Edwin Quispe grew to become the ninth particular person to die this 12 months in NYC Division of Corrections custody, or shortly after their launch, when workers discovered the 33-year-old man unresponsive whereas being held on the Eric M. Taylor Heart on Rikers Island.
Such incidents have turn out to be the reasoning behind the Metropolis Council passing a invoice earlier this month mandating the DOC report custody deaths to the general public and members of the family inside 24 hours, in addition to, to the Board of Corrections (BOC) oversight company, the people’ legal professional and the Workplace of the Medical Examiner. The invoice awaits Mayor Eric Adams’ signature however is a couple of votes away from supermajority help.
“A notification from the DOC is the naked minimal type of decency and respect for many who are grieving the lack of family members,” mentioned Public Advocate Jumaane Williams in a press release. “Increasingly persons are dropping their lives on Rikers, and this administration is offering much less and fewer transparency. Passing Int. 0423 will assist to verify the Division of Correction (DOC) is held accountable for people who died in its custody, and is chargeable for notifying the general public of their passing.”
Precisely how town notifies next-of-kin stays doubtful. In 2023, the division quietly discontinued publicly reporting deaths in custody, though a spokesperson then maintained the decedent’s next-of-kin and authorized counsel would be told.
A number of deaths went unreported on the time, together with that of Joshua Valles, who suffered a fractured cranium, regardless of jail officers claiming he died from a coronary heart assault. A report from the unbiased monitor assigned from the Nunez class motion lawsuit revealed the true extent of his accidents.
Ending public notifications for custody deaths led NYC Comptroller Brad Lander to query whether or not the 2023 dying depend was correct. Even right this moment, his DOC dashboard makes use of an asterisk when updating the reported dying depend in metropolis jails.
The invoice mandates not solely household entry to info, however belongings. Its principal sponsor, Metropolis Council Member Carlina Rivera, realized from crafting the laws that DOC discarded Brandon Rodriguez’s private results after his dying earlier than they may very well be collected by his mom Tamara Carter. “No mom ought to need to beg for her youngster’s belongings and be informed they had been tossed out like trash,” Rivera mentioned.
Carter talked about to the Amsterdam Information that the Corrections Division didn’t notify her when Rodriguez died. As a substitute, she realized of her son’s dying from a stranger’s Fb message.
“When Brandon left this world, it was very disheartening to not obtain his gadgets,” mentioned Carter. “Particularly his cellphone being that it had photos along with his nieces and household. [DOC] had been notified nearly instantly that we wished his issues by my lawyer. And I believe every week and a half in, they informed me his gadgets had been destroyed. In order that was very upsetting.
“After I had the possibility to assist [with] this invoice, I used to be completely going for it. Any household will need their youngster, brother, uncle[‘s] gadgets to maintain endlessly like I’ve completed with…all his stuff at house.”
Rivera says the laws acquired enter from advocates and impacted members of the family like Carter from Freedom Agenda, a member group finest recognized for championing the Rikers closure plan.
In response to the invoice, details about deaths in custody can be revealed on the Corrections Division web site after the next-of-kin is notified, offering the general public with the people’ title, age, race, gender and the place they died.
“Nothing can deliver again my brother,” mentioned Freedom Agenda member Amariliz Torres, sister of Erick Tavira who died on Rikers in 2022, in a press release. “However the remedy my household acquired from the Division of Correction deepened our ache. The crushing information of any human being’s passing needs to be delivered with care and compassion to those that love them. And we must always have transparency concerning the failures that led to their dying.”
The invoice additionally allows the company to convene a Jail Demise Evaluation Board which Rivera hopes will improve interagency cooperation. To be clear, not each dying in custody stems from violent situations on Rikers Island, which are sometimes the main focus of reforms like these posed by the 2015 Nunez settlement. Christian Collado died earlier this month in palliative care after he was detained by the DOC. Nonetheless, the invoice would mandate extra transparency on jail workers whose misconduct contributed to an individual in custody’s dying.
“Accountability isn’t a selection, it’s a primary obligation for this company with so many New Yorkers in its care,” mentioned Rivera. “And when there is no such thing as a transparency, there is no such thing as a belief and so at this level, we actually should be diligent in defining the protocols that DOC should comply with when notifying the household of an individual in custody why they died or who suffered from a medical emergency.
“And that’s vital as a result of [Rikers Island] is a spot with such a deeply entrenched tradition of dysfunction and abuse and violence so we must be taking as many steps to extend transparency and likewise deliver down the inhabitants.”



















