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Subject: NY Judge Rips 'Terrible' Conditions At NYC Federal Jails - Law360
Date: Wed, 06 May 2020 11:46:16 +0000
NY Judge Rips 'Terrible' Conditions At NYC Federal Jails
By Stewart Bishop
Share us on:
Law360, New York (May 5, 2020, 9:12 PM
EDT) -- A New York federal judge on Tuesday
derided the "unfortunate, terrible" conditions
at New York City's two main federal jails, both
before and after the coronavirus pandemic,
during a hearing where he sentenced an
admitted fraudster who tried to steal $2.5
million from a law firm to time served.
U.S. District Judge Richard M. Berman
criticized the "deficient system" at the
Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn
and said he "has serious doubts" about the
ability of the Metropolitan Correctional Center
in Manhattan to safely and properly house its
detainees.
Judge Berman, who presided over the
criminal sex trafficking case against Jeffrey
Epstein until his suicide at the MCC in
August, said he was very disappointed that to
his knowledge, U.S. Attorney General William
Barr has not conducted a thorough
assessment and investigation of the Bureau
of Prisons nationwide, something he said
Barr pledged to do around the time of
Epstein's suicide.
https://www.law360.corn/articles/1270636/ny-judge-
rips-terrible-conditions-at-nyc-federal-jails
EFTA00025383
In particular, Judge Berman said as far as he
knows, there have been no serious reviews
forthcoming of the poor living conditions at
either the MCC or the MDC — which he said
are dirty and infested with drugs and violence
— conditions that have been many times
compounded by the coronavirus outbreak.
"It is an outrage I have to say, and I'm very
disappointed the Attorney General has not
followed through on making a thorough
investigation of conditions that those of us in
the business, as it were, are all too familiar
with," Judge Berman said. "And more
importantly has not implemented appropriate
changes."
A spokesman for the U.S. Department of
Justice in Washington, D.C., did not
immediately respond to a request for
comment.
The judge's remarks came at the sentencing
via video and audio conference of Terrance
Morgan, who pled guilty to bank fraud
conspiracy in October for his role in a scheme
to steal $2.5 million from an unnamed law
firm's bank account.
Morgan, a citizen of Liberia and U.S. resident,
already served about 14 months in custody
with the Bureau of Prisons — including at the
MDC — Immigration and Customs
Enforcement and local authorities.
An attorney for Morgan, Sam Schmidt, said
he was pleased with Judge Berman's
EFTA00025384
decision.
"It is gratifying to hear that Judge Berman
fully understands what our clients are going
through in the Bureau of Prisons at this time,
especially in MCC and MDC," Schmidt said.
While Judge Berman didn't explicitly tie
Morgan's sentence of time served, three
months of home confinement and four years
of supervised release to the conditions at the
MDC, and the dangers of the coronavirus to
inmates, it appeared to be a major factor. The
judge also said while he doesn't disagree that
Morgan's crime was a serious one, he said
the goals of general and specific deterrence
have been met, and the term of incarceration
he has already served is adequate.
The judge also appeared to give some
amount of weight to an April 30 report by
Homer Venters, a physician and
epidemiologist, who toured the 1,700-inmate
facility recently to observe the jail's response
to COVID-19.
In the report, which was filed in a proposed
class action brought by medically vulnerable
inmates seeking release from the prison
because of the coronavirus, Venters
excoriated the medical care at MDC in his
expert report.
Venters, who previously served as the chief
medical officer for New York City's jails, cited
an array of problems including faulty virus
screening, ignored and discarded sick-call
requests, inept medical care and a "gross
EFTA00025385
deviation" from Centers for Disease
Controland Prevention and correctional
health care standards.
"I have to say it's a very serious document. It
is not surprising to me. I've personally
become acutely aware of the deficiencies at
the ... MDC," Judge Berman said, citing a
well-known incident in January 2019 when a
fire took out the jail's power and heat.
Inmates were left in frigid conditions for a
week and denied meetings with their
attorneys or any other visits.
That incident led to an ongoing lawsuit by the
Federal Defenders of New York against the
BOP over attorneys' access to clients in the
MDC. That case is currently in mediation,
which includes the MCC as well.
Judge Berman said Venters' report requires
that there be a response from the BOP to the
criticisms in the document.
"Such a response is long overdue," Judge
Berman said. "It was long overdue when
Jeffrey Epstein committed suicide, long
before then."
The government is represented by Dina
McLeod and Robert B. Sobelman of the U.S.
Attorney's Office for the Southern District of
New York.
Morgan is represented by Sam A. Schmidt.
The case is U.S. v. Morgan et al., case
number 1:19-cr-00209, in the U.S. District
EFTA00025386
Court for the Southern District of New York.
--Additional reporting by Frank G. Runyeon.
Editing by Amy Rowe.
EFTA00025387
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