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Judge in NYC fired after posting hardcore gay porn on OnlyFans, Twitter
Screenshot of New York Post video (featured: Gregory A. Locke)

Judge in NYC fired after posting hardcore gay porn on OnlyFans, Twitter

A New York City judge has lost his job for "unprofessional behavior" after a city councilmember reported him for posting X-rated material on OnlyFans and Twitter in his spare time.

On March 21, Gregory A. Locke, 33, was fired from his job as a city administrative law judge. For $58 an hour, Locke was tasked with adjudicating parking tickets. If he worked full time, then that job would have paid him more than $120,000 a year. However, either to supplement that income or perhaps to indulge some kind of fetish, Locke created an OnlyFans account two and a half years ago and charged subscribers $12 a month for his explicit content. He also established a JustFor.Fans account, where he charged just under $10 a month for similar material.

In addition to OnlyFans and JustFor.Fans, Locke reportedly created a Twitter account to share similarly graphic pictures and videos of himself engaging in sex with multiple male partners. Though he does not use his name on the account, he does include his preferred pronouns and a photo of a T-shirt which reads "not fresh but good in bed." In January, he posted that he was "a judge" in response to a question from another Twitter user.

Locke also manages another Twitter account which, though vulgar, does not share explicit content. In that Twitter bio, Locke claims to be a lawyer, a "democrat," and a supporter of "Black lives matter." "Sex work is valid," the bio also states.

This second, less offensive account is the one that likely cost him his day job. Earlier this month, Locke used that account to respond to a post from Councilwoman Vickie Paladino criticizing drag queen story hour. Paladino called the drag show with children an "absolutely shameful display." Locke replied to Paladino's comment by telling her to "choke on a d***." Paladino then filed a complaint against Locke, likely with the city's Finance Department.

"Because of a disgusting tweet this judge posted about me, we placed a complaint, the floodgates opened and he was fired," Paladino claimed.

Paladino did not stop there. "This guy should lose his law license, we’re in the process," she added.

"This city must have absolute faith in its courts at every level, and employing individuals like Mr. Locke in positions of legal authority only corrodes the people’s trust in the professionalism and impartiality of our institutions," Paladino concluded.

The NYC rules of conduct for administrative law judges express similar sentiments: "A city administrative law judge shall conduct all of his or her extra-judicial activities so that they do not cast reasonable doubt on the city administrative law judge’s capacity to act impartially as a city administrative law judge" and "do not detract from the dignity of judicial office."

An Instagram account associated with Locke includes pictures of the former judge receiving a blessing at Westminster Abbey and with ashes on his forehead to commemorate Ash Wednesday in 2017.

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