Home » News » NYPD fires two officers, one for robbery and one for domestic abuse, indictment says – Telemundo New York (47)

NYPD fires two officers, one for robbery and one for domestic abuse, indictment says – Telemundo New York (47)

The NYPD fired two officers who were arrested in separate incidents – one for beating his girlfriend and the other for robbery while on duty, according to the indictment.

A police spokesman told the Daily News that Detective Samuel Lallave and Officer Jason Holloway were “fired from the NYPD” in late October.

Holloway was a union steward at Barracks 88 when he was arrested for the assault on his girlfriend while off duty in February 2018.

The ex-uniformed man was charged with breaking into his girlfriend’s home at Marlboro Houses in the Gravesend, Brooklyn neighborhood on February 20, 2018 at around 2 a.m.

His girlfriend, a security guard at a state penitentiary, locked herself in the bathroom, but the ex-cop kicked the door and ripped it off its hinges, according to the NYPD.

Holloway fell on the woman, causing her to hit her head on a stool. The victim would have required seven stitches and two staples to close the wound, the newspaper reported, citing police sources.

The former agent fled the city after the assault, but officers with the Regional Fugitive Task Force tracked him down in East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania.

The other police officer, Lallave, received a subpoena following his arrest for petty theft in Bushwick in August.

Lallave’s arrest was the result of an Internal Affairs investigation, but the police did not provide further information as the investigation is ongoing.

Lallave, 53, was assigned to a command in North Brooklyn at the time of his arrest. In addition, he has been named in 14 separate lawsuits against the NYPD, including the one filed by the widow of James Young, a Crown Heights resident who died four months after another detective allegedly suffocated him during an arrest on December 3. June 2011.

Lallave was one of six officers named in the federal lawsuit, in which he was charged with failing to help Young while Detective James Rivera held him by the neck “for an extended period.” Young, 49, was the father of three children.

The Brooklyn Prosecutor’s Office refused to prosecute the officers involved in Young’s death and the city settled the lawsuit in 2014 for $ 832,500.

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