Rabbi: Bias led to firing from jail job
A FORMER Jewish chaplain working in a Brooklyn federal jail said his bosses discriminated against him — and ultimately fired him — for his religion.
Rabbi Naftali Ausch, a certified chaplain and Hasidic rabbi in Williamsburg, is now suing the federal prison system and his former bosses who, he says, subjected him to the discrimination, a hostile workplace and retaliation when he complained.
Ausch started as a chaplain in the Metropolitan Detention Center in July 2009 and said he did well by the inmates he counseled. Prisoners of all faiths talked with him at the Sunset Park facility and he enjoyed the work.
“People felt comfortable with me,” Ausch, 64, told the Daily News on Tuesday. But problems started for him around fall 2012, when the Rev. David Barry became Ausch’s supervisor.
Ausch had a Monday-to-Friday schedule, which let him attend morning prayers and make it home at the end of the work week for Shabbat. But that became a hassle. Barry, a Jesuit priest, “always gave Rabbi Ausch a difficult time about accommodating his religion,” said the lawsuit filed Monday in Brooklyn federal court.
In December 2012, Ausch told Barry about volunteers for the upcoming holiday of Purim, which fell that year on a Sunday. Ausch said he didn’t work on Sundays, but Barry allegedly lost his temper and vowed to “fix that.” Two days later, Barry put Ausch on a Sunday-to-Thursday schedule.
“I’m sure your God will forgive you. He is a forgiving God,” Barry said, according to Ausch’s lawsuit.
The new schedule began earlier in the day, which interfered with Ausch’s morning prayers. When the rabbi didn’t show up the Sunday of Purim, he was disciplined and docked pay. Ausch’s suit said Barry “often made derogatory remarks to the Jewish inmates and other chaplains in front of Rabbi Ausch, and when Rabbi Ausch was not present. These comments were perceived by Ausch, as well as his fellow chaplains, to be antiSemitic.”
The rabbi filed complaints with the Bureau of Prisons, which he said only led to further scrutiny from Barry, and then another supervisor, after Barry retired around September 2014.
Ausch was fired in October 2015 for bringing in tefillin, a prayer accessory that prison authorities claimed was contraband. When he heard about his termination, Ausch said he was “shocked to death” and cried as he went home to his wife.
Barry could not be immediately reached for comment. The Bureau of Prisons did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
From March 2013 through November of that year, Sohngen, who went by the aliases “Helmuth Moss” and “Stephen Weierbach,” allegedly swapped texts with a pimp in order to buy sex from minors, authorities said.
The pimp trafficked the girls from his Davidson Ave. apartment in the Bronx, taking “sexually suggestive” photos of several minors, which he then posted on Backpage.com, “offering to sell them for sex acts,” according to court papers.
The criminal complaint contains disturbing texts authorities said were exchanged between Sohngen and the unidentified pimp — including price negotiations for sex acts. Sohngen and the pimp used code to describe the girls, inverting the numbers for