NEW YORK, NY – A former New York City Police Department supervisor has pleaded guilty to a federal bribery conspiracy after admitting that she sold the personal information of car accident victims to a call center operator in exchange for cash and other benefits.
Pamela Dillard, 48, of Brooklyn, entered her plea before U.S. District Judge John G. Koeltl in Manhattan federal court and is scheduled to be sentenced on July 1, 2026. Dillard, who served as a Principal Police Communication Technician with the NYPD, admitted that she accepted at least 21 payments totaling about $17,300 while illegally providing non-public data from NYPD databases to a co-conspirator.
According to court documents, from January 2021 through September 2023, Dillard accessed confidential information about automobile accident victims—records intended only for law enforcement purposes—and passed those details to a call center owner who used them to solicit clients for lawyers and medical providers. In exchange, prosecutors said, Dillard received regular bribe payments while continuing to supervise other police communication technicians in her NYPD role.
Federal agents: “Betrayal of public trust”
“The NYPD is the gold standard of police departments,” said U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton. “There is no place in the NYPD for those who compromise the Department’s integrity for personal profit.”…