Rikers Island Sees 2 Prisoner Deaths in 2 Days
Just a week ago, New York City convinced a federal judge not to seize control of the jail.

It's been a week since a judge approved an action plan to reform the dangerous and troubled Rikers Island jail in New York City to avoid a federal takeover, and there have already been two inmate deaths.
On Monday, Rikers Island officials announced the death of Anibal Carrasquillo, 39, most likely of a drug overdose. Carrasquillo is the seventh prisoner to die in custody on Rikers Island this year. Then on Tuesday, the Department of Corrections announced the death of Albert Drye, 52, making him the eighth death. The circumstances of his death have not yet been released.
Just a month ago, another inmate, Emmanuel Sullivan, was found dead in his bed on Rikers. He was the third inmate to die just in May.
Rikers had 16 prisoners die while in custody in 2021, and widespread staff shortages have turned the detention center—which already had a well-deserved reputation for corruption and dysfunction—into a complete hellhole. More than 1,000 correction officers out of 9,000 are failing to show up for work on an average day.
A federal monitoring team had encouraged intervention to try set things aright there. A letter from the team to federal U.S. District Judge Laura T. Swain last summer warned, "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."
But Mayor Eric Adams and his Department of Corrections Commissioner Louis Molina resisted a complete federal takeover and had submitted a lengthy reform plan to Swain promising to change sick leave and absence policies and shake up staff. At the same time, another judge found the city in civil contempt for failing to provide proper medical treatment to detainees and ordered it to fix the situation.
Nevertheless, in a June 13 decision, Swain accepted New York City's reform plan and gave the city until November to "demonstrate their ability to make urgently needed changes."
Obviously a week is not enough time to completely reform this broken jail system, but two deaths happening just days after Swain accepted the plan is certainly an indicator of how dire the situation is.
And to be clear, it's important to understand that as a detention center, Rikers has thousands of inmates who have been arrested and charged with crimes, but have not yet been convicted. These are people who are supposed to be treated with the presumption of innocence.
Sullivan, for example, had been arrested in February on murder and robbery charges, but he had not yet been tried and convicted. The New York Post notes that Drye had two open cases of assault and possession of a weapon awaiting prosecution. The first inmate to die at Rikers in 2022, Tarz Youngblood, had been arrested on a domestic violence charge and was unable to pay the $10,000 bail order. And so he remained in jail for six months awaiting justice. He died in jail without being convicted of the crime that got him arrested.
It should go without saying that it's unacceptable for inmates to be dying in prison when these deaths are preventable, even if they have been convicted of crimes. But above and beyond that, we should see it as absolutely abhorrent and unacceptable when people who haven't even been convicted of a crime are dying while in the state's custody.
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Well, let's hope for that federal takeover. That will no doubt improve the functionality of things.
"Quis custodiet ipsos custodes"
The feds?
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LOL the SAME organization that made it hard for Corrections to strip search and scan inmates coming in is now SHOCKED the inmates are smuggling drugs in their ass to sell or use.
Color me surprised.
I don't know how much that matters since prison guards are often involved with the drug trade anyway.
had submitted a lengthy reform plan to Swain promising to change sick leave and absence policies and shake up staff.
LOL, I wonder what the Union had to say about that plan?
Probably LOL - - - - - - - -
Well, a little digging shows that the union did in fact have something to say about it:
Oh... oh yeah:
Something something contracts something local control vs federal control.
I'll let y'all figure out what the answers are here, because I have no problem admitting I got nothing, except abolish the fucking public sector union, and then see how radical, and sudden transformations via reform can take place.
Black Lives Matter, in their list of... demands or 'plans' on their website specifically called out to "strengthen public sector unions".
...abolish the fucking public sector union...
Hear hear! All public unions are parasites! Even FDR knew this, as he created more government jobs. Too bad he never pushed for legislation banning it.
Yeah. I'm not sold on the second half of FDRs equation, but I'm being brought around to the arguments against public sector unions.
I'm practically against them all the time, but sort of waffled on the question of "Is it constitutional or moral to disallow unions?"
This is a separate question of whether unions are good or bad. In general, it is obviously no, you can't ban them. At the same time, a company can choose not to work with unions. And the government can reasonably codify that preference the same as any other group.
I actually did struggle with this for a long time before convincing myself. I don't think it's too motivated of a reasoning, but it's hard to tell because I do tend to distrust unions generally.
Seems the solution would be to export the prisoners to functional prisons (both in and out of state) and just shut the place down. Laying off all employees. But I think a New York judge already ruled that illegal, saying prisoners had to be held near their families.
Start by deporting all of the illegals.
That damn COVID just won't quit!
I know! More funding!
>>the eighth death
eggs, omelet.
I feel conflicted here. I would like more information about how they died, since I think that matters a lot. But, man, our prisons need reforming and they are truly shit.
How is a self induced drug overdose the jail’s fault?
That's why I said we'd need more information about how they died. The second statement is a general issue.
This assumes that these highly corrupt jail officials are telling the truth about the cause of death. Was it really a drug overdose or just a beating? If it was an overdose, was it actually self-induced?
It should go without saying that it's unacceptable for .....But above and beyond that, we should see it as absolutely abhorrent and unacceptable when ....
Scott, sweetheart, you are sounding more and more like a member of the Moral Majority. Are you related to Anita Bryant? Nah, my bad, she was married while we all know you're a frustrated, single gay bear.
xoxo
Good to know nobody dies outside prison these days. Sorry shit for brains but being arrested is not a get out of mortality free card. Maybe if you were specific for the state's hand in these deaths I might be convinced. An OD doesn't help your case because junkies die everyday of their own choices and you'd be the first to defend their right to shoot up again, but now we should spend infinite resources to protect him from the consequences of his actions? Just bonkers what passes for logic in Scott's skull.
2 Deaths 2 Days is the best of the series imo
Good.
2 drug addicts with assault, robbery and weapon charges died.
Oh noes! How will I sleep tonight?
Give them all the Fentanyl they want...GARBAGE human beings who would hurt your mother, wife or daughter without a second thought.
So if being charged by a police force who can do no wrong and who are always above reproach when it comes to who they arrest to quickly close a case means you’re guilty, why not dispense with the waste of time and money that a trial would entail?
Why they’re at it, those jailbirds should also “volunteer” to be organ donors for party officials who have been waiting for transplants! See, there’s a lot we can still learn from the Chinese Communist Party once we get past silly antiquated notions about so-called human rights.
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This is exactly the sort of activity that might land you at Rikers Island awaiting trial. Just satin’.