Logo

The cop-hating demonstrator who spat in an NYPD sergeant’s face last month allegedly leaped onto the back of a police captain as he tried to make an arrest during an earlier protest, it emerged in court Monday.

“Phlegm fatale” Devina Singh, 24, was issued a desk appearance ticket during the Manhattan protest in September after she allegedly interfered with Captain Bekim Kalicovic’s arrest of her comrade Alvin Dan on the edge of Washington Square Park.

“The defendant jumped on the back of Captain Bekim Kalicovic…who was assisting in the arrest of Alvin Dan, in an attempt to pull Captain Kalicovic away from Alvin Dan,” the complaint states of the Sept. 18 confrontation.

When Kalicovic and Lt. Frank Gonzalez tried to place Dan in cuffs for kicking a police car, he allegedly kicked and punched them in the face and body, according to court papers.

Singh and her lawyer appeared virtually in Manhattan Criminal Court on Monday, where she was arraigned on charges of obstructing governmental administration and resisting arrest and was ordered released without bail. If convicted, she faces up to one year in jail on the top count.

On her since-deleted Instagram, Singh bragged about the arrest, posting a photo showing her dressed in all black, with her hands behind her back.

“im so f—— mad … probs bc behind me (white shirt) is Deputy Inspector Elias J. Nikas AKA Little Dick Nik,” she captioned the photo.

The Pennsylvania resident was among a group of left-wing, anti-cop protesters on Nov. 4 when she was busted in Manhattan for hocking a loogie at a cop. She was captured on video by The Post yelling, without a mask on, “F— you, fascist!” before splattering the sergeant’s face with saliva.

She later told The Post that she spat at the sergeant after the cops “started attacking people” which is not shown in the video.

During the post-election demonstration, she was one of nearly 60 protesters arrested in the West Village after the unruly mob lit garbage cans on fire, clashed with police and harassed outdoor diners.

She’s due back in Manhattan court on Jan. 22 to be arraigned on charges of obstruction of governmental administration, violation of local law and harassment in connection to the spitting case.

In October, she was also collared at a demonstration in Brooklyn on an unlawful assembly rap and has yet to appear in court on the case, records show.

Singh’s defense lawyer Gideon Oliver didn’t immediately return a request for comment.

Comments
anonymous profile image
Powered by RoundtableBuilt on infrastructure designed for real-time media. Learn more at RTB.io.© Roundtable 2026. By using this site you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy