Metro

NYPD Daily Blotter

Manhattan

A Beth Israel Medical Center worker illegally accessed a patient’s private health information and passed it on to a prisoner who had assaulted the patient and put her in the hospital, authorities said.

On March 23 and March 27 of last year, Amber Fox, 26, looked up the medical records of a woman who had been assaulted by Darryl Campbell, 26, court documents state.

Campbell was heard on a recorded phone call from prison talking about the victim’s injuries and condition, then talking to Fox about the medical records, court papers state.

Fox, who’s not authorized to access patient information, also had her name on Campbell’s prison-visitors log, documents indicate.

Beth Israel traced the illegal computer activity to Fox and suspended her, the papers state.

Campbell and Fox were arrested on Feb. 7 and 8, respectively, and hit with charges of computer trespass and unauthorized use of a computer, records show.

Brooklyn

An armed man whom cops shot in East New York after he turned his gun on them was hit with a weapon-possession rap, police said.

A cop saw Alexis McIntyre, 31, leave the rear of a Glenmore Avenue apartment building with a .38-caliber revolver at about 5:45 p.m. Tuesday, authorities said.

When the cop told McIntyre to drop the weapon, he allegedly wouldn’t — and the officer shot him once in the chest, cops said.

The suspect was taken to Brookdale Hospital in stable condition.

McIntyre, who lives in Williamsburg, was charged with criminal possession of a loaded firearm, police said.

***

A punk vandalized a Windsor Terrace apartment building with disturbing graffiti, police sources said.

A resident discovered the words “I hate my son so I murdered him” scrawled on his second-floor apartment door in a building on Ocean Parkway near Kermit Place at about 1:30 p.m. on Feb. 4.

A woman also found the sentence “I hate my own brother Trayvon Martin” and “I murdered my brother” written on her fourth-floor door at about the same time, sources said.

She told investigators her brother may be responsible for the creepy graffiti, sources added.

Another neighbor told cops that he saw a 6-foot-4 man in the building that he didn’t recognize, sporting a dark winter hat.

No arrests have been made.

***

A shoplifter was busted for pocketing tools at a Sunset Park Home Depot, police sources said.

Osman Nikqi, 46, allegedly stole a socket-wrench set from the Hamilton Avenue store near the Gowanus Expressway at about 2:05 p.m. on Feb. 6, sources said.

He was charged with petit larceny and criminal possession of stolen property, records show.

Queens

The young thief pictured snatched a woman’s iPhone on a subway train in Corona, police said.

The suspect grabbed the smartphone from the 36-year-old victim at about 11:30 p.m. on Feb. 5 on the 7 train at the 111th Street station and fled, cops said.

Police say the suspect is in his late teens, about 5-foot-9, with a stocky build.

Staten Island

Cops busted a thief who used a stolen credit card to buy pricey jewelry at a Westerleigh store, authorities said.

Gerard Cassuci, 56, was arrested Monday for breaking into a car on Aug. 9, stealing a wallet and using the stolen card to purchase a bracelet, according to court documents.

Cassuci claims to have been under the influence of Xanax when he took the stolen card to a store at Victory Boulevard and Wheeler Avenue and bought a gold bracelet worth more than $1,600, law-enforcement sources said.

He was booked on charges of grand larceny, criminal possession of stolen property and petit larceny, said Doug Auer, a spokesman for DA Daniel Donovan.

Cassuci, who has more than 30 prior arrests and has served two stints in state prison, was held on $5,000 bail, records show.

***

A young man stole video games and controllers from a Target store in Charleston and walked across the street to resell them at another store, officials said.

Michael Esposito, 19, told cops he entered the Target at 3 p.m. on Feb. 2; at 1:45 p.m. on Feb. 3; and at 3:40 p.m. on Feb. 6; and stole a total of five game controllers and four video games by ripping them off display brackets, arrest records indicate.

The thief confessed to putting the stolen goods into his coat pocket, walking across Veterans Road West and selling the loot at GameStop, court papers state.

Esposito was charged with petit larceny and criminal possession of stolen property, records show.