Man jailed at Rikers Island without charges for 3 years commits suicide

B00Mer

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Man jailed at Rikers Island without charges for 3 years commits suicide



Kalief Browder, arrested for stealing a backpack and jailed at the infamously violent Rikers Island prison in New York City for three years without charge, has committed suicide. His case helped spark reform of the city's criminal justice system.

Browder, 22, ended his life at his family's home in the Bronx, according to a report by The New Yorker, which wrote about Browder's case last year.

Kalief Browder was initially arrested on his way home on May 14, 2010, after an unknown individual identified the teenager, then 16 years old, as the person who robbed him a few weeks prior. Browder was charged with second-degree robbery and, unable to post the $10,000 bail at the time of his arrest, was transferred to Rikers Island.

The case never went to trial, however, and Browder languished at Rikers Island until the charges were dropped without explanation in June 2013. His stay at the prison included around two years of solitary confinement.


Kalief Browder, 1993–2015

“No apology, no nothing,” Browder told WABC in November 2013. “They just said, ‘Oh, case dismissed. Don’t worry about nothing.’ What do you mean, ‘Don’t worry about nothing?’ You just took over three years of my life.”

More than two and a half years into his detainment, Browder was offered a plea deal that would have likely released him under a time served sentence. He did not take the deal because he did not want to admit guilt for the crime.

READ MORE: NYC sued over violence against young inmates at notorious Rikers Island jail

Browder struggled with depression and attempted suicide several times both during and after his incarceration, according to The New Yorker. He spent time in the psychiatric wards of both St. Barnabas Hospital in the Bronx and Harlem Hospital after his release.

Browder has said he was subject to numerous assaults and beating from prison guards and other inmates. Rikers Island surveillance footage of two instances in which he was assaulted -- one by an officer and one by a large group of inmates -- were provided to The New Yorker.

www.youtube.com/watch?v=xYgP2s_TZzg

Upon his suicide, The New Yorker's Jennifer Gonnerman -- also author of the feature article on Browder published last October -- wrote that he was interested in public release of the footage if only to prevent others from suffering the same fate.

"He was driven by the same motive that led him to talk to me for the first time, a year earlier," Gonnerman wrote. "He wanted the public to know what he had gone through, so that nobody else would have to endure the same ordeals."

Browder's story was a catalyst in New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio's decision to reform parts of the city's criminal justice system. Speeding up city courts was one reform directly related to Browder.

“Kalief Browder’s tragic story put a human face on Rikers Island’s culture of delay—a culture with profound human and fiscal costs for defendants and our city,” de Blasio told The New Yorker in April. “We promised to find ways to improve the quality of justice in New York City and cut down on unnecessary incarceration—and this reform package showcases a commitment from the City, the courts, district attorneys, public defenders, and law enforcement to root out unnecessary case delay.”

Browder's attorney, Paul V. Prestia, said the case was "bigger than Michael Brown," the unarmed teenager who was shot by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, last August. Brown's death sparked unrest across the nation over police profiling and abuse, especially in communities of color.

“When you go over the three years that he spent [in jail] and all the horrific details he endured, it’s unbelievable that this could happen to a teen-ager in New York City," Prestia said following Browder's death, according to The New Yorker. "He didn’t get tortured in some prison camp in another country. It was right here!”

source: http://rt.com/usa/265807-browder-rikers-suicide-teenager/

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That's some due process..
 

gopher

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sad that so many innocents are abused like this - naturally the person who had him arrested will not suffer for causing all this

meanwhile there will be some here who still insist that we need to stay involved in foreign wars rather than fix the mess that exists here
 

MHz

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Good thing that was an isolated case and it could never happen again, ever. Let me guess, that prison never has any empty beds.
 

gopher

Hall of Fame Member
Jun 26, 2005
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prison (or post incarceration) suicides occur more often than one might think but it is rarely studied or discussed in society - sadly, the social and institutional racism that leads to these unhappy events gets ignored and nothing is done to take preventive steps which could have avoided this needless tragedy
 

B00Mer

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Good thing that was an isolated case and it could never happen again, ever. Let me guess, that prison never has any empty beds.

What you never watch Law & Order?? Rikers Island.. probably one of the busiest prisons in the USA & New York City.

meanwhile there will be some here who still insist that we need to stay involved in foreign wars rather than fix the mess that exists here

Oh don't concern yourself, a Republican will be voted in and they will have the Draft.. you can join in the fun soon

Oh yeah, Canada no longer allows cowardice draft dodgers into Canada as refugees.. Yippie!!
 

SLM

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Mar 5, 2011
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All the derailing posts have been moved. This is rather an interesting topic/news article.....let's try to keep it that way.
 

MHz

Time Out
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If 3 years is not a crime then nobody is safe, except if you are rich and (most likely) White. Looks the KKK is back in charge. Last time I saw a white American get into trouble was when he was going to get caned for keying a cars paint. International incident of major proportions and he still got caned. I'll also bet he never keyed a car again.

What caught my eye was the suicide after being let loose. When they say the rate is higher they are a little sketchy on the details for obvious reasons. If black neighborhoods are kept in a depressed condition intentionally then for some the structured life of prison would actually more attractive than being homeless and out of work in the free and open place that other would call a Ghetto.
What did the 2 years in solitary do to somebody is a child (16) when he enters the system? This might be why they call the illegal torture prisons 'black sites'.