Rikers Island Sees 17th Prisoner Death This Year
Is a federal takeover of the troubled jail pending?

An inmate at Rikers Island prison died on Saturday, apparently from suicide, marking the 17th death there this year, surpassing last year's record.
Erick Tavira, 28, reportedly took his own life early Saturday morning, according to his lawyers. The New York Daily News reports that Tavira was arrested in June for attacking a teen boy without provocation and was being held on $20,000 bail. Tavira had been living in a homeless shelter at the time.
His death comes a month after Gregory Acevedo, 48, died in a 50-foot fall into the East River in an attempted escape from the Vernon C. Bain Center, a barge-turned-jail stationed at Rikers. He was awaiting trial for robbery.
Criminal justice reform advocates and New York City officials themselves have been trying to get Rikers Island shut down for years. The current plan is to shut it down in 2027 and replace it with four new jails. In 2021, the already struggling jail hit a full-blown crisis as thousands of correctional officers stopped showing up for work, compromising both prisoner and guard safety and depriving prisoners of food and medical care. That year, 16 prisoners held at Rikers died.
Federal monitors have gone to court to attempt to force a takeover of the jail. Even though Mayor Eric Adams says he supports closing the jail, the city has resisted a federal takeover and submitted its own reform plan that was accepted by a federal judge in June.
But since then, the death count has continued to climb. Tavira's death makes 2022 even more deadly than 2021, with two months still left in the year. A federal court hearing is scheduled for November that may determine whether to let the city keep operating the jail. The city is expected to show the progress it has made in efforts to stop these deaths.
Just a week before Tavira died, New York City Comptroller Brad Lander called for a transfer of control to a federal receivership, the first citywide elected official to do so.
"After so many years, and through the pandemic, the dysfunction has grown into an intractable emergency. There is little reason to believe that the current system or management can reform itself, and a receiver outside of many of those barriers holds the most chance of enacting the necessary changes for the basic safety of people incarcerated and staff," Lander said in a forum on October 13.
Lander has also published an online dashboard tracking monthly data on assaults, jail populations, and staff absences in the city's Department of Correction. Staff absences that contributed to last year's crisis at Rikers have started to decline, but they're still well above normal levels prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Overall assaults on staff and between inmates have dropped since last year, but slashing and stabbing incidents remain very high compared to pre-pandemic numbers. There were 38 slashings in August 2022 compared to just seven in just August 2020, for example. And the fact that the average daily jail population in the city has declined from 9,500 in 2017 to 5,700 as of September of this year, and that most prisoners are held in one of the many detention centers at Rikers, just makes the increase in deaths all the more notable.
What's worse, many of those who have died at Rikers this year were accused of crimes but had not yet had their day in court; they were being held in the facility on charges and awaiting trial.
When the government imprisons people, even those who have violated the rights of others, the government bears responsibility for their safety and well-being.
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One guy offing himself and another dying in an escape attempt are hardly compelling cases for a federal takeover. Maybe some of these 47 deaths do make the case for such a takeover, but the two listed here certainly don't.
Don't let the trees get in the way of the forest.
Or maybe you should look at the forest. Weren't you just arguing, correctly I might add, how numbers without context are meaningless? Well, 17 people dying sounds bad but without knowing the context of how those people died, it means nothing. Moreover, when the two examples they give were likely not the fault of the people running the place, that number becomes even more suspect.
There have been a lot of articles about that particular prison, not just in Reason but other news sources. Prisoners regularly die, or are killed, often before they see a courtroom let alone get sentenced. The staff is the dregs of the dregs, and nobody gets fired because they have a hard time getting people to show up. Abuse and neglect are rampant.
I don’t know if that warrants a federal takeover, but these two deaths are tiny part of the picture.
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I guess repealing the law against bringing raw peanuts from Carolina isn't even on the table, amirite?
Can’t we find more sympathetic victims?
You mean crazy homeless guy who attacked people and armed robber who tried to escape are not sympathetic? What kind of a racist are you?
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What about the guy who took a used burlap bag out of NY and was beaten to death at Rikers?
Nobody would die in prison if nobody ever went to prison in the first place.
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The simple solutions are the best solutions.
The Green Goblin gang's released with no bail. Who's running NYC, the Penguin?
Exactly who remains a riddle….probably some joker who’s robbin the taxpayers blind.
Who up next to bat, man?
OK, you know that homeless shelter mentioned in the article? Evidently one of the other residents there is this batshit crazy catwoman!
They already freed the criminals to make room for hippies, gamblers, pregnant women and non-taxpayers.
Is there really a problem with Rikers? I'm not completely sure we can trust the data. I don't think we'll ever know.
Needz moar context.
Does it matter? Is 17 an abnormally high number? Are federal prisons safer? Do we think the federal government is capable of seamlessly replacing the complete existing staff with well-trained and capable people in only a few days? Without screwing things up worse? And if they're going to rely on existing staff 'with new supervision' - why would we think those supervisors are in any way capable of changing the corporate culture of the prison staff?
The feds run the prison where they are holding the j6 protestor without bail, representation, and keeping them in solitary for nearly 2 years. Is that the federal takeover you want?
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Don't commit crimes, staying out of jail/prison increases most people's longevity. New Yorker's might want try that.