Crisis at Rikers Island
In 2021, the institutional rot and dysfunction at Rikers Island cascaded into a full-blown catastrophe.

Rikers Island, the infamous jail complex where New York City has incarcerated people since 1932, has always been a problem. But in 2021, the institutional rot and dysfunction cascaded into a full-blown catastrophe.
As of October, 12 inmates had died at Rikers in 2021, five in suspected suicides. That's the most since 2005. A New York state senator said lawmakers touring Rikers in September saw a man trying to kill himself. A public defender who toured the jail told The Intercept that inmates in one segregated intake unit were locked in small showers and given plastic bags to defecate into.
Meanwhile, widespread and unauthorized staff absences have left the jail dangerously shorthanded. In a September letter to the New York City Council, Rikers' chief medical officer warned that "in 2021 we have witnessed a collapse in basic jail operations, such that today I do not believe the City is capable of safely managing the custody of those it is charged with incarcerating in its jails."
In a September court hearing before a U.S. District Court judge, a federal monitor revealed widespread security lapses, failures to help inmates who were trying to commit suicide in plain view of officers, and a small guard rotation working double and triple shifts. Meanwhile, use of force by officers, inmate-on-inmate violence, and inmate-on-guard assaults have all increased.
"This state of seriously compromised safety has spiraled to a point at which, on a daily basis, there is a manifest risk of serious harm to both detainees and staff, which in turn, generates high levels of fear among both groups with each accusing the other of exacerbating already challenging conditions," the monitor wrote in an August 24 letter to U.S. District Judge Laura T. Swain. "Turmoil is the inevitable outcome of such a volatile state of affairs."
After touring the jail himself, outgoing New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio said, "The whole thing upsets me." But Hizzoner had no intention of actually taking on the forces that have made Rikers a hellhole for decades.
New York City has a tentative plan to permanently close Rikers in 2027. But the Eighth Amendment's prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment extends to providing incarcerated people with food, shelter, hygiene, and medical care. If New York City cannot force Rikers to meet this low bar of basic human decency and maintain that standard until the planned closing date, the jail should not stay open a day longer.
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"If New York City cannot force Rikers to meet this low bar of basic human decency and maintain that standard until the planned closing date, the jail should not stay open a day longer."
With the alternative being, what? And no, not incarcerating convicted offenders does not seem to be a viable option after the spike in crime over the past year.
Better supervision. Someone who cares.
You mean like they would be treated at the VA or an old folks home?
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How do you get better supervision in the teeth of an active campaign to vilify and defund the police, let alone the ridiculous safety protocols against COVID that reduce staffing and dramatically ramp up the demand for isolation? It's like leftists don't live in a world where causa and effect apply.
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"The majority (85%) of detainees [at Rikers Island] are pretrial defendants, either held on bail or remanded in custody. The rest of the population have been convicted and are serving short sentences."
So, stating up front that I *do not* think that eliminating pretrial detention entirely is actually a good idea, it would certainly reduce the demands on that facility significantly. Which implies that a different balance might be struck that more effectively protects the rights of the innocent and the accused alike. What portion of that 85% of the Rikers' population is actually a flight risk or risk to society?
New York has already eliminated cash bail for a host of offenses so at this point you have to start assuming most are flight or community risks. This is just one more "criminal justice reform" from leftists actually looking to eliminate all consequences for bad actions.
Alternative 1 - Ship the prisoners somewhere else where there might be competent supervision.
Alternative 2 - Stop putting people in jail for non-violent offenses like mere drug possession or use. That is, reduce the volume of people in the jail to a manageable level.
Alternative 3 - Stop the use of our prisons as a de facto mental health system. Again, reduce the volume by sending the many who should be in hospitals there instead.
Alternative 4 - Privatize the whole mess. Private prisons have their share of problems but, good lord, it's not hard to be less bad than Rikers.
And there you have your problem with this whole decarceration and defund the police and justice system reform movement - people ain't in the mood for this after everything that's been going on the last couple of years. For a brief moment after George Floyd, there was some sympathy for getting something done, but the BLM/Antifa people made sure that sympathy quickly got strangled by their extreme Marxist demands, the lawlessness, the criminal-loving DA's and the bail flash mobs, the pundits and the news media and people like AOC justifying criminality, and now the support for Kyle Rittenhouse and his "vigilantism". You're going to be lucky if they don't make Riker's Island the new standard for prisons.
Avoid New York.
This problem could be solved by implementing the Koch / Soros / Reason soft-on-crime #EmptyThePrisons agenda.
#CheapLaborAboveAll
But do prisoners actually provide much useful labor, especially when not incarcerated? And I'd think it would be cheaper if they were still *in* jail!
I'm really happy to see Reason mention that the guards are running double and triple shifts. It makes the case that this prison is broken stronger, by not leaving out relevant information that goes against the magazines bias, I can now fully trust that 2 seconds of research won't reveal facts that completely undermine the point trying to be made.
That said, I wonder how much the guards are getting in straight take home pay for non-overtime work. If it's the same as what you would get working at McDonald's but you spend all day every day working with nothing but sometimes violent criminals, no one should be surprised that they have trouble getting enough people and most those people have the qualification of being a warm body.
Might do everyone good to lower benefits in exchange for higher wages. It's stupid but also true that most people can't conceptualize just how much benefits are worth in comparison to straight pay.
It's stupid but also true that most people can't conceptualize just how much benefits are worth in comparison to straight pay.
Not stupid. Rational. Straight pay incentivizes work directly. Paid leave doesn't. Especially for prison guards.
I was actually thinking along the lines of pensions. In many states, you can work 20 years in the prison system, then retire on 50% of your last three years of pay for the rest of your life. If you join up straight out of highschool you could be retired by 48. That's the kind of benefit that's hard for a lot of people to be able to quantify in comparison to straight pay.
That's the kind of benefit that's hard for a lot of people to be able to quantify in comparison to straight pay.
I remain unconvinced that a state-funded pension is a/the 'not stupid' option. I could agree that it's personally smart, but the stupid is conserved, just more diffuse.
We're talking about on the personal level. If you're choosing between becoming a McDonald's worker or a prison guard.
New York should have a talk with Joe Biden and discuss his crime bills.
probably more useful with somebody lucid, but what's to discuss? how they cut crime? made New York Safe(er)? made Bernie Goetz's unnecessary?
think it was WF Buckley who said it was preferable to have Homosexual Rape in Central State Prison than in Central Park. Or as the great Detective Tony Barretta said, "Don't do the Crime, if you can't do the time!"
Buckley may have been sharing personal fantasies.
Seems like a bit of a false dichotomy.
Despite how much they might claim to sympathize with the inmates, DiBlasio and others know that if they let them out and shut down Rikers, the woke progs in Park Slope and upper West Side will flee for the burbs like they did in the 70s because they will get tired of their homes and cars getting broken into and smelling urine everywhere. Poof! There goes the tax base. So they just complain about it and keep on with business as usual. You also have the correction officers unions who want to keep their jobs.
"Corrections Officers"?? you mean the Screws? Anyone who voluntarily goes to jail for 40 hours a week deserves everything they get(and don't get) Contract "Corrections" to the Gangs who run the place.
This
What kind of communo-fascists is Reason hiring? This article is written as if there is a right way to lock human beings in cages at all, let alone in rape cages for decades.
Well, the 8th Amendment prohibits "cruel and unusual punishment". While being raped is certainly cruel, in prison it doesn't appear to be unusual. Perhaps the amendment should have read "or" instead of "and".