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Horny cop sent lewd texts to woman after he arrested her: suit

First the cop busted her — then he tried to bust a move on her with a slew of lewd texts, a new lawsuit says.

NYPD Officer Rony Santiago allegedly sent a photo of himself in uniform along with the message, “love a woman who could sit on my face,’’ according to a lawsuit set to be filed Monday.

In another disgusting missive, Santiago allegedly wrote, “I think u look better with the cuffs on.”

“I was shocked and confused,” plaintiff Kammie Sifonte told The Post.

Sifonte, 22, says the sickening harassment started Nov. 21, 2016 — after she was arrested by Santiago for allegedly shoplifting at Target, records show — and hauled to the 52nd Precinct.

Just 20 minutes after releasing her on a desk-appearance ticket, the cop fired a slew of vulgar texts at her, telling her he wanted to participate in a “threesome orgy” and that she was “thick in all the right places,” the Bronx Supreme Court suit alleges.

Santiago offered to “rub you anywhere you want,” according to the suit, filed by civil lawyer Henry Bell.

Santiago, 24, told her that he regularly flirts with attractive women he arrests, according to the filing.

The first few texts were aggressive but not crude, Sifonte said.

“You owe me donuts,” Santiago allegedly wrote. “[w]henever you are free let me know…I get off at 4.”

Sifonte, who works as a pet-care specialist, said she reluctantly played along out of fear that Santiago could control the outcome of her criminal case. She said she even texted him a picture of herself. She was worried that if she spurned him, he would testify at her trial and possibly lie, she said.

Her criminal case was later dismissed and sealed, according to Bell.

But Sifonte said she didn’t give him her number and that he had clearly taken it from police paperwork.

The young woman said it was alarming that Santiago knew her address and even threatened to show up at her home for dinner in one message.

The offensive communications came to an abrupt end Nov. 23, her civil complaint states.

She is suing Santiago, the NYPD and the city for “in excess of $25,000” for the “extreme and outrageous conduct” that violated her civil rights and caused her emotional distress, her suit says.

“It hurts everybody in the community when a police officer does something like this,” Bell said. “It erodes trust in the community, and that trust is essential.”

Santiago declined to comment when reached by phone.

The NYPD also declined comment.

Bell said he received a call from the department’s Internal Affairs Bureau but didn’t respond because of the lawsuit.

Additional reporting by Daniel Prendergast