New York Daily News

Fed correx officer guilty in sex rap

- BY STEPHEN REX BROWN

A former Metropolit­an Correction­al Center officer pleaded guilty Wednesday to sexually abusing inmates as a lockdown at the troubled jail entered its seventh day.

Colin Akparanta, 43, copped to engaging in sexual acts with seven women at the federal jail. Prosecutor­s said one of the women was molested through the slot in the door of her solitary confinemen­t cell. Akparanta pleaded guilty to abusive sexual contact and deprivatio­n of civil rights.

“As he has now admitted, Colin Akparanta abused his position of authority as a correction­al officer at the [the lockup] to sexually abuse at least seven inmates whose safety and security he was duty-bound to protect. This office has prosecuted, and will continue to prosecute, correction­al officers who use their positions to engage in criminal conduct, and I encourage anyone with knowledge of this or similar criminal conduct involving correction­al officers at the [the jail] to contact my office,” Manhattan U.S. Attorney Geoffrey

Berman said.

Akparanta, of Irvington, N.J., asked victims for their contact informatio­n so he could reach them after they were released from custody, prosecutor­s said.

He smuggled contraband, including feminine hygiene products, into the jail for at least one victim in exchange for sexual acts. The depraved officer, who abused his victims between 2012 and 2018, took advantage of Bureau of Prisons policy that made feminine hygiene products available for purchase at the commissary. That policy was changed in 2017, making the products available free.

The guilty plea in Manhattan Federal Court occurred while the troubled jail next door remained on lockdown despite mounting public pressure.

The ban on family and attorney visits is because of a tip a gun was smuggled into the jail. A search of the lockup where Jeffrey Epstein killed himself uncovered a large amount of contraband — but no gun, the Daily News reported.

Federal defenders have criticized the Bureau of Prisons for not providing informatio­n about the lockdown, which they say violates inmates’ constituti­onal rights to an attorney.

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