I'm curious about who will take on this prestigious position. Could it be a whistleblower or perhaps a lieutenant? I wonder if this will stir things up with our current leadership. Some people speculate that the next hire might be someone focused on diversity, equity, and inclusion . Whistleblowers often thrive in chaotic environments.
🚨NYC CITY HALL NEWS🚨 According to multiple sources, NYC Sheriff Anthony Miranda’s last day as NYC sheriff is expected to take place in the next day or so. His incoming replacement is said to be a former NYPD uniformed member of service.
🚨 A Sal Greco Show Exclusive 🚨
Deputy Director of the NYPD Health & Wellness Section, David Tzall, Psy.D., a licensed psychologist, is alleged to have been working at his private practice while on NYPD time. After an NYPD audit, he was allegedly found to have taken approximately 800 hours ( official misconduct ) — nearly 100 workdays.
Like his former boss, Matthew Graziano, who was allowed to leave the NYPD without prosecution despite allegations involving roughly 1,000 hours of official misconduct ( misuse of time ), Tzall is now reportedly leaving without facing prosecution as well.
That now makes Graziano, Tzall, and Deputy Chief Richie Taylor — all first reported on by The Sal Greco Show — accused of official misconduct, yet none have been criminally prosecuted.
Meanwhile, former NYPD Lieutenant Thomas Fabrizi had his life destroyed over the exact same type of allegation.
Wasn’t the United States built on equal application of the law?
When someone dons a police uniform, they embody a multifaceted role. Are they acting as a therapist or a social worker? Are they a friend to the person in crisis, or simply someone who loves humanity and cares deeply for others? In moments of urgency, like when someone is on the edge of a roof, these Officers become heroes, often working alongside the Emergency Services Unit. Their commitment and compassion truly make a difference. Great job!
@CopsGoneWrong this is 2019 video, the individual was armed with a gun, and the officers were struggling for their lives. While the situation may not seem favorable at first glance, it's important to recognize that the officers were fighting to disarm him.
https://t.co/6XEKKHJAFA
Last week, the NYPD responded to a call for a woman and her cat in the water near the Brooklyn Bridge.
Our officers immediately jumped into action, rescuing the pair from the current.
With the help of @nycparks and @FDNY, they were brought to safety.
“When her son Ortanzso Bovell was killed in 2008, the Brooklyn cop who shot him in the back in what the officer described as an accident was not even reprimanded.
But Wright-Bovell thought a 2017 civil court ruling that found then-Lt. John Chell intentionally shot her son and awarded her $2.5 million would lead to some repercussions for the cop.”
There are no comments, especially from someone who has been on their knees for the past four years.
Just FYI, i’ll definitely vote for you killachell
🚨NYPD Breaking News🚨
After the incident in Brooklyn involving Brooklyn North Narcotics, the detectives in question were suspended, the sergeant was modified and the rest of team transferred as the NYPD, Brooklyn DA office, State AG office and DOJ are investigating the totality of the circumstances of that incident and more.
We all know the real story here, and when it comes out, we’re all going to know how much of a failure you guys have been. This is a disgusting and spineless response.
It’s frustrating to see the focus on criticizing the New York City mayor for his comments on a widely circulated video, while the real issue remains unaddressed. The lack of equipment specifically, the radios that these detectives were without for weeks—poses a significant threat to their safety. Where was the support for these officers when they needed it most?
This isn’t just a public safety concern; it’s about the well being of the officers risking their lives on the streets. Instead of holding senior management accountable for inadequate enforcement operations, the blame seems to be shifting toward the sergeant @sbanypd, who may become a scapegoat in this situation. The executive staff should have known better than to send these detectives into the field without the necessary equipment.
Using WhatsApp for enforcement communications is unacceptable. If a critical incident had occurred, like a shooting at that liquor store, what were they supposed to do? Send a text for help? This is not just a minor oversight; it's a serious failure that jeopardizes the safety of both the officers and the community. It's time to confront the real issues and ensure that the NYPD is equipped to protect its officers effectively.
Tomorrow at 1105am on episode 186 of @TheSalGreco Show we’ll have the latest regarding a Brooklyn incident that took place involving NYPD’s Brooklyn North Narcotics that has plenty of outrage from all sides. Plus all the latest breaking news around the world with @j_stern97 .
This incident was captured by Sinistratm on Instagram and took place April 14, 2026 in Brooklyn at a liquor store on Hoyt and Baltic street. Brooklyn North Narcotics attempt to arrest a suspect who resists arrest when chaos ensues. What do you all think about this incident?
Hey Sal, I’m really looking forward to The Sal Greco Show on YouTube at 11:05!
Break it down for us and discuss the deficiencies and the circumstances around the resisting arrest actions that led to this altercation.
