The dapper club patron who stabbed ex-Knick Chris Copeland outside the 1OAK nightclub last year may have blown his slap on the wrist plea deal.
Shevoy Bleary-Murdock, who was due to be sentenced to what amounted to a couple of weekends in jail in Manhattan Supreme Court on Wednesday, was instead told to come back to court in a month when charges against him in Brooklyn are unsealed.
Bleary-Murdock was rearrested in Brooklyn for possessing forged credit cards just three days after taking a sweetheart deal in Manhattan on his street scuffle assault case.
Bleary-Murdock, who did not know Copeland or the NBA star’s girlfriend when he assaulted them after a night of partying in the Meatpacking District, pleaded guilty to two counts of assault in June.
He faced up to seven years behind bars on the top count he faced.
The party boy’s latest run-in with the law occurred about 1:45 a.m. on June 24 when cops pulled over his 2013 Mercedes-Benz with tinted windows at Bedford Ave. and Linden Blvd. in Brooklyn, according to his criminal complaint.
During the Prospect Lefferts Gardens traffic stop, police allegedly found a stash of pot and 17 forged credit cards.
“The people are no longer recommending the promised sentence. The defendant is in violation of the terms of that promised sentence,” Assistant District Attorney Courtney Groves said.
Prosecutors did not specify how much additional time they would be seeking.
Bleary-Murdock was supposed to get a month of weekends in jail, a system in which he would check himself into Rikers Island voluntarily on Fridays.
But he had time served already from his arrest — so he would have done even less than four weekends.
The case was adjourned to September 7.
With Christina Carrega-Woodby