| NYPD Detective Charged with Demanding Sex from Women he Arrested |
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| Written by JOHN MARZULLI | ||||||||||
| Wednesday, 26 May 2010 03:44 | ||||||||||
![]() An NYPD narcotics detective was charged Tuesday with preying on women he arrested - on police property. The alleged attacks by Detective Oscar Sandino date to 2006 and could land the 13-year veteran behind bars for three years if he's convicted on federal charges. His lawyer dismissed the accusations as "old news" and questioned the credibility of the women, one of whom has filed a lawsuit. But federal prosecutors Pamela Chen and Licha Nyiendo said the evidence that Sandino is more perp than protector is "substantial and irrefutable." "The persistent and repetitive nature of the defendant's misconduct demonstrates that he is a sexual predator," they wrote in court papers. They say that in August 2006, when he was assigned to the Queens North Narcotics Bureau, he coerced a woman into having sex with him in exchange for help with her cousin's criminal case. In February 2008, while arresting a woman and her boyfriend on drug charges, he took the woman into a bedroom and forced her to undress, the feds charge. When he brought the woman to the 110th Precinct stationhouse for booking, Sandino warned she would lose her children unless she had sex with him, prosecutors say. Sandino allegedly took the woman into the bathroom, ordered her to pull down her pants and molested her. "Wow, you have an earring down there," Sandino said to the woman, according to a lawsuit she filed. The victim reported Sandino to the Internal Affairs Bureau, and investigators gathered text messages, phone records and secretly taped conversations to corroborate the allegations. In a third attack in September, Sandino allegedly took a handcuffed woman arrested for disorderly conduct into a room at Brooklyn Central Booking and made her bare her breasts. Sandino, 37, was charged with civil rights violations and released on a $250,000 bond to be co-signed by his estranged wife, who lives in Arizona. Defense lawyer Peter Brill claimed the Queens district attorney had passed on prosecuting Sandino because the second victim was not credible. Source: NOHTDT (NO One Has To Die Tomorrow)
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