It’s going to be an intriguing show where you tackle both sides of the issue!
🚨 NYPD NEWS 🚨
Recently, in the 52nd Precinct, NYPD Officers Tejada and Piedra pursued a motorbike traveling the wrong way on a one-way street before it crashed into an oncoming city bus. Sources say the pursuit was never called over the radio, and neither officer activated their body cameras. Sources further indicate they provided aid while treating the incident like a routine accident despite initiating a pursuit.
Now questions are mounting about possible discipline for the officers and the patrol supervisor, fairness in how probationary officers are treated, and whether leadership—specifically the NYPD First Deputy Commissioner—is attempting to shield a probationary officer from termination. Meanwhile, the NYPD Chief of Department reportedly wants officers to remove these motorbikes from the streets and has praised other officers who have done so without any reported “ incidents “. Mixed messaging has now led us to this point, where failures in leadership lead to casualties. 🚨
What began as a personnel dispute now reads like catastrophic institutional liability.
My latest piece explains why the allegations out of Manhattan North Narcotics are not just ugly—they threaten case integrity, invite federal scrutiny, and raise a harder question about whether a tainted command can still be trusted to wield public power at all.
If these allegations are substantiated, this is not a counseling problem. It is a disbandment problem.
Read the full commentary on my website. Bias Inside the Command Did Not Stay There—Now the Record Is Rotten https://t.co/p6OYVSVyOc
#NYPD #CivilRights #PoliceAccountability #TitleVI #Brady #Giglio #PoliceMisconduct #ConstitutionalRights #PublicIntegrity #TheSandersFirmPC #EricSandersEsq
The Criminals in the Patrol Borough Manhattan North Narcotics
The "Delete" Button is a Digital Confession.
Let’s be clear: These aren't just "misguided" officers. These are criminals masquerading as law enforcement officials. To the “geniuses” currently wiping their chat threads: You aren’t hiding evidence. You are documenting your consciousness of guilt. In the world of high-stakes litigation and digital forensics, the “it’s only AI” defense is a fraud, and the “delete” button is a myth.
The "Hard Core" Reality:
Spoliation is a Felony: Depending on the investigation, hitting “delete” isn't just a policy violation—it is a crime. If an official proceeding (IAB, CCRB, or Criminal) is active, destroying a mobile device or wiping a thread is Tampering with Physical Evidence. The Spoliation Trap: In a civil rights lawsuit, your duty to save data starts the moment you think you’re getting sued. If you delete it, you lose. We don't need the “deleted” pixels; we will take the Mandatory Adverse Inference. Any lawyer will simply argue to a jury: “The defendants destroyed their phones because they knew the content proved their racial animus.”
DCAS EEO Policy (Pages 6-7): The law is clear. These group chats are an “extension of the workplace.” By manufacturing and circulating racial contempt, you’ve already violated the policy. By deleting it, you’ve added Conduct Unbecoming and Evidence Tampering to your specifications.
The problem is not the technology. The problem is the mind that used it, the colleagues who shared it, and the command climate that allowed the factory of bias to remain open.
By trying to hide the Meaning (the racial contempt), you’ve provided the Movement (the cover-up). You can’t outrun the digital footprint of your own hate. Forensic imaging pulls data from the unallocated space—your "hidden" prompts are still resident in the hardware.
Stop pretending to be the Law while you're busy breaking it. The “Delete” button is your digital confession.
#CivilRights #NYPD #InternalAffairs #DigitalForensics #Spoliation #EvidenceTampering #DCAS #EEO #LegalStrategy #MufasaTheGreatOne #TheSandersFirmPC #EricSandersEsq #PoliceAccountability #ConsciousnessOfGuilt
🚨A SAL GRECO SHOW EXCLUSIVE🚨According to sources this is one of the pictures circulating in the NYPD Manhattan North Narcotics group chat embroiled in scandal. Whether it’s AI or not, it’s indicative of racial animosity in the workplace which then leaks out into the public.
🚨A SAL GRECO SHOW EXCLUSIVE 🚨
Remember Director Graziano from NYPD’s (Health & Wellness) reportedly showed up to work once a week — worrying about shoe polish while NYC taxpayers funded his full-time salary? He resigned after an investigation into alleged time theft totaling over 1,000 hours according to sources. The investigation though was not from NYPD Internal Affairs investigation. There was no investigation from the Department Of Investigation either. No District Attorney’s office investigation. No arrest. No accountability, just resign and act like you had a better job opportunity elsewhere.
Lower-ranking NYPD members of service and its civilian members face investigations for far less, and get disciplined for far less.
Is this one of the largest taxpayer time-theft cases in NYPD history or what? Is anyone going to ever be held accountable? NYC Taxpayers were fleeced with zero accountability.