Metro

Swastika wearing taxi driver suspended

You won’t be Heil-ing this creep anytime soon.

A hateful yellow cabbie was suspended for driving the streets wearing a swastika armband — which got him flipped off and cursed at by furious pedestrians and other motorists.
“Of course people would curse me out but I kept on moving,” boasted Gabriel Diaz, 27, a self-identified National Socialist who wears the bright red band on his left arm so his passengers can’t see it.

“People would say ‘f— you Nazi!’, typical stuff.”

He said the passengers never complained to him, and were oblivious to rants outside his cab.

“Their mind was somewhere else,” he said. “They were focused on what they had to do.”
But several people were so disgusted walking past his taxi that they snapped pictures and filed complaints to the Anti-Defamation League.

“I thought my eyes were deceiving me,” said a New Jersey mother who spotted Diaz last month on East 57th Street — and reported it to the Taxi and Limousine Commission and the Anti-Defamation League.

“I tried to get closer and inch up when I realized it was exactly that. I just felt like I had to document it because I couldn’t believe my eyes. It was shocking. I was very angry.”

The ADL sent a letter in early April to the TLC.

“We are extremely disturbed by this provocative and offensive display and call upon the New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission to investigate this matter and take appropriate action as soon as possible,” wrote Evan Bernstein, the regional director.

The agency investigated Diaz and suspended his license on May 9 for 30 days after he pleaded guilty to violating TLC rules.

Taxi driver Gabriel Diaz was suspended from driving his taxi for 30 days due to a complaint about his wearing a swastika armband while driving his cab.Robert Kalfus

“They set a real line in the sand for other drivers to know,” said Bernstein, the Anti-Defamation League’s regional director, who praised the suspension. “Hate symbols worn publicly are not going to be tolerated.”

It is against TLC rules for drivers perform any act that is against the best interests of the public.

Diaz, who lives in the Bronx, has been driving a taxi since November 2011, and works out of a Long Island City garage.

He promised said he won’t wear the armband on the job any more because of “liberal crybabies” — but feels the suspension is a violation of his constitutional rights.

“If a Muslim can drive a cab wearing a turban, if a homosexual can walk around with a big flag, a rainbow flag, why can’t a person like me wear a Nazi armband?” he said. “I’m expressing my First Amendment right.”

Diaz is Dominican, but it isn’t a contradiction for him.

“We’ve been told lies about Hitler,” he said. “We believe in racial separation and racial differences.”

He said to a Jewish Post photographer wearing a yarmulke, “Nothing against you people, I’m not anti-Semitic. Why don’t you tolerate my views?”

Additional reporting by Erin Calabrese