“They [the NYPD] didn’t know how deep I was,” the 45-year-old Pegues said. “I had to hide that relationship for 20-something years. If they had any inclination that David McClary was my man, I would have had a hard time.”
[In a prison interview with the New York Post, McClary, who is doing to 25 to life in Attica, said: “Corey Pegues ain’t no friend of mine. This is all for the money. Everything he’s been saying about his history is total bull....”
During the podcast, Pegues described himself as the son of an absent, alcoholic father, a single mom on welfare, the sibling of five older sisters, but with what he said was “a consciousness of self. Malcolm, Martin and Mecca.”
He called the death of Eric Garner on Staten Island, after his arrest for selling “loosie” cigarettes, “murder.” He added that at 13 he, too, was selling “loosies” but that they weren’t cigarettes.
His “great escape” from his street life came when he enlisted in the Army. “I got popped on an assault,” he said. “I told the judge I was going in the Army. The judge dismissed the case and gave me one more chance. A higher power had to be looking out for me.”
He said the birth of his son and daughter when he was 16 turned his life around.
“I got two kids, two baby moms, one in Brooklyn, one in Queens,” he said. “I manned up.”
But after he left the Army, he said in the podcast, he was still doing stickup jobs. “I’m coming home, I’m doing stakeouts. I wanted to keep my street cred up.” On Halloween, he said, he committed a robbery wearing his daughter’s pumpkin mask.
Roy Richter, president of Pegues’s union, the Captains Endowment Association, said, “I was shocked and disgusted hearing the criminal conduct bragged about. If true, it is a complete betrayal of the oath and the sacrifice police officers make to society.”
PBA president Pat Lynch pledged, in a letter to the Post, “to use the full resources of this union to convince the general public to boycott any publishing house that would buy and publish a book by this disgusting and vile man.”
Black law enforcement officials seemed especially aggrieved by his remarks. None has offered public support.
“He’s bragging he shot a guy,” said a former high-ranking black officer who spoke on the condition of anonymity. “He’s pushing this book, not to turn people around in their lives, but to brag about himself and to glorify that kind of life.
“He didn’t repudiate those street thugs. He is not apologizing for his actions or his reckless statements. He doesn’t even repudiate the guy who shot Byrne. He is denigrating the years of advancement black law enforcement officials have made by making us out to be perps and thugs.”