A hero NYPD detective who was shot over $20 while washing his car in Brooklyn in 1990 has died after spending more than three decades in a coma, law-enforcement sources told The Post on Sunday.

Officer Troy Patterson was just 27, newly engaged and off-duty when he was ambushed by three armed thugs looking for a few bucks outside PS 3 in Bedford-Stuyvesant.

The then-six-year department veteran — who had already racked up seven commendations for police work at the time — was shot in the head with a .38-caliber pistol during the botched robbery.

The panicked suspects fled after the shooting, leaving Patterson’s wallet at the scene.

The hero cop — who had been washing his car at a fire hydrant three blocks from his home when shot — remained in a vegetative state until he died Saturday night, sources said.

The three suspects — Vincent Robbins, Tracey Clark and Darien Crawford — were later arrested in the unprovoked shooting.

Robbins, now 53, was convicted of assault and attempted-robbery charges and sentenced to a prison term of five to 15 years. He was released in 2000, state records show.

Clark, the gunman in the shooting, and Crawford — both minors at the time of their arrests — were also convicted, prior news reports show. It was not immediately clear what their sentences were.

A rep for the Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office said Monday all three of their cases were now under review.


  NYPD cop Troy Patterson was just 27 when he was ambushed by three armed robbers while washing his car in Bedford-Stuyvesant on Jan. 16, 1990. The shot detective remained in a coma until his death Saturday. New York Post NYPD cop Troy Patterson was just 27 when he was ambushed by three armed robbers while washing his car in Bedford-Stuyvesant on Jan. 16, 1990. The shot detective remained in a coma until his death Saturday. New York Post

Although Patterson never regained consciousness, New York’s Finest never forgot the Brooklyn cop.

“Detective Troy Patterson was a hero of New York City, who inspired hundreds of fellow Detectives to continue his courageous, important crime-fighting work,” said Paul DiGiacomo, head of the Detectives’ Endowment Association, in a statement Sunday.

“Troy’s legacy will forever be one of service and sacrifice. The DEA will ensure he and his family are never forgotten.”

NYPD Assistant Chief Judith Harrison had said during a vigil for Patterson in January 2022, “We come here every year to honor his life, to celebrate his life to let his family and to let him know we will not forget.

“The Police department has a saying, ‘We will not forget,’ ” Harrison said. “But when we gather here what we do is we put action behind those words. So we’re here to celebrate Troy, we’re here hoping for a miracle more than 30 years later.

“We will never forget.”

Additional reporting by Joshua Rhett Miller

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