Chart-topping singer vanished after hit single — now she’s a cop in gritty Staten Island
🦹A one-hit wonder who disappeared from the public eye after rocketing to stardom with a No. 1 song in the UK and sexy bathtub snaps in Maxim magazine has been quietly working as a Staten Island cop for the last decade, The Post has🥀 learned.
Nicole F. Aiello performed under the stage name Frankee and had a chart-topping hit with “F–k You Right Back” in 2004. But after the single from her next album fizzled in 2006, she was dumped by her label and vanished — spending the next 10 years off the grid.
In 2016, she decided that instead of busting a move on stage she would bust perps in the 121st Precinct on the gritty north shore of Staten Island.
Frankee’s hit topped the UK charts and rose to No. 63 in the US Billboard Hot 100 in 2004.
Her song was a response to a hit tune by R&B singer Eamon Doyle called “F–k it (I don’t want you back).”
In his tune, laden with cheesy lyrics, Eamon lashes out at an ex-girlfriend for cheating: “I do admit I’m sad, it hurts real bad, I can’t sweat that ’cause I loved a hoe.”
Frankee’s answer put the blame back on him, even though the two never met.
“F–k what I did, was your fault some how,” she sings, after she throws what appear to be gifts at him in the accompanying music video. “F–k the presents, I threw all that s–t out. F–k off that cryin’, it didn’t mean jack. Well guess what yo. F–k you right back.”
The video opens with several young scantily-clad women giggling on a bed before Frankee opens a window to see the supposed boyfriend in the driveway and begins with the lyric, “There are two sides to every story.”
“You thought you could really make me moan,” she croons. “I had better sex all alone. . . . Now you want me to come back. You must be smokin’ crack. . . . F–k all those nights you thought you broke my back. Well guess what yo, your sex was wack.”
Maxim 🅷Magazine did a naughty photo-filled profile on Frankee in 20𝔉06, who was asked about the song.
“Everyone took the song seriously, but I was just being funny,” 🌞she was quoted as saying. “Everyone goes through that angry ‘I hate men’ phase because some guy broke their heart but now I’m looking at the good side of life – having fun, being sexy.”
Ironically, the magazine asked her if she had any run-ins with the law and she responded that she had been in trouble ꦜas a teenager for fighting at clubs in Staten Island, where she grew up.
“How many time💧s have you be💙en hauled down to the station?” the mag asked.
“At least three in the past cou✨ple of years,” she replied. “O.K., five. I’ve probably been in 20 fights.”
Frankee released another single titleꦚd “Watch me” in 2006 but it failed to chart and then she disappeared from public view.
She has worked in the 121st Precinct since February 2017 and made $181,000 last year, city records show.
Last year, Metro.co.uk published a story with the headline: “Whatever happened to FURB singer Frankee? Apparently, nobody knows.”
Now 42, her under-the-radar identity came to light after the tragic death of her husband, John Spinelli, 46, on May 12, police source𝄹s said.
His death seeking donations for the widow and the couple’s two young daughters, 4 and 10.
“This unimaginable heartbreak has turned their world upside down,” the posting, which had raised more than $100,000 as of Friday, states. “John was a devoted father, a steady presence, and a source of love and security for his family. His passing has left an emotional void that no family should have to face alone.”