Robert Mastroddi
Vice President, Security & Facility Operations
Greater New York City Area
Sports
Current
- NY Jets
Previous
- NYPD
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Background
Experience
Vice President, Security & Facility Operations
NY Jets
July 2003 – Present (12 years 5 months)
Responsible for the selection, training and supervision of both the security staff and facility operations staff at the Atlantic Health Jets Training Center. Additionally, he is responsible for the development and implementation of policies and procedures necessary for safe and efficient operations and the analysis and evaluation of the facilities infrastructure in order to identify maintenance renovation issues. He works collaboratively with his security and public safety partners at both MetLife stadium and the AHJTC in order to maintain effective emergency operations plans and business continuity plans. These plans are developed utilizing a comprehensive risk assessment approach with a focus on preparedness, mitigation, response and recovery.
Detective 1st Grade
NYPD
July 1983 – July 2003 (20 years 1 month)
Assignments included:
• NYPD Security Liaison to the Governor of New York
• Deputy Director, New York City Mayor’s Office of
Emergency Management (OEM)
• Intelligence Division
• Police Officer – Brooklyn South
Brooklyn South cop for 20 years...uh huh...and you KNOW what that means right? Read this and weep... this scumbag should have been wearing a number after he quit in 2003.
http://nypost.com/2005/04/25/dirty-watchdogs-13-anti-corruption-cops-slapped-in-nypd-scandal/
Thirteen veteran supervisors and detectives from an NYPD watchdog unit that was supposed to prevent corruption and wrongdoing in a major police division have been slapped with misconduct charges, The Post has learned.
A lieutenant, eight sergeants and four detectives who once virtually made up the entire “investigations unit” scrutinizing narcotics, vice, auto crime and firearms cops within the NYPD’s Organized Crime Control Bureau are each facing departmental trials.
Improprieties within the monitoring unit surfaced last year after the NYPD was jolted by scandals in the Narcotics Division, where several present and former detectives were arrested for stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars from drug dealers.
Last October, one-time partners Detectives Julio Vasquez and Thomas Rachko pleaded guilty to stealing $169,000 in cash from a drug courier who was under surveillance by another OCCB drug unit, the El Dorado Task Force.
Vasquez was on his lunch hour at the time of the heist.
Last April, former narcotics Detective Carlos Rodriguez admitted to conspiring to launder drug money and use it to renovate his Long Island home and was sentenced to two years in prison.
Last Dec. 29, Deputy Inspector Richard Capolongo committed suicide inside a Queens police facility while under investigation by Internal Affairs for working a security job when he was supposed to be on duty.
And last fall, 20 cops were bounced from another inspections unit for failing to properly oversee overtime wrongfully claimed by about 70 Brooklyn South narcotics officers.
Another 25 officers in Manhattan were also suspected of cheating on their time sheets.
When angry top brass were trying to figure out how such blatant wrongdoing could occur, they quickly realized that oversight was not only lax, but that some supervisors were raking in overtime they did not work or cutting other corners during their shifts.
“They were supposed to be watching search warrants, checking on roll calls and watching overtime,” one source explained. “But basically they were part of the problem, too.”
The 13 supervisors and detectives – many of them former members of Internal Affairs with more than 20 years on the NYPD – were hit with charges ranging from failing to supervise to misusing time to crafting their work schedules around their personal lives. All but one of the accused were dumped from the unit by Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly and replaced with a new and expanded team headed by Harvard-educated Deputy Inspector Kevin Ward.
Spokesmen for the NYPD and the Sergeants Benevolent Association declined to comment.
(p. 5 in metro and sports extra)
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A Finest mess
* A lieutenant, eight sergeants and four detectives in the NYPD’s investigations unit have been departmentally charged.
* Unit scrutinized cops within Organized Crime Control Bureau.
* Improprieties surfaced last year after several detectives were arrested for robbing hundreds of thousands of dollars from drug dealers.
* Another 75 investigators were accused of stealing overtime and a deputy inspector was probed for moonlighting.
* Since shaking up the unit, Commissioner Ray Kelly has increased inspections – more closely monitoring overtime, tightening the use of department cars and E-ZPasses, and checking up on cops supposed to be in court.
This freaking clown has the unmitigated gall to even suggest he's "security" for the Rats? He's their dirty tricks ex-dirty cop scumbag who teaches his friggin' kids to publicly wish bodily harm on innocent people You simply cannot make up such unbelievably overt scumbaggery. The NFL HAS jumped the shark