NYPD’s top uniformed officer wanted after multiple sex-abuse allegations, commissioner shuffles leadership

NYPD Chief Jeffrey Maddrey abruptly resigned Friday night, police officials confirmed, ahead of a bombshell report alleging he repeatedly sexually abused a subordinate officer in exchange for overtime pay.

Maddrey was the highest ranking uniformed police officer in the department. His accuser Lt. Quathisha Epps told the New York Post that he had asked her to perform various sexual acts at NYPD headquarters.

“He wanted anal sex, vaginal sex, oral sex,” Epps told the Post. “He always asked me to kiss his penis.”

The Manhattan district attorney’s office said Saturday it had launched an investigation.

“These are extremely serious and disturbing allegations that allegedly took place at NYPD headquarters in Manhattan,” said Doug Cohen, a spokesman for Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg.

Maddrey’s exit follows a shakeup of the department under Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch, who took over the NYPD about a month ago. She has made several personnel and policy changes, including ordering 500 officers who had been “improperly transferred” to return to their posts. On Thursday, she announced that she had replaced Tarik Sheppard, who handled communications for the department. Sheppard had clashed with reporters and former interim commissioner Tom Donlon.

In a statement, mayoral press secretary Kayla Mamelak said City Hall was “deeply troubled” by the allegations against Maddrey, adding that “the NYPD is investigating this matter.”

“Mayor Adams is working in close coordination with Police Commissioner Tisch as the NYPD conducts a separate department-wide review to ensure that no high-ranking officers use their power inappropriately,” Mamelak said. “We will refrain from commenting further to avoid jeopardizing any of the investigations.”

In a statement, the NYPD confirmed that Tisch had accepted Maddrey’s resignation Friday night and would “thoroughly investigate the matter.”

On Saturday, Epps’ attorney Eric Sanders filed a charge of discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the first step before a federal lawsuit.

According to the complaint, Epps said that after she began rejecting Maddrey’s advances in October, he retaliated by “orchestrating a deliberately manipulated” overtime report that claimed she earned more than $200,000 in overtime pay.

After stories about her alleged overtime abuse came to light, Maddrey offered to speak to the commissioner on her behalf, but first demanded that she kiss his penis, according to the complaint. She said she was “complying under duress.”

Immediately after, she submitted her paperwork to retire, according to the complaint, and was subject to a department investigation into her overtime.

The NYPD also announced that John Chell, the chief of patrol, would serve as the interim chief of department and Phil Rivera, the chief of transportation, would take over as interim chief of patrol.

“The interim department and patrol chiefs will continue to lead efforts to reduce crime and disorder and build public trust,” Tisch said in a statement.

The press release did not mention Maddrey, and he could not be reached for comment.

Maddrey has previously been accused of sexual assault. In 2016, he was sued by Tabatha Foster, a former police officer who said he demanded sex in his office. Both the federal and state cases were ultimately dismissed.

NYPD Capt. Gabrielle Walls on Wednesday added Maddrey as a defendant in an ongoing sexual harassment lawsuit. Her complaint filed in Manhattan Supreme Court alleged that Maddrey repeatedly tried to kiss her without her consent and also tried to visit her in the area where she worked.

The complaint also alleges Maddrey told Walls he was “going to mold her” and offered to help her career.

Maddrey also got into trouble for intervening in the arrest of a retired police officer who had chased three boys while armed. An independent oversight board found he had abused his authority, but former commissioner Edward Caban dismissed the allegations in August.

Caban was forced to resign earlier this year after it was revealed that the US Attorney’s Office for the Southern District and the Internal Revenue Service were investigating his alleged involvement in a shakedown scheme with his twin brother.

Former Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Phil Banks, also a former policeman, was forced to resign following a separate federal investigation.

Walls’ lawsuit is one of several lawsuits filed by female police officers that depict a culture of sexual harassment in the NYPD that senior police officials have repeatedly ignored. Timothy Pearson, another former officer and close confidante of Mayor Eric Adams, was accused of sexual harassment by several women at the NYPD. He was also forced to resign during a separate federal investigation.

Adams, a former NYPD captain, is being sued by a former transit police colleague who accused him of sexual assault in 1993. The suit was filed last year under the Adult Survivors Act.

The mayor has denied any wrongdoing.

This is a developing story and has been updated with more information.

Correction: An earlier version of this story misstated the date of a previous sexual assault case filed against Maddrey.