New York Daily News

RIKERS: KEEP YOUR EYES OFF OUR SECURITY VIDEO

Board of Correction members slam new policy to restrict access; transparen­cy advocate says ‘It’s like Giuliani 2.0’

- BY GRAHAM RAYMAN

Rikers Island does not just hold detainees — it also holds many secrets about its operations, critics of its administra­tion claim.

Correction Department officials recently cut the Board of Correction’s access to internal security video, sparking a new skirmish over transparen­cy.

The Board of Correction (BOC) — an oversight body that issued several hard-hitting reports in 2022 on deaths in New York City jails — issued a statement decrying the Jan. 18 move to restrict access to the jails’ surveillan­ce video system, employees’ body cam video and handheld camera video.

Security video has been a central tool for Board of Correction investigat­ions that have found that staff and management breakdowns contribute­d to the 35 deaths in custody in 2021 and 2022. The 19 deaths in 2022 took place at a higher per capita rate than in any year in memory.

Despite the board’s complaint, the restrictio­ns — which came with little explanatio­n — remain in place.

The Correction Department’s move was just the latest by Mayor Adams’ administra­tion to restrict informatio­n on the city’s beleaguere­d jail system.

Moreover, city officials have shrugged off a demand for data from Congress, resisted providing certain data to the City Council and convinced a federal judge to keep secret a key report from the federal monitor due in February, critics charge.

“I think it’s an effort to control the narrative. They are closing ranks and being less transparen­t than in the past,” said Darren Mack of advocacy group Freedom Agenda, who is unaffiliat­ed with the board.

“It’s like Giuliani 2.0. We seem to be going into an era of a lack of transparen­cy and accountabi­lity. It seems like they are digging their heels in.”

During a Wednesday City Council hearing, Councilwom­an Carlina Rivera asked Correction Commission­er Louis Molina why video access was cut off.

“The board’s investigat­ions don’t focus on criminal wrongdoing,” Rivera told Molina. “Instead they seek what lessons can be learned.”

She asked the commission­er: “Do you not agree that the oversight and reports produced by BOC can be helpful to identify areas where the department’s procedures can be improved?”

Molina began his answer by attacking the board, saying he was “highly aggravated and disturbed that the BOC didn’t once for two years visit Rikers Island … while uniformed and nonuniform­ed staff came in every day during a global pandemic to manage a vulnerable population.”

In fact, board staffers were routinely in the jails during the pandemic, according to a statement posted publicly to LinkedIn Thursday by BOC Executive Director Amanda Masters.

“At great personal risk, many of them remained inside the jails even while COVID levels peaked, even when they could have worked from a safer location,” Masters wrote in the LinkedIn post. “They did that because they care passionate­ly about our mission.”

In addition, the Correction Department struggled to fill jail posts because of massive numbers of officers calling out sick for legitimate and illegitima­te reasons.

Molina insisted he stripped BOC of remote video access to “align our rules” involving the board with the City Charter.

“They have access to view these videos at our headquarte­rs facilities,” he said. “We

have set up stations so they can view in private during business hours.”

But the Charter says Board of Correction staff have the unrestrict­ed right of access to all “books, records, documents and paper” of the Correction Department and can compel production of records, the board’s Jan. 18 statement said.

“Independen­t access to security video without someone from DOC looking over your shoulder is hugely critical to the board’s operations,” a former BOC staffer said. “The board is the public’s representa­tive and I would think the average New Yorker would be concerned about this.”

Rivera and Molina butted heads again later in the hearing over another cause of tension — a feeling in the council that DOC has resisted complying with data requests, particular­ly about contraband smuggling.

“We are still waiting on data from previous hearings and I want to ensure that transparen­cy and the partnershi­p continues going forward,” Rivera said.

Molina bristled at this. “For the record, Madam Chair, we provided you with all of the data requests to your office and your team,” he said. “I don’t know if your team maybe hasn’t provided it to you.”

The News has previously reported that the council has struggled for months to get the Department of Correction to turn over certain informatio­n.

Neither has the city responded to a Dec. 22 request from Rep. Alexandra Ocasio-Cortez (D-Queens, Bronx) and two other members of a congressio­nal oversight committee for informatio­n about the jails.

“Time and again, members of the Rikers Island Interagenc­y Task Force, including (the Correction Department) have failed to deliver on promises of transparen­cy,” Democratic members of the committee said on Twitter last week.

Additional­ly, the city and the federal monitor overseeing Rikers convinced U.S. District Judge Laura Taylor Swain Nov. 17 to keep secret a statistica­l report due in February, suggesting the public may “misinterpr­et” the data.

The administra­tion recently appointed a new Board of Correction chair — retired MTA employee Dwayne Sampson, who is a longtime contributo­r to Adams going back to 2008. Sampson gave $1,300 to Adams’ 2021 mayoral campaign, records show. He also gave $1,250 to Adams’ state senate campaign from 2008 through 2018, and another $550 to Adams borough president campaigns in 2013 and 2017.

During the same period, Sampson made contributi­ons to the campaigns of other state and city legislator­s largely from Brooklyn, including Bill de Blasio.

Reached by The News, Sampson said he would be issuing a statement on his priorities “in a couple of weeks.” He declined further comment.

Meanwhile, the council is poised this week to confirm two of its own BOC appointees — DeAnna Hoskins, president of Just Leadership­USA, and Dr. Rachel Bedard, a former director of geriatrics and complex care for the jails’ health system.

“Every day that Rikers remains open equals horrific human suffering and harm including death,” Hoskins said in 2020 well before the 35 jail deaths in 2020 and 2021.

Hoskins was scheduled to be interviewe­d by The News last week but abruptly cancelled.

Bedard advocated for the release of aging or ailing detainees and wrote in a March 2022 piece in the New Yorker that Rikers during the pandemic was like “the worst cruise ship in the world: our patients held in close proximity, in violent, unsanitary conditions.”

 ?? ?? Rikers Island and the Department of Correction are under fire for restrictin­g the oversight Board of Correction’s access to the jail’s surveillan­ce video, body cam video and handheld camera video. In defense of the new policy, Correction Commission­er Louis Molina (inset opposite page) lashed out at critics.
Rikers Island and the Department of Correction are under fire for restrictin­g the oversight Board of Correction’s access to the jail’s surveillan­ce video, body cam video and handheld camera video. In defense of the new policy, Correction Commission­er Louis Molina (inset opposite page) lashed out at critics.
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