Metro

Swastika-wearing cabby’s garage dumps him

Heil no!

The Nazi-loving taxi driver who was suspended for wearing a swastika armband has his hack license back — but his Queens garage has told him to stay away, The Post has learned.

Gabriel Diaz, 27, was suspended May 9 when pedestrians and drivers spotted him wearing the hate symbol and reported it to the Taxi and Limousine Commission.

He got his license back on June 9, but was told not to wear the swastika again.

Gabriel Diaz was suspended when pedestrians spotted him wearing an armband with a swastika on it.Handout

Ted Strauel, president of the Long Island City garage Team Systems, said Diaz isn’t welcome there anymore.

“We told him he was better off going to work somewhere else,” Strauel said. “He’s not working here, he’s not going to work here.”

A spokesman for the Metropolitan Taxicab Board of Trade, which represents Team Systems, says the garage won’t lease to him to because his behavior was offensive and inappropriate.

The Dominican driver from The Bronx admitted he wore the band on his left arm to conceal it from passengers.

He pleaded guilty to violating TLC rules — and the agency said they took the toughest action possible against him.

A New Jersey mom who reported Diaz to the TLC and the Anti-Defamation League said she doesn’t think a 30-day suspension can change him.

“If anything, he may feel more strongly in his hate against people,” she said on Monday.

“I think that he doesn’t understand the ideology completely, and he’s kind of making a fool of himself.”

Diaz could not be reached, but his dad insisted that, “he doesn’t have a problem now.”

The Anti-Defamation League said if Diaz served out his suspension and isn’t wearing the band, he has the right to drive.

“As long as he doesn’t wear a hate symbol in the cab, he has the right to drive a cab,” said Evan Bernstein, the regional director of the League. “We hope he can learn.”

A TLC spokesman said they would monitor Diaz’s situation closely and take action if he acts irresponsibly.

“The TLC took the most aggressive action permitted under the law and made clear to Mr. Diaz that his conduct was unacceptable,” said spokesman Conan Freud.

Additional reporting by Lorena Mongelli