In
an extraordinary rebuke of the New York City Department of Correction,
the federal government said on Monday that the department had
systematically violated the civil rights of male teenagers held at
Rikers Island by failing to protect them from the rampant use of
unnecessary and excessive force by correction officers.
The office of Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan, released its findings in a graphic 79-page report
that described a “deep-seated culture of violence” against youthful
inmates at the jail complex, perpetrated by guards who operated with
little fear of punishment.
The
report, addressed to Mayor Bill de Blasio and two other senior city
officials, singled out for blame a “powerful code of silence” among the
Rikers staff, along with a virtually useless system for investigating
attacks by guards. The result was a “staggering” number of injuries
among youthful inmates, the report said.
The report, which comes at a time of increasing scrutiny of the jail complex after a stream of revelations about Rikers’s problems, also found that the department relied to an “excessive and inappropriate” degree on solitary confinement to punish teenage inmates
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