NYPD pair turn Council office into frat-style party pad — but one is caught drunk on the job: sources

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To overserve and protect.

Two NYPD cops used a City Council office as their own frat house-style party pad — but got busted when one of them stumbled into work drunk, The Post has learned.

Officers Dionis Bravo and Candice Guerra had been assigned to Council Speaker Julie Menin’s security detail but were pulled off active duty after Bravo allegedly went on a bender during an overnight shift early this week, sources said.

Bravo was visibly intoxicated on the job and Guerra allegedly tried to shuffle him back into an office to sleep it off, the sources added.

Menin’s staff discovered the boozed-up Boy in Blue and uncovered his partner’s attempt to hide him, prompting the Council speaker to directly call NYPD Commissioner Jessica Tisch to complain, sources said.

Officer Dionis Bravo allegedly showed up drunk to work in the City Council speaker’s office. NYPD 81st Precinct
Bravo’s partner Officer Candice Guerra allegedly tried to shuffle him out of sight before his drunkenness was discovered.

The sudsy saga didn’t end there.

Staffers found out the Bravo and Guerra had been using an office in 250 Broadway — the building where the City Council keeps a base — as an after-hours ginmill, sources said.

The duo had been assigned to the security detail in 2024 and 2025 under the tenure of Menin’s predecessor Adrienne Adams.

Part of their duties included overnight shifts staying in the Broadway building, where the office was furnished as a place to stay, sources said.

Bravo and Guerra, however, at some point had allegedly turned the official crash pad into a decidedly unsanctioned party pad, the sources said.

The extent of hijinks in the sullied office remains under an internal investigation, police officials said.

Bravo was suspended Monday, while Guerra was placed on modified duty, NYPD officials confirmed.

City Council Speaker Julie Menin inherited the alleged problem officers, who were assigned to the security detail under her predecessor’s tenure. Gregory P. Mango for NY Post

Staff in the speaker’s office — which had inherited Bravo and Guerra — kept mum on the sordid affair.

“This matter involves NYPD employees, so any inquiries should be directed to the department,” a spokesperson for Menin said.

Bravo and Guerra didn’t return requests for comment.

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