A New York City police officer who is suing her commanding officer and the city over an alleged on-duty sexual assault filed an emergency motion on Friday, asking a judge to disarm the NYPD inspector, according to court documents.
The civil lawsuit claims the alleged assault happened on New Year’s Day in 2025 inside the 46th Precinct in the Bronx. The officer alleges her commanding officer, Inspector Jeremy Scheublin, called her into his office, grabbed her, threw her onto a couch, attempted to kiss her and tried to remove her gun belt while armed with his service weapon.
According to the filing, the officer fought him off and escaped after kicking him in the groin. The lawsuit also alleges Scheublin told the officer he wanted to “make biracial babies” with her.
Court documents also claim the NYPD was aware of the alleged incident for more than a year and allege Scheublin retaliated against the officer, made threats, tampered with surveillance evidence and tried to bribe her to remain silent.
The filings also allege the inspector remains on full duty and armed despite a criminal referral and an active investigation. The emergency motion asks the court to place Scheublin on modified duty, remove his service weapon and prohibit contact with the officer.
The NYPD told News 12 it is working with the Bronx District Attorney’s Office to investigate the allegations and that Scheublin was transferred from his role in the 46th Precinct several months ago.
News 12 has also reached out to the Bronx District Attorney’s Office and is awaiting a response.