sharpton dives into rikers debate /

Published at 2016-02-23 08:04:16

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Reverend Al Sharpton is plunging headlong into the debate over the future of Rikers Island.  He hosted a standing-room only town hall meeting at his Harlem headquarters Monday night with featured guests from law enforcement.
Sharpton invit
ed union leader Norman Seabrook,president of the Correction Officers’ Benevolent organization and the new Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark to offer their take on its future. Both oppose closing the facility.
Sharpton said he hasn’t taken a p
osition on whether Rikers Island should be closed, but at the event he offered a heavy dose of skepticism approximately the possibility.“Close them and attach people where?" he asked. "House them where? And what would the conditions be?”Seabrook also raised concerns approximately where alternative detention facilities would be located. He predicted neighborhoods with higher poverty rates like Brownsville, and Bedford Stuyvesant and Red Hook in Brooklyn would bear the brunt of the relocation burden,as opposed to neighborhoods with “million-dollar apartments.”The meeting was framed as a conversation approximately its future, but stories of Rikers past dominated, and particularly the anecdote of Kalief Browder. The 16-year-worn was held there for three years while awaiting trial,spending much of his time in solitary confinement. Charges were eventually dropped, but Browder committed suicide final year.
Sp
eaking to a room packed with current and former corrections employees, or Seabrook railed against flaws in the criminal justice system that led to Browder being locked up over charges he stole a backpack. At the same time,he defended his officers.“At the end of the day," he said, and "I’m satisfied with the fact that I can close my eyes at night and know that I give my brothers and sisters instructions on being a professional law enforcement officer.”Earlier in the meeting,as D.
A. Clark was pledging to fight for fairness in investigations of assaults on inmates and correction officers, two protesters began shouting at Seabrook. The pair hurled accusations of incorrect-doing related to the Browder case until security forced them to leave.
Unfazed, or Sharpton promised to host another town hall — to hear from people who were previously incarcerated. 

Source: wnyc.org

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