Touro Law to Honor Legal Lit Legend Grisham
/He’s sold hundreds of millions of novels and his legal thrillers have inspired generations of lawyers. Now he’s coming to Touro Law Center to pick up his prize.
Read MoreHe’s sold hundreds of millions of novels and his legal thrillers have inspired generations of lawyers. Now he’s coming to Touro Law Center to pick up his prize.
Read MoreHours before officials from ICE were scheduled to appear at a St. John’s University career fair amid student opposition, the agency gave the school the cold shoulder.
Read MoreAs the Queens’ population ages, more and more senior citizens are targeted by schemes designed to separate them from their money, assets and homes.
Read MoreAn alleged bomber who killed a landlord with a homemade explosive device at a home on 222nd Street in Brookville is facing new charges.
Read MoreAhead of Thursday’s Queens County Democratic party judicial convention — where party delegates will vote on the party’s nominees for Queens Supreme Court, Civil Term — three sources confirmed the four judges who will likely be nominated.
Read MoreInside the Queens County Courthouse in Long Island City a janitor cleaned the second floor bathroom, a lone security guard watched the front door while his colleagues took their lunch breaks and a judge sat chatting with visitors on the empty benches of his courtroom.
The dark hallways, normally bustling with people, sat mostly empty during a lull Wednesday, leaving signs of the building’s rich history out in the open for visitors to admire.
Read MoreA former union boss who was once regarded as the king of New York City’s jails may be headed to federal prison after a jury convicted him of corruption charges Wednesday.
As another semester begins at the St. John’s School of Law, second and third-year students have a chance to apply their legal training through the school’s various law clinics.
Read MoreIt turns out the mayor wasn’t full of hot air when he said the city would crack down on illegal hotel operators.
Read MoreIn the days since Council Member Rory Lancman and Queens Senior Executive Assistant District Attorney James Quinn debated about the future of Rikers Island, a specific exchange about Kalief Browder has garnered national attention.
While defending the proposal to close jails on Rikers Island and open four “borough-based” jails, Lancman — a potential candidate in the 2019 Queens DA race — frequently described how the bail system keeps low-income defendants in detention simply because they cannot afford to pay bail.
He cited the experience of Browder, a 16-year-old from the Bronx who was arrested for stealing a backpack and held on Rikers for three years — including two in solitary confinement — because he could not afford to pay his $3,000 bail. Ultimately, Browder’s C Felony charges were dismissed.
Two years after his release from Rikers, Browder committed suicide.
Quinn took issue with what he called the Browder “narrative” that has informed much of the debate about closing Rikers. Browder’s experience has become a symbol of a broader movement to reform the criminal justice system and end the mass incarceration of low-income people of color.
“Kalief Browder committed suicide two years after leaving Rikers,” Quinn said.
Several people in the audience applauded, to which Lancman declared his disgust.
“For the life of me, I can’t understand what people are clapping about,” Lancman said, adding that those who applauded should search “the dark place” within themselves.
Lancman said Browder’s mental health issues, which ultimately contributed to his suicide, were exacerbated by his years in solitary confinement.
The debate and the heated exchange about Browder were first reported by the Queens Daily Eagle last Thursday. The story garnered national attention when The Appeal, a national news outlet focused on the criminal justice system, reported on the exchange about Browder’s death.
On World Suicide Prevention Day, Monday, Tina Luongo, the attorney-in-charge of the Criminal Defense Practice at The Legal Aid Society called on Queens District Attorney Richard Brown to condemn the remarks made by Quinn on behalf of his office.
Luongo criticized Brown for not addressing the comments “where his deputy attempted to downplay the devastating effects that Rikers Island had on Kalief Browder.”
“It reflects a mindset of indifference towards those in our city’s jails — many of whom are detained because of unaffordable bail amounts and excessive charges levied by prosecutors — New Yorkers who are brutalized by staff, and subjected to the torture of solitary confinement, and who are struggling with depression and other mental illness,” Luongo said.
Brown did provide a response in a statement to the Queens Daily Eagle Tuesday.
“At a debate that was supposed to focus on whether Rikers should be repaired or replaced, Councilman Lancman chose to inject the tragic death of Kalief Browder,” Brown said. “ADA James Quinn sought to correct the narrative that had been put forth but in no way minimized the tragedy. ADA Quinn noted that Mr. Browder did not commit suicide while in Rikers, but did so two years after his release. He also noted that Mr. Browder would not have been released even if his bail had been posted, because he was also being held on a violation of probation charge. Attempts to distort, ADA Quinn’s words and their meaning are only intended to cloud the underlying issues.”
Brown also defended Quinn’s record as a “career prosecutor with more than 40 years of experience.”
“He is very well-regarded by his colleagues here in New York City and beyond,” Quinn said. “He began the debate last week by saying that we agree Rikers should be improved and upgraded, but that the current city plan is wasteful, would disrupt the criminal justice system and local neighborhoods for years to come and would delay any reform efforts for years. The same result could be achieved faster and for far less money by building a world-class prison system on Rikers. It is unfortunate that Mr. Lancman chose to inject the tragic death of this young man into a debate over a topic — the rebuilding of our prisons — that deserves far more attention than misleading and emotionally-charged sound bites.”
In a statement, Lancman told the Eagle that Browder’s detention and tragic death are symptoms of a flawed justice system that disproportionately detains low-income people of color in jails and prisons in New York and nationwide.
“The tragedy of Kalief Browder reflects the tragedy that is our broken criminal justice system, where thousands of people — almost all of them people of color — are criminalized for minor offenses or sit in jail solely for want of bail money just to have their day in court,” Lancman said. “Denying Kalief’s tragedy is to deny the burning, urgent need to fix our criminal justice system, and the responsibility of District Attorneys to lead the way in doing so.”
Classes began at Plaza College in Forest Hills on Monday and for a crop of first-year students, that meant encountering a new and potentially lucrative device: the stenotype machine.
Read MoreState Sen. Michael Gianaris introduced a bill on Sept. 4 that would mandate more frequent lead inspections of sinks and water fountains at schools and — for the first time — parks across the state.
Read MoreNew York Attorney General Barbara Underwood subpoenaed all eight Roman Catholic dioceses in the state Thursday as part of a broadening civil investigation into the handling of sex abuse allegations by church leaders. The investigation includes the Brooklyn Diocese, which serves Queens and Brooklyn.
Read MoreA Bronx Criminal Court Judge with Queens connections is the latest leader to reportedly consider a run for Queens District Attorney in 2019, but a source familiar with the courthouse said he is content on the bench.
Read MoreThe Legal Aid Society announced yesterday that it has created a GoFundMe campaign to help immigrant families afford certain filing fees on immigration applications that average about $750 per person.
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