NYPD chief misidentifies judge in social media post condemning bail decision

FILE - Deputy Chief John Chell speaks during briefing before a raid in the Brooklyn borough of New York, Jan. 4, 2022. In a post sent from his official X account on Tuesday, Feb. 27, 2024, NYPD Chief of Patrol Chell named a judge and wrote that she "did not do her job鈥 when she ordered the release of a man who police say is a repeat offender within the city鈥檚 transit system. (AP Photo/Seth Wenig, File)

NEW YORK (AP) 鈥 Several New York City police chiefs are facing criticism from the state鈥檚 court system after misidentifying a judge in a controversial social media post that accused her of letting a 鈥減redator鈥 loose on the city鈥檚 streets.

The episode marked an unusually public dispute between court officials and the city鈥檚 police leaders, who rarely go after sitting judges by name.

In a post sent from his on Tuesday, NYPD Chief of Patrol John Chell named a state Supreme Court judge, writing that she "did not do her job鈥 when she ordered the release of a man who police say is a repeat offender within the city鈥檚 transit system.

鈥淪he set free a predator back into the community, who may be on your next train, or walking the streets of our city, looking for his next victim,鈥 he continued.

The missive was shared by three high-ranking NYPD officials, garnering hundreds of thousands of views and several angry comments directed at the judge. Some posters circulated a photo of a New York judge with the same last name.

On Thursday night, a spokesperson for the state court system, Al Baker, said the department had gotten multiple facts about the case wrong.

鈥淭he recent social media posts from NYPD officials criticizing a recent bail decision not only indicated that the crime allegedly took place in the wrong county, it also named a judge that did not preside over the case,鈥 Baker said.

The NYPD鈥檚 media relations office did not immediately respond to a request for comment Thursday evening.

The NYPD has taken a more aggressive approach on social media in recent months, railing against those who are perceived as soft on crime or unfairly critical of the department.

Prior to the court鈥檚 statement, the NYPD's top spokesperson, Tarik Sheppard, said he 鈥渇ully supported鈥 the decision to condemn judges, adding that the practice would continue in the future.

鈥淭he judge plays a critical role and if any one of us is not doing our job, we should be transparent about that,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very intentional.鈥

Steven Zeidman, the director of CUNY Law School鈥檚 criminal defense clinic, said the post had crossed a line, putting a judge in harm's way.

鈥淲hile the NYPD apparently believes it should have the right to post opinions and reactions to judicial decisions, the danger, on full display by this ineptitude, makes the case why that is a very bad, and dangerous, idea,鈥 he said.

According to a criminal complaint, police arrested the man named in Chell's post on Feb. 23, accusing him of jumping a subway turnstile without paying and possessing narcotics and a stolen iPhone.

Prosecutors in the Bronx requested he be held on bail of $10,000. But Judge Michele Davila 鈥 the actual judge presiding over the case 鈥 set him free, agreeing with defense attorneys that the man was not a flight risk. Though he has several prior arrests, he had not missed a court date since 2007, Davila noted.

New York law generally requires judges to make bail decisions based on the likelihood that a criminal defendant will return to court.

The message Chell shared also featured the man's mugshot, despite a New York law that bans the sharing of those images in most circumstances. An NYPD spokesperson said the department was authorized to share mugshots for public safety purposes.

Earlier on Thursday, before the post was found to have misidentified the judge, City Hall spokesperson Charles Lutvak in a statement to Gothamist.

鈥淲hen misinformation festers on social media," he said, 鈥渢he NYPD is countering it with facts.鈥

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