VIDEO: NYPD officer appears to steal cash from man

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Thursday, October 9, 2014
Man says officer stole wad of cash from him
Jim Dolan reports from Coney Island.

NEW YORK CITY (KABC) -- Did a New York police officer take cash right out of a man's pocket? The Brooklyn District Attorney has video of the incident in question and he's investigating.

In the video, keep an eye on the right hand of the police officer, which goes into Lenard Joye's sweater pocket and comes out with what Joye claims is a wad of cash, which the police officer does not give back.

"Why you gonna take my money," you hear Joye say on the recording.

Instead, the officer sprays Joye with pepper spray. His sister tries to identify the police officer, and she is heard on the recording saying, "Get his badge number, get his badge number." She gets sprayed as well.

"It seems like it's a strong-arm robbery, that they took his money, and then when he asked for it back, they maced him in the face," said Robert Marinelli, Joye's attorney. "Mr. Joye works full time, he has proof of where all that money came from, pays taxes, seemingly robbed by a member of the NYPD."

The Police Benevolent Association said in a statement, "A 35 second long video does not provide enough information about a police encounter to come to any conclusion."

And then they blamed the person who documented the incident with "It is time to stop the amateur video activists who interfere with police operations."

The NYPD said, "As a result of the allegations, the matter is under investigation by the Internal Affairs Bureau and the CCRB." They would not say if the officer was still working on the streets, but it's not just him.

"There's one officer standing right next to him and at the end of the video you can see four or five officers just standing on the side and not taking any action," Marinelli said.

"That's robbery, man," said one area resident.

Eyewitness News showed the tape to people in the neighborhood.

"It's outrageous, it shouldn't be happening like that, you're supposed to be here to protect and serve, you know you are making people scared of you," a resident said.

"I just think it's too much, that's just too much now. It's good they caught it on camera because people get to see what's going on," another resident said.

Neither Joye or his sister were arrested. The cash was never accounted for.