JAILS: Bitter Outbreak on Rikers Island
A jail official on his rounds spotted the ominous signs around 9 p.m. in cell block 7: jagged tiles handy for weapons missing from a bathroom wall and menacing whispering between cells. Then, recalls another official, Deputy Assistant Warden Roy Caldwood: "All hell broke loose."
Last week at New York City's 42-year-old House of Detention for Men on Rikers Island, about 1,500 inmates, who were out on the catwalks for free time, swarmed in every direction, some passing through holes gouged between the asphalt walls of the cell blocks. Prisoners carried broken pipes, broomsticks and rocks. A few quickly seized five guards as hostages. The inmates, more than 80% of whom are black or Puerto Rican, rapidly gained control of six of the eight cell blocks, but guards thwarted a takeover of cell block 6 by pitching tear-gas into a 3-ft.-wide hole in a wall, stopping prisoners from a neighboring cell from passing through.
Eerie Mist. Within several hours some 500 police and extra guards were rushed to the jail. Commissioner of Correction Benjamin J. Malcolm and Peter Tufo, the unpaid head of the city's Board of Correction, arrived and bravely agreed to enter one of the cell blocks held by the rebels in order to negotiate. Donning gas masks, the two men crawled through the hole in cell block 6 into an eerie tear-gas mist. They then asked the tense inmates for "delegates." Seven leaders who carried homemade shivs and wore blankets and towels around their heads as a protection against the gas returned with them for talks in the police-held cells.
They called for total amnesty and an end to overcrowding and other grievances. Ultimately, Bronx District Attorney Mario Merola appeared and agreed not to press any charges against the inmates in exchange for the release of the hostages. The amnesty was a virtually unprecedented action in prison insurrections. Commissioner Malcolm also promised to use "all the resources" of the Correction Department to solve the problems at Rikers Island's House of Detention for Men.
All the resources may never be enough. Ironically, a court decision aimed at improving conditions in local jails probably contributed to last week's explosion. Early in 1974 Judge Morris Lasker ruled that the wretched conditions at Manhattan's House of Detention for Men called The Tombs violated the constitutional rights of prisoners. New York City could not afford to improve the jail and so closed it down, sending some 500 street-wise inmates to the Rikers' lockup. These transfers and others swelled Rikers' population from 1,036 to 1,879. Today each block holds up to 325 inmates, 85 more than "capacity." So far this year, the budget-pinched Correction Department has laid off 654 employees, dangerously thinning the guards at Rikers from five to four per cell block.
- 1
- 2
- NEXT PAGE »
Most Popular »
- The '00s: Goodbye (at Last) to the Decade from Hell
- Dubai's Woes Are a Blow to Its Ambitious Ruler, Sheik Mo
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- 'Bohemian Rhapsody,' Muppet-Style
- Amanda Knox Murder Trial Moves Toward a Climax
- Can the Banks Force Dubai into Foreclosure?
- Florida's Deadly Hit-and-Run Car Culture
- Woods Withdraws from Tourney, Cites Injuries
- Workers of the World vs. China Inc.
- The Women of Islam
- The Growing Backlash Against Overparenting
- The '00s: Goodbye (at Last) to the Decade from Hell
- Florida's Deadly Hit-and-Run Car Culture
- Why Ireland Is Running Out of Priests
- The Thriving Cult of Greed and Power
- New Evidence That Early Therapy Helps Autistic Kids
- Will Private Equity Be the Next Meltdown?
- Why Big Shopping Bargains Are Bad News For America
- Want to Boost Your Memory? Try Sleeping on It
- Energizer Bunnies: Turning Rabbits into Green Fuel







RSS