Metro

‘Racist’ cop in civil-rights rap

BAD DUDE: Feds say Michael Daragjati, yesterday in court, trumped up charges against a black man.

BAD DUDE: Feds say Michael Daragjati, yesterday in court, trumped up charges against a black man. (Shepard)

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A hate-spewing city cop roamed his beat like it was Mississippi in the ’60s — once even hauling an innocent black man to jail for talking back, then boasting that he had “fried another n—–,” officials said yesterday.

FBI agents yesterday busted the rogue NYPD officer, Michael Daragjati, on gross civil-rights violations for deliberately falsifying the arrest against the man, officials said.

Daragjati is nothing less than “a blatant racist” and “a violent person … who has no respect for the law,’’ Assistant US Attorney Paul Tuchmann said at the disgraced cop’s arraignment in Brooklyn federal court.

Daragjati, an eight-year veteran assigned to the NYPD’s anti-crime unit on Staten Island, had been on patrol in plainclothes with his partner when they stopped the black man in the Stapleton section for an unknown reason on the evening of April 15, the feds said.

“Daragjati forcibly pushed [the man] against the side of a parked car and roughly frisked him,’’ according to court papers. The cop did not find contraband or a weapon on the man.

When the man griped about his treatment, Daragjati promptly arrested him — although he had no probable cause, feds said.

Daragjati wound up filing a police report in Richmond County Criminal Court falsely claiming that the man had “flailed his arms and kicked his legs during the arrest,’’ allowing the officer to charge the man with resisting arrest, authorities said.

After hauling the man to the 120th Precinct station house, Daragjati allegedly told him that he would have let him go “but that [he] really did not like being disrespected,’’ the court papers said.

The man was kept in jail for a day and half, prosecutors say.

The 32-year-old officer’s undoing resulted from the fact that he didn’t know that the FBI was already investigating him for alleged insurance fraud — and monitoring his text messages and phone calls.

In some texts and phone calls that Daragjati made later that evening to an NYPD sergeant, he lied about the black man’s actions before his arrest, prosecutors said.

The next day, the FBI also intercepted a call that Daragjati made to a female friend in which he discussed the bust.

“Another n—– fried, no big deal,” Daragjati told the woman, who responded by laughing, according to a transcript of the call filed in Brooklyn federal court.

Other damning phone calls followed. In these casual chats with various people, Daragjati used the N-word freely, on more than a dozen occasions, officials said.

In one call, Daragjati was discussing the difficulty of loading a motorcycle into the high bed of a pickup truck, prosecutors say.

Daragjati suggested that his friend “pile some n—–s up and drive it over them,” according to the transcript.

The officer admitted in one conversation that he’d be in big trouble if anyone knew how he really acted — acknowledging he’d be fired if his bosses knew he would at times “throw somebody a beating,” prosecutors say in court documents.

Officials say Daragjati also was involved in an extortion scheme with an off-duty snowplow business.

Magistrate Judge Joan Azrack ordered Daragjati held without bail.

The NYPD has suspended Daragjati.