Friday, April 24, 2015

Rare Video From Inside Rikers Island Jail Shows Inmate Being Beaten By Guards And A Gang

Rare video footage from inside New York City's Rikers Island jail – which has been blasted by federal investigators for its abuse of inmates and sued by the Justice Department – shows a teenager apparently being slammed to the ground, while handcuffed, by a corrections officer and being beaten by a gang.

The footage was obtained by The New Yorker, which in October wrote an exposé on the conditions faced by Kalief Browder, who waited at the jail for three years to face a long-delayed trial for allegedly stealing a backpack. (The case against him was dismissed.)

In the first portion of the clip, a corrections officer is seen handcuffing Browder through his cell door so he can be taken to the showers. When Browder emerges from the cell, he and the officer seem to exchange words. Then, the officer pushes him repeatedly and eventually slams him onto the floor.

As Browder told the New Yorker after seeing the video for the first time:

“I just felt him tighten a grip around my arm,” he recalled, referring to the guard. “In my head, I was wondering why he tightened it so tight, like he never usually does, and that’s when he swung me and kept trying to slam me.” Browder says that, when a captain arrived, the guard explained that Browder had tried to run. “I was on the floor going crazy: ‘He’s lying! I didn’t do nothing!’ ”

He was later placed, again, in solitary confinement for the incident. New York City later ended the practice for juveniles after U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara found it was used "excessively."

NYC DOC / Via The New Yorker

The second portion of the video shows Browder being beaten by a gang for several minutes.

Browder was being held in an area of the prison that was under the heavy influence of a gang, The New Yorker reported. A gang leader allegedly spit on him, and Browder punched him in the face. The situation devolved into a mass beating on the then-17-year-old.

"He decided that he needed to retaliate," Jennifer Gonnerman wrote in The New Yorker. "If he had not, he said, it would have 'meant they could keep spitting in my face. I wasn’t going to have that.'”

The New York City Department of Correction didn't immediately return a request for comment.

Thumbnail image from the NYC DOC via The New Yorker



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