Henry Herring, 54, in an interview Tuesday, said he needed the time to take care of his sick fiancée.
“I know what I did looks like something very horrible, whatever,” the Brooklyn man admitted. “But I have a very good reason for what I did.”
Herring, a transit system cleaner who was hired last January and has since been suspended without pay, claimed his gal pal “had two brain surgeries and it caused brain leakage” and that he’d go visit her at Methodist Hospital every day after he got off work.
“I did something stupid. At the end of the day, I did it for someone I love,” he said.
“What I did was stupid. I admit. It was very deplorable. At the end of the day, I wanted to be there for a family member,” he added.
“I didn’t think,” he admitted. “I was a poser, pretentious — all of that. The thing is I want to be there for someone I care about. End of the day I had a real good reason for what I did. I’m not crazy.”
Herring was charged last week with falsely reporting an incident for telling cops that he was attacked while cleaning a train at the 179th Street subway station in Jamaica shortly after 3 a.m. July 31.
But surveillance cameras caught him red-handed and exposed the ruse, according to a criminal complaint.
“My goal was to have the summer off because it was too hot down there,” he allegedly told police, according to court records — a claim Herring denied.
“No, I didn’t say that,” he insisted Tuesday. “The cop said that. ‘You just wanted the summer off, didn’t you?’ I was shaking my head. I was distraught. The cop I was talking to … he said it came from a three-star chief, that’s the MTA transit police. They gave him that, not me.”
Herring did acknowledge that he wanted some time off — with less than two years on the job he didn’t have enough accrued time to get a paid leave, he said.
“End of the day we get one sick day a month,” he said. “I had used mine up. I had no choice.”
He then admitted that he still had five unused sick days at the time he faked the attack — but assumed he’d need them for his physical rehab appointments, he said.
Herring said he’d do it all over again given the chance — but this time, he’d be smarter and avoid getting caught by surveillance cameras.
“I would do it all over again. If I had to do it again, to be there for her, I would,” he said. “I gotta admit I would. I’d probably go about it better, [because] I know there’s cameras down there.”
Herring, who has a “F–k the Police” tattoo on his arm, has served two stints in state prison on robbery and gun charges, but said he’s turned a corner and earned associates and bachelor’s degrees.
“I’m not unemployable,” he said. “I have two college degrees.”
He then clarified that he has an associate degree but is still 13 credits shy of his bachelor’s, which he said he’s currently working on.
“I’m employable, but at the same time I want that to be my career, the MTA,” Herring said. “I have nothing bad to say about the MTA. I muffed up. At the end of the day I apologize to everybody, my MTA family.”
Between tending to his fiancée as she recovers and physical therapy for injuries he said he sustained in a car accident in April, he simply needed a break, he told The Post.
His fiancée works for the Department of Social Services at a city migrant shelter, he said, but declined to provide her name, other details about their relationship or pictures of the two of them together.
He did provide documents on city stationery that appear to show she was approved for a leave of absence from July 5 to Sept. 27.
Herring also provided medical records that seem to indicate he underwent a CAT scan and other procedures following the injuries he said he sustained in a car crash on April 19.
“If I had a chance to right this wrong, I would,” he said of his slashing ruse. “I love my job. I love the MTA. They gave me a chance,” Herring said. “I messed up. I wasn’t thinking. I suggest you don’t try it.”
Herring, whose next court date is Oct. 8, said he wanted to tell his side after seeing The Post’s front page about his case — which he seemed to enjoy.
“When I saw myself on the front page I had to clap back,” he said. “It may look stupid to the world, ‘Loco Motive’ — that’s cute anyway. But at the end of the day , that’s why I did what I did.”
For the latest metro stories, top headlines, breaking news and more, visit nypost.com/metro/
Get updates delivered to you daily. Free and customizable.
It’s essential to note our commitment to transparency:
Our Terms of Use acknowledge that our services may not always be error-free, and our Community Standards emphasize our discretion in enforcing policies. As a platform hosting over 100,000 pieces of content published daily, we cannot pre-vet content, but we strive to foster a dynamic environment for free expression and robust discourse through safety guardrails of human and AI moderation.