New York Daily News

Security big downplays violence: claim

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THERE’S SOMETHING hokey going on at the city’s pokey.

As pressure mounts to reduce violence at the troubled jails, top correction bosses — seeking to create the impression they have turned matters around — repeatedly order underlings to downgrade incidents, a Daily News review of scores of internal documents shows.

Knife fights and ugly brawls between inmates, even attacks on officers, often end up airbrushed in the records as routine “log book entries,” sources familiar with the process say.

The main culprit, critics say, is Security Chief Turhan Gumusdere, a man who has faced scandal in the past for distorting data in the jails by deleting hundreds of fights among inmates from the records when he was a deputy warden.

They also have questions, they say, about Correction Commission­er Joseph Ponte, a touted reformer who nonetheles­s promoted Gumusdere into his job, even after the city’s Department of Investigat­ion recommende­d he be demoted.

While vowing to alter the culture of violence, Ponte has done nothing to address flaws in the record-keeping process, either exerting pressure or looking the other way, all to placate City Hall, several sources say.

One officer, requesting anonymity, called the practice a “purging” of unfavorabl­e stats.

Gumusdere and the department strongly deny any wrongdoing. A department spokeswoma­n said Ponte declined to respond to the accusation­s.

The cases probed by The News seem to defy reason.

For example, a Rikers Island assault by four inmates leaving another inmate bloodied with severe gashes to his face is first depicted by front-line officers as a “violent incident.”

But an order arrives to downgrade the episode, and it is swallowed up in the ledger as another workaday footnote.

“They lie about the use of force statistics,” charged an officer who asked to remain anonymous. “This is a practice to keep the stats down.”

Now the City Council, citing computatio­ns that don’t add up, is demanding answers, starting with Elizabeth Crowley, who heads the committee overseeing the jails. She is calling on city Controller Scott Stringer to run an audit of the records.

This is not the first time jail brass, particular­ly Gumusdere, have come under fire for juking figures. The city’s Department of Investigat­ion found in 2011 that Gumusdere, while running a Rikers facility for troubled teens, “abdicated all responsibi­lity” in documentin­g incidents. DOI recommende­d he be demoted.

Instead, Ponte did the opposite, promoting Gumusdere, in a move requiring special City Hall permission, a source said.

In reviewing 11 specific cases, The News found nine downgrades. But according to several jails bosses, this number represents just a fraction of the cases that are skewed. Incidents are often not logged at all, with Gumusdere telling supervisor­s to “make it go away,” the sources say.

Experts agree that how the mayhem is chronicled is critical in a jail system rife with chaos. Each of the last two fiscal years has seen more than 100 stabbings and slashings, a threshold not passed since 1999 when the prison population of nearly 20,000 was about double its size today.

By all accounts, curbing the violence is a formidable challenge, complicate­d by the detainees themselves, often loath to cooperate, lest they be seen as snitches.

In one case, an inmate said three gashes on his face came from a fall against a bedpost. Another inmate said he injured his head falling on a “hot box.”

Doctors doubted their accounts, noting the injuries indicated a blade was used.

Correction officers labeled the incidents as “slashings” only to see them later downgraded. That catch-all category, a holdover from precompute­r times, is not included in data on violence.

The Correction Department vehemently denies any wrongdoing.

“Any claim that our numbers are manipulate­d is absolutely false,” said spokeswoma­n Dina Montes. “We have a rigorous process for capturing and reporting incidents.”

The allegation­s, though, are not a surprise to former warden Raino Hills, who succeeded Gumusdere as head of the juveniles complex. He blew the whistle against Gumusdere in 2011, telling DOI there were scores of cases left open to make it appear violence was down.

“Gumusdere is Gumusdere,” Hills told The News. “That’s his MO. That’s what he does.”

In an interview with The News last Tuesday, Gumusdere denied any broad attempt to downgrade cases. He said that since he became security chief in February, there have been only 14 such examples — a number hotly disputed by the several sources who spoke to The News.

“Everything is on video,” Gumusdere said. “Everything is on the up and up. I don’t know where all this is coming from. I can tell you one thing. Everything you have is wrong.”

Department rules are clear — when an inmate suffers a “serious injury” a report must be filed and

 ??  ?? Inmates Michael Bryant (r.) and Christian Sims (below, r.) and a Correction Dept. captain (inset) all had their cases downgraded in log books. Bryant’s was later upgraded to a stabbing after he complained.
Inmates Michael Bryant (r.) and Christian Sims (below, r.) and a Correction Dept. captain (inset) all had their cases downgraded in log books. Bryant’s was later upgraded to a stabbing after he complained.

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