NYPD employee believes ex-DoorDash driver’s vile video was ‘payback’ on police

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The Brooklyn NYPD employee whose DoorDash delivery driver claimed to have put his manhood in her grub told The Post that the disgusting deed was no prank — but likely anti-cop “payback” by the former gangbanger.

Melissa George had not long finished her $19.47 Chipotle burrito bowl last month when a colleague at the 61st Precinct in Sheepshead Bay showed her the vile video of delivery guy Lance Layne putting his mitts in her meal.

“Hope that d-k taste good bitch!” he wrote on a note, captioning the clip, “Ya kno I’m bout to violate the s–t out this order 61st precient [sic].”

“It didn’t leave a good taste in my mouth,” George told The Post as she spoke about the ordeal for the first time this week, revealing that she was so alarmed she bolted to an emergency room for tests.

“I felt violated and I felt very disgusted,” said the soft-spoken administrative aide. “I don’t know the gentleman from anywhere, and I just don’t understand how could someone do that,” she said.

George said she will likely never again use DoorDash — and isn’t buying Layne’s claim that it was “a prank that went out of hand.”

“It wasn’t a prank. It was deliberate,” she said of Layne, a known Bloods member with a lengthy rap sheet who was on parole in the shooting of a police or peace officer in 2011.

“Based on his record, I’m guessing it was payback” to the force, she said — even though she “didn’t do nothing at all to him.”

Even if it had been a joke, “I don’t think you should be playing with people’s food at all. He was supposed to pick up the food and deliver it and not tamper with it at all,” George complained, also questioning DoorDash’s vetting process given that Layne used another name with the service.

After filing a police report at her own stationhouse, George said she went to an emergency room to get blood work and “check for any possible disease that I could have been exposed to.”

“He put his genitals in my food. That scared me. I don’t know this person and who is involved with, what he is involved in,” she said.

The results show that “everything is OK so far,” she added.

“Everybody at my job was sympathetic,” said George, who received numerous gifts, including one from a cop stationed elsewhere who came to give her a hug and deliver food for her entire precinct.

She had less luck with DoorDash, saying that despite being told her case was being escalated, she was given the run around every time she called. The delivery service “didn’t make me feel like I was being taken care of or valued as a customer.”

“They told me they couldn’t give me my money [back] at that time. They would give me credit, but I told them I don’t want that,” she said.

“I’m not going to order through DoorDash again.”

A DoorDash spokeswoman said at the time that Layne had been booted from their service. The company did not immediately respond to further requests for comment Thursday.

Layne has been charged with attempted assault on a police officer, tampering of a consumer product and criminal tampering. He was held for violating his parole in the early shooting case.

After his arrest, he had insisted that the precinct “wasn’t no target.”

“I got nothing against ’em… it was a prank. They know that,” he told reporters at the time.

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