NEW YORK — A New York Police Department administrative trial judge has recommended that a disciplinary case against the department's highest-ranking uniformed officer be dropped, arguing that the police watchdog agency that investigated the case lacked jurisdiction.
The city's Civilian Complaint Review Board had been pursuing a case against Chief of Department Jeffrey Maddrey over a November 2021 incident in which he ordered officers to void the arrest of a retired officer who previously worked for him.
But the NYPD's deputy commissioner of trials, Rosemarie Maldonado, said Tuesday that the case against Maddrey should be dropped because the CCRB is only authorized to investigate encounters between officers and members of the public, not an internal police interaction inside a station house.
Maldonado said Maddrey ''did not interact with any member of the public'' when he told a sergeant to void the arrest of a former officer who had been accused of waving a gun at three children after their basketball hit his family's security camera.
The final decision about whether to discipline Maddrey rests with Police Commissioner Edward Caban, who has authority over police disciplinary matters and can overrule the CCRB.
A spokesperson for the department said Maldonado's recommendation, along with written comments from the attorneys representing Maddrey and the CCRB, will be submitted to Caban for review and final decision.
Maddrey's attorney, Lambros Lambrou, praised Maldonado's recommendation.
''We are delighted with the decision and the recognition that CCRB has boundaries,'' Lambrou told the New York Post.