMG]3

Daughtry was the protégée of Chief of Department Jeffrey Maddrey.Paul Martinka
The promotion also came with the added bonus of making Daughtry untouchable by the Civilian Complaint Review Board, which was forced to drop the three open cases against him, according to sources. News of the dropped charges was first reported by the nonprofit newsroom The City.
A protégée of Maddrey, much of Daughtry’s 18-year career has followed the chief. After Adams installed his longtime friend Maddrey in a top spot in the NYPD, Daughtry, then a detective, was moved into One Police Plaza. Sources previously told The Post that he was “literally running” the department from NYPD HQ and crossed then-Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell by going around her to City Hall.
Weeks after Sewell abruptly resigned, newly minted top cop Caban made Daughtry an assistant commissioner, in which he was tasked with being chief of staff to Maddrey and a liaison to the mayor’s office.
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Since then, Daughtry has become one of the most visible top NYPD officials, along with Chief of Patrol John Chell. He has also repeatedly gotten praise from the mayor for expanding the NYPD’s drone program.
For his part, Daughtry previously told The Post that he likes to be out on the streets policing while working nearly around the clock.
He was promoted again in February to deputy commissioner of operations, and has since been ineligible for overtime, the police department confirmed.
 

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Ex-NYPD Chief Jeffrey Maddrey’s former driver — who made $163K in overtime last year — questioned by feds in sex-for-OT probe: sources​

By
Tina Moore
Published Jan. 4, 2025, 8:06 a.m. ET


One of the top overtime earners in disgraced ex-NYPD Chief Jefferey Maddrey’s office is talking to federal investigators as they probe sex-for-overtime allegations uncovered by The Post, law enforcement sources said.
Ingrid Sanders, the ex-driver of the department former top uniformed cop, had her cell phone taken by the feds, who are looking at whether the NYPD was using federal funds to pay for the overtime, the sources said.
“The only thing she can be talking about is her overtime and her interactions with Maddrey,” a source familiar with the investigation said.
Chief of Department Jeffrey B. Maddrey. 3
One of the top overtime earners in disgraced ex-NYPD Chief Jefferey Maddrey’s office is talking to federal investigators.Paul Martinka
Sanders, who joined the department in 1993, made an eye-popping $163,414 in OT last year — and resigned days after The Post exposed her boss’s alleged tawdry conduct at police headquarters with another underling in a front-page expose on Dec. 21.


Lt. Quathisha Epps was the top earner, pulling in $405,515, including $204,453 in OT. The 19-year veteran of the department filed an EEOC complaint claiming Maddrey exploited her “emotional and financial vulnerabilities, as well as her history of childhood trauma” to “coerce her into performing unwanted sexual favors.”
Detective Ada Reyes, another top overtime earner who also worked for Maddrey, was transferred to public housing after The Post broke the scandal.
Pictured are Deputy Commissioner Lisa White (left) and  Detective Ingrid Sanders (center) with an unidentified woman. 3
Ingrid Sanders (center), the ex-driver of the department former top uniformed cop, had her cell phone taken by the feds.instagram @nypddcer
She made $42,500 as a new police officer in 2019 but her pay jumped to $154,405 in 2024, including $55,923 in overtime, city records show.
Maddrey’s Queens home was raided by the feds Thursday as investigators probed Epps’ accusations.
Maddrey resigned Dec. 20 after The Post reached out to him for comment about Epps’ allegations. Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch suspended him several days later.
Maddrey lawyer Lambros Lambrou said the sex between Maddrey and Epps was consensual and denied allegations of sex-for-overtime, saying his client didn’t approve overtime slips.
A newspaper featuring a woman dressed in pink 3
Maddrey resigned Dec. 20 after The Post reached out to him for comment about Epps’ allegations.
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“Lt. Epps got caught with her hand in the cookie jar and is trying to deflect her wrongdoing by making these allegations against Chief Maddrey,” Lambrou said.
Tisch ousted dozens of NYPD brass Dec. 28 in a shocking purge, beginning with bosses at the department’s Internal Affairs Bureau, which is responsible for investigating cops accused of wrongdoing.
Everyone transferred out of the disgraced former chief’s office is expected to be brought in for interviews with the revamped IAB, another insider said.
 
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