An NYPD detective accusing his sergeant boss of forcing her panties into his mouth has been subjected by his fellow cops to a purported “pattern of retaliation” so vicious that his lawyer has filed a cease-and-desist letter with the department.
Ever since Det. Victor Falcon filed an internal complaint against Sgt. Ann Marie Guerra in October over the alleged skivvies-stuffing, less-than-sympathetic members of the department have made Falcon’s life a living hell, even trying to get him involuntarily committed to a psych ward, claims lawyer Seamus Barrett in a letter sent last week to the NYPD’s Legal Bureau.
“This pattern of retaliation has included disparaging, defaming and slandering Det. Falcon in news media, harassing him at his residence while off-duty, unlawfully detaining Det. Falcon at his residence and at NYU Lutheran Hospital in Bay Ridge while attempting to baselessly have Det. Falcon involuntarily committed to psychiatric care … and improperly and baselessly placing him on restricted duty, thereby relieving him of possession of his badge and service weapon,” wrote Barrett.
“It should go without saying, but … in the likely event that the individuals involved in this matter are tempted to engage in further retaliatory conduct against Det. Falcon, any and all precautions should be taken by your office to ensure that all parties involved are fully aware that such retaliation violates the law and will be used against all of the defendants in the pending litigation.”
Falcon, 35, claims in the Equal Employment Opportunity complaint that Guerra, 38, shoved her underwear into his mouth after he griped about her leaving the unmentionables strewn about a unisex locker room in the station house of Brooklyn’s 72nd Precinct.
“They are f–king clean,” Guerra purportedly screamed during the bizarre incident — part of an alleged pattern of raunchy behavior that also included openly detailing her sex life in front of Falcon, and telling him that he was likely rejected by a gal pal “because I had a little d–k.”
While Falcon is sidelined pending the outcome of the case, Guerra has been re-assigned to the 17th Precinct in Manhattan.
Barrett, of the Derek Smith Law Group, bemoaned the fact that he had to fire off the letter to the NYPD.
“It is unfortunate that it was necessary to send a cease-desist letter to the NYPD in order to put the appropriate parties on notice that Det. Falcon’s employment rights are being violated in a concerted campaign of intimidation and retaliation,” Barrett told The Post. “Det. Falcon has been treated like a perp, smeared publicly, falsely accused of mental instability and now his livelihood is being threatened.”