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NYPD Academy legend retires after training more than 20K recruits over seven years

nypd-academy-legend-retires-after-training-more-than-20k-recruits-over-seven-years
NYPD Academy legend retires after training more than 20K recruits over seven years

He’s the Finest family man!

Beloved NYPD Police Academy platoon commander Lt. Jose Caraballo, hung up his uniform Friday after a 20-year career on the force — and guiding over 20,000 recruits through the academy in the past seven years.

And he treated each one like they were his own kin.

NYPD Police Academy Recruit Training Section Platoon Commander Jose Caraballo doing pushups with recruits.

NYPD Police Academy Recruit Training Section Platoon Commander Jose Caraballo sometimes makes recruits do push-ups when they’re late but he always joins them. Leonardo Munoz for NY Post

“I kind of look at the recruits like my children,” said Caraballo, who spent the majority of his career as a patrolman in the Bronx, where he grew up, and in Harlem. 

“Seeing these guys and girls come through and do such great things, it’s like watching my kids grow up,” said Caraballo, who has no kids but hopes to someday. “It’s just awesome to see.”

Caraballo told The Post he wanted cadets to have a memorable experience.

“I don’t even remember who my lieutenant was when I went to the police academy,” he said.

“I felt like if I’m going to be in this position, I want a lot of these young men and women to see what leadership’s supposed to look like. Every push-up I ask them to do, I do with them.”

NYPD Platoon Commander Jose Caraballo smiles while recruits do push-ups at the Police Academy in Queens.

NYPD Platoon Commander Jose Caraballo smiles while recruits do push-ups at the Police Academy in Queens. Leonardo Munoz for NY Post

Caraballo started out wanting to be a lawyer and attended John Jay College of Criminal Justice but was bored so walked away, he said.

He then joined the NYPD Police Cadet Corps, a paid public-service apprenticeship for college students, and quickly felt like he was part of a family, he said.

NYPD Police Academy platoon commander Jose Carabello saluting with other recruits in the background.

Caraballo, who once wanted to be a lawyer, says he treats the recruits like they’re his children. DCPI

Like officers on patrol, recruits muster at the start of each shift. That’s when Caraballo made sure they were following department regulations.

NYPD Police Academy platoon commander Jose Carabello walking past recruits.

Caraballo sometimes makes his recruits do push-ups as punishment but he joins them. DCPI

“Sometimes, if they have deficiencies, if their boots are scuffed, or the uniform looks a little untidy” he would tell the recruits to drop and give him 20 or more push-ups.

“’It’s not a punishment, it’s a privilege,’” he would tell the recruits of the push-ups. “So then I give them some privilege.”

Jose Carabello and NYPD recruits pose for a photo with their index fingers pointed upwards.

NYPD Police Academy recruit training lasts six months. DCPI

After that, the recruits would go to classrooms and learn everything from police science to the department’s rules and how to deal with emotionally disturbed people, he said.

He sometimes went into the classes and chimed in with stories from his more than 13 years on patrol.

He would also tell the stories of fallen officers that came under his tutelage, including officers Wilburt Mora, 27, and Jason Rivera, 22, who were gunned down in an ambush while on a domestic-violence call in Harlem in 2022.

Jose Carabello with a group of police recruits.

Recruits complete combined academic, tactical, and physical training at the Police Academy located in College Point, Queens. DCPI

He remembers Rivera, who was overweight, struggling with the requirement that all recruits run a mile and a half in 14 minutes. 

“He joined a run club to make sure that he was able to pass the standard to become a police officer,” Caraballo recalled. “So I use his story to motivate a lot of young men and women who may not be in the best shape to say, ‘Hey, this guy identified that he had an issue and went above and beyond to change it.’”

One of his recruits loved the story so much he began doing all department-connected runs.

Three smiling male NYPD officers in uniform.

Caraballo has trained recruits wgi were slain in the line of duty and tells their stories to new recruits. DCPI

“He found a lot of love in running and getting himself in shape,” Caraballo said. “He lost like 58 pounds.”

Caraballo was the first person in his family to join the police department, and his dad was proud — so much so that when he was dying of cancer four years ago he confessed he wished he had done more with his life.

“And I said, ‘You did, because look at me,” Caraballo recalled. “Everything that I speak about with these young men and women is what you taught me and what you trained me to be.’”

Caraballo hopes that the recruits have gotten the same thing from him.

“I don’t want to see them get hurt,” he said. “I’ve been to too many funerals. They need to stay true to everything that they learn because those are the things that are going to keep them safe.”

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