
Brian Downey, deputy mayor of Airmont in Rockland County, was arrested at his home Thursday for purchasing a rifle suppression device over the internet. Department of Homeland Security agents had tipped off prosecutors to the delivery of the illegal device, Rockland County District Attorney Tom Walsh said.


Downey acknowledged that he wasn't authorized to possess the controlled weapons, but claimed he felt he was allowed to alter the rifle because "he was a peace officer," the complaint shows.
Investigators then found a lock box that Downey said he couldn't access, leading a federal agent to force it open. Inside the box was more than 10 fake federal badges bearing the deputy mayor's name and photo, including credentials from the FBI, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Bureau of Prisons, among others.
"Also located within the lock box were Downey's United States passport book, United States passport card, and his New York state commercial driver's license," according to the complaint unsealed Tuesday in the US Southern District Court in New York.
After being charged Thursday with multiple counts of criminal possession of a weapon, Downey was charged Friday with additional counts for possessing 10 or more unregistered firearms, 16 assault weapons and 13 firearms silencers, Walsh said.
Downey, a deputy building inspector in Ramapo and a part-time court officer, was first elected as an Airmont trustee in 2019, according to the Journal News. If convicted of a felony, he would be forced to leave office, the outlet reported.

"I will echo my statements on Thursday about this unfortunate incident," Walsh said. "Anyone who takes an oath of office to serve the public and is entrusted to by their community to serve its constituents should have integrity beyond reproach."
The investigation into Downey is ongoing, Walsh said.



Reader Comments
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