Saturday, March 16, 2019

THIS COMES JUST 2 WEEKS AFTER A NYPD COP WAS CONVICTED OF RUNNING A DRUG-TRAFFICKING OPERATION OUT OF HER BRONX APARTMENT

Ex-NYPD officer sold drugs from LI home, authorities say

By Stefanie Dazio

Newsday
March 14, 2019

Nassau County police arrested a former NYPD officer Tuesday following community complaints that he was allegedly selling drugs at his North Merrick home, across the street from a school and daycare center.

Authorities said they seized about $146,000 in bundled cash, believed to be from narcotics sales, an uncashed $85,000 cashier's check, more than 200 oxycodone tablets, Xanax pills, a half-ounce each of suspected cocaine and heroin, scales, glassine envelopes and a switchblade knife from the home of Kenneth Riggio, 59, and his wife, Faith Riggio, 53.

“The alarming part was that it was done across the street from a daycare center, the Bellmore-Merrick administrative building and an alternative learning school where kids attended daily," Police Commissioner Patrick Ryder said at a news conference Thursday in Mineola.

Kenneth Riggio has an extensive criminal record, with arrests for narcotics, driving while under the influence and assault, Ryder said. Faith Riggio, a special education aide for the North Merrick school district who was charged only with a single count of fifth-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, does not have any prior arrests.

"The district has been informed that a Camp Avenue [Elementary School] special education aide has been arrested for alleged possession and sale of drugs," North Merrick superintendent Cynthia Seniuk said in a statement. "Please know that prior to the hiring of all of our employees, a thorough background check is conducted by the district. However, due to the arrest, this employee was immediately placed on administrative leave, pending the outcome of the legal investigation."

Ryder said Kenneth Riggio is currently unemployed, but was an NYPD officer for about four years, from 1981 until 1985. Ryder said "we don't know the reasons why" he left the force.

An NYPD spokeswoman said records show he was an officer from August 1985 until July 1986 when he was "dismissed." She did not know why he was dismissed.

Kenneth Riggio is charged with three counts of third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance with intent to sell, one count of third-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance, 11 counts of seventh-degree criminal possession of a controlled substance and one count of third-degree criminal possession of a weapon.

The couple were arraigned Thursday morning at First District Court in Hempstead before Judge Scott Siller. Their next court appearance will be Monday.

Siller set Kenneth Riggio's bail at $500,000 bond or $250,000 cash. Faith Riggio's bail was set at $50,000 bond or $25,000 cash.

Their Rockville Centre lawyer, Michael Dergarabedian, said Kenneth Riggio says he has prescriptions for the oxycodone and the cash could be from a recent settlement in a personal injury case. Dergarabedian said he believed Faith Riggio would be "absolved" of her charge.

"The highest form of ignorance is forming an opinion without knowing both sides of the story," Dergarabedian said.

Community complaints had been coming in for months of “cars coming and going all day long,” Ryder said, prompting an unscheduled probation check called "Operation Nightwatch" on Tuesday at the Riggio home.

County Executive Laura Curran credited the tips regarding the activity at "a house nestled in a lovely suburban community” that helped solve the case and noted its impact on the opioid crisis.

“We need everyone in our communities to step forward and help us get rid of these drug dealers and get these drugs out of the hands of our kids and out of the hands of our families," she said.

EDITOR’S NOTE: On march 7, NYYPD cop Yessenia Jimenez was convicted of running drug-trafficking operation out of her Bronx apartment. Jimenez and her boyfriend, Luis Soto, used her Bronx apartment as a stash house, where they kept kilos of heroin, fentanyl and cocaine they brought into the U.S. from Mexico, along with hundreds of thousands of dollars in drug money. She dealt the drugs in New York and Boston.

No comments: