


When he wasn’t napping on the job, he was allegedly showing penis pics to female underlings.
NYPD Lt. Scott Milne — who was caught in photos sleeping in a police vehicle during a Black Lives Matter march at the Brooklyn Bridge — showed pictures of his genitals to Officer Alexandria Sanchez and a fellow cop while they were on duty, Sanchez claimed.
The 58-year-old boss also smacked Sanchez’s butt, prompting her to throw a stapler at him at NYPD’s 84 Precinct station house in downtown Brooklyn, according to a discrimination complaint filed with the state Division of Human Rights last week.
The lurid tale began in 2019, when Milne became Sanchez’s supervisor. Sanchez, 44, was driving Milne with another female officer during the Brooklyn Half Marathon that year when he started talking about his social life.
“He just started talking about, ‘I’m always on Tinder and I show pictures of myself to women,’” the married mom-of-three told The Post. “‘This is the picture I show them’ and he pulled out his phone and he showed us the picture of his penis.’”
He also told the cops he meets women from the dating app at hot-sheet hotels.
“Then he asked, ‘How about a hotel?’” Sanchez recalled.
Sanchez, who was angry, called him “a dirty old man” but she and the other female cop didn’t complain because they feared retaliation.
Sanchez said she never drove him again, but the frat-house atmosphere continued at the precinct.
“He’ll come into our room and be like ‘Everybody take off your clothes let’s have a party,” Sanchez claimed, speaking of the office where she worked.
He would also talk about “his penis being circumcised and laugh about it,” she said.
In June 2020, Milne was at the Black Lives Matter protest in Brooklyn when he was caught on camera snoozing in a Temporary Headquarters Vehicle with a radio in his hand, photos show.
Another photo shows him lying back in a booth with his belly leaning on a table inside the vehicle.
In 2021, Milne slapped her rear end so hard it irritated a back injury, she alleges.
“I’m standing by the desk with my sergeant and I’m leaned over, we were comparing notes, and I felt a large smack on my buttocks,” Sanchez said of the incident in the precinct.
“I stood up and I turned around like, ‘What the f–k just happened? So I grabbed a stapler from the top of the desk and I threw it at him and it hit the door.”
She also shrieked “My back!” prompting Milne to laugh.
“I didn’t smack your back. I smacked your ass,’” he told her.
The sergeant also laughed, she said.
“I dared him but I didn’t think he was going to do it,” the sergeant said, according to Sanchez.
Soon after, Milne began to deny her requests for time off, put her on tours that made it difficult to see her kids, meted out unfair discipline, and threatened to transfer her back to patrol, she alleged.
In 2022, she went out sick and Milne called her delegate and said he wanted her out of her position where she was in charge of sending cops to training, she said.
She has since been transferred to nights in downtown Manhattan, a 90-minute commute each way from her Long Island home, where she has 10- and 14-year-old children.
“I’m beside myself,” she said. “I never thought in my career that I would come down this path. It’s scary. I’ve seen what happens to you when you make allegations against a member of service. It’s become a living hell.”
The NYPD released a statement saying it “does not tolerate discrimination or sexual harassment in any form and is committed to respectful work environments for our diverse workforce.”
It said any investigation would be confidential.
Milne didn’t return a phone message.