Metro

NYPD Daily Blotter

Brooklyn

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Police are seeking three men (two of whom are pictured) suspected of hitting a Brooklyn Heights bank.

After they entered the Sovereign branch at 195 Montague St. at about 10:20 a.m. Thursday, one barked at a teller, “Put all the money on the counter! No dye pack! And don’t make me use the gun!”

The frightened teller complied, and the robber stuffed the bills into a bag as an accomplice served as lookout.

The third then whipped out a black semiautomatic pistol from under a newspaper and yelled, “I don’t wanna shoot anyone!”

All three then fled with an undisclosed amount of money.

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A 20-year-old man who stole $4,339 from the Park Slope variety store that employed him was still on the loose last night, cops said.

Cops said the unidentified worker fraudulently filled out personal checks from the store, Joy Hollywood, on 15th Street, between Aug. 15 and Aug. 20 and deposited the dough into his own bank account.

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Those drinks cost them a trip to jail!

Two drunken goons went on a rampage in a Sunset Park restaurant after claiming they were being overcharged for booze, cops said.

Isaac Meza, 27, became enraged at about 10:35 p.m. on Aug. 20 when he saw the bill at Tacos Matamoros, on Fifth Avenue near 45th Street, cops said.

So he punched the 30-year-old restaurant manager in the face, and his pal Victor Lopez, 24, kicked out a glass door, causing an estimated $600 in damage, police said.

Meza was charged with assault and Lopez with criminal mischief.

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A 23-year-old employee of a Sunset Park Vietnamese restaurant tried to slice off an older coworker’s nose — for not working fast enough, cops said.

Gia Uy Tien was also upset that the unidentified 42-year-old — who had just started at Nha Trang Palace, on Eighth Avenue near 59th Street — had forgotten to place silverware on a table, the cops added.

During the brawl, which broke out at 2:45 p.m. on Aug. 20, Tien cut the man on his nose and above his right eye and inflicted defensive wounds on his right hand, according to investigators.

Tien was charged with assault, menacing and possession of a deadly weapon.

Meanwhile, a manager at the restaurant said both Tien and the victim were banned from returning to work — at least for now.

Manhattan

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A man allegedly raped a coworker in her East Harlem home, authorities said.

Sunggyu An, 24, forced himself on the woman at about 6 a.m. on Aug. 27 in her East 104th Street apartment, cops said.

The woman later called 911, and An was arrested at the scene.

He was charged with rape and sexual abuse and was being held last night on Rikers Island in lieu of $10,000 bail, records show.

It was not disclosed where the two were employed.

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Cops collared a teenage pyromaniac who admitted that he set fire to his own West Village apartment, authorities said.

Morgan Greenburger, 19, piled sheets and garbage bags atop the stove in his third-floor residence on Hudson Street near Charles Street on Aug. 25 and lit them, court records show.

Parts of his kitchen were charred by the time firefighters extinguished the flames just after 4 p.m., the authorities said.

Greenburger confessed that he did so knowing that there were other people in the building and that they could have been harmed, according to court documents.

He was charged with arson and reckless endangerment, the records show.

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The fully clothed body of an apparent suicide victim was pulled from the Hudson River off lower Manhattan yesterday morning, police said.

The body of the 54-year-old man, whose name was withheld pending family notification, was spotted at 8:20 a.m. in the waters near Chambers Street, cops said.

Detectives said that they were investigating but that no criminality was initially suspected.

Queens

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Two eagle-eyed cops caught a crook just moments after he allegedly tried to break into a closed bank in Jackson Heights.

Ilie Cauni, 38, started running the moment he noticed the officers at the intersection of 35th Avenue and 83rd Street, according to court documents.

The cops were responding at 12:30 a.m. on Aug. 21 to a radio call of a botched bank job nearby.

But in his haste, Cauni dropped a black satchel carrying 38 prepaid credit cards — 31 of which had been illegally re-encoded with other people’s banking information, the officers said.

They caught up with and arrested Cauni not far from the scene, they added.

He was charged with criminal possession of a forged instrument, grand larceny and criminal possession of stolen property, said a spokeswoman for District Attorney Richard Brown.