Bronx man once convicted of triple murder, passed over by NYU for security job lands gig with NYPD watchdog
A Bronx man convicted in a 1972 triple murder who sued NYU for passing him over as a campus security guard has landed a gig with the NYPD’s internal watchdog, The Post has learned.
Ronald Davidson is training to be an investigator with the city’s Civilian Complaint Review Board, which looks into claims of police misconduct – a move that has riled police unions even as the candidate says he long ago turned his life around.
“He was convicted of three homicides, so he should be disqualified from doing any investigations involving the NYPD and its members,” Vincent J. Vallelong, head of the NYPD’s Sergeants Benevolent Association, said in a statement.
“He also should not have access to sensitive materials involving victims,” he continued, noting Davidson was scheduled to be a second seat in a case against a sergeant last week until the union protested it.
Davidson was just 17-years-old when he killed three people, after the trio tried to rob him at knifepoint one August night on a New York City beach, according to a 2016 letter he penned to the parole board.
