Earlier this year, it was reported that an NYPD detective was still on the job after being accused of making sexual advances on a rape victim during an investigation. Now the officers involved in the incident have both admitted to wrongdoing—but they still get to keep their jobs. "What the detective did was immoral, certainly," a police source told the News. "It was wrong. But it wasn’t criminal."

Officer Lukasz Skorzewski had stood accused of groping the 24-year-old victim, whose name has not been released, while visiting her in Seattle to interview her about her rape, which happened in NYC.

The victim was attending college in NYC when she was raped by a man in his Union Square apartment in January 2013; after reporting the rape to police she relocated to Seattle. Six months later, Detective-in-training Lukasz Skorzewski traveled to interview her with his boss, Lt. Adam Lamboy.

After having lunch with Skorzewski, a 31-year-old married father-of-two, he introduced her to Lamboy, who invited her out for drinks. "Looking back, it was totally naive of me to join them,” she told the News this past January. "But I was like, ‘This is really cool.’ I really looked up to them.” She recalled that Skorzewski wasn't sure whether it was proper for her to come with them, but Lamboy insisted. "I was going through this all alone. My family didn’t know," she said. "It felt good that they were being so nice."

At the end of the night of drinking, they also insisted she come back to their hotel room because she was drunk: "No, no, you’ll be safe with us. Come back to our hotel, you can crash with us," they allegedly said. At some point the next morning, Skorzewski climbed in bed with her and said he wanted to kiss her: "He was insistent on feeling me up...He tried to work his way up my pants, I pushed his hand away," she said. In addition, Skorzewski told her at some point, "You're my favorite victim."

After this encounter, the woman says Skorzewski called her almost daily from New York for a month and was "like a big brother figure." He stopped calling her or returning her calls, and he became angry when she confronted him about it; he also never followed up about her rape case again. In January, the victim noted, "I think what he did was bad enough that he shouldn’t be a cop."

But that's not happening: Skorzewski and Lambert both pleaded guilty to departmental charges of prohibited conduct this week. Skorzewski's punishment: demoted from detective, docked 30 vacation days and suspended for 10 days without pay. He was also transferred from the Special Victim's Unit to Medical Division in Queens. Lamboy was docked 45 vacation days and suspended for 15 without pay. He was transferred to Police Service Area 9 Viper (a public housing unit) in Flushing, Queens.

Sonia Ossorio, president of the National Organization for Women’s New York City chapter, was disturbed by the slap on the wrist: "The idea of a special victims detective making a pass at a rape victim when he’s charged with interviewing her about that rape shatters any notion of confidence in the NYPD’s ability to regulate itself," she said in a statement about the case. "It’s so far beyond the bounds of acceptability."