Elected officials and public defenders are calling on Big Apple prosecutors to completely stop requesting cash bail in all cases, saying it’s the “driving cause” behind the “ongoing humanitarian crisis” at the beleaguered Rikers Island.
Four state senators, nine assembly members and one City Council member sent an open letter to the city’s five district attorneys on Tuesday and held a rally Wednesday morning saying prosecutors’ decision to seek bail is subjecting thousands of presumptively innocent New Yorkers to “torture.”
“Throughout the year, a rising jail population has led to the steady degradation of the conditions at Rikers. In the last few months, the conditions have worsened so substantially that people are dying regularly and an unprecedented crisis prevails,” says the letter, referencing the 12 people who’ve died at the facility this year.
“While there are other contributing forces to this shameful situation — COVID, staff absenteeism, an abdication of DOC responsibility — there is no doubt that the driving cause behind it remains the decision of your offices to seek bail recklessly and in virtually every eligible case. Those decisions now leave thousands of poor New Yorker — mostly Black and brown — to endure torture every day.”
A 2020 state law limited the number of crimes for which a judge could impose bail — which critics have blamed for causing a surge in violence across the city.
The letter from the politicians and public defenders called the situation at Rikers a “crisis.” AP Photo/Seth Wenig, FileBut the letter, also signed by community groups and public defender organizations like the Legal Aid Society, accused prosecutors of violating bail laws by requesting “unaffordable bail or bail for people who pose no risk of flight.”
The letter included a series of anonymous anecdotes from arraignments in all five boroughs, including one from Brooklyn about a mentally ill man who faced a $75,000 cash or $150,000 bond for a weapons charge after he attempted to commit suicide in front of cops.
“Despite your knowledge that the man was suicidal and had serious physical disabilities, you requested unaffordable bail that sent him to Rikers Island where he suffered trauma and medical neglect, instead of allowing his family to transport him directly to the hospital for treatment,” the letter states.
In another Brooklyn case, prosecutors requested $50,000 bail for a man with no prior record accused of stealing packages from the lobby of a building.
“When this person was taken to Rikers, unable to afford the bail you requested, he spent two entire days on a bus parked outside of [Otis Bantum Correctional Center] because there was no room in intake,” the letter claims.
A spokesman for the Brooklyn DA’s Office said later Wednesday that the defendant has eight open cases, all from this year, including four felony burglaries and an alleged attempted home invasion while dressed as an Amazon worker. He also has multiple bench warrants related to those cases.
In Queens, the letter claims prosecutors “took advantage of one of the exceptions in the bail reform rollbacks” to ask for bail for a defendant with health issues caught shoplifting “winter clothes, toothpaste, soap and cleaning supplies.”
“Even after three family members of the person were located and volunteered to assist the person in making court appearances — and defense counsel offered to provide the person a phone — you continued to refuse to consent to the person’s release on supervision,” the letter states.
A spokesperson for the Queens DA’s office said the office “supports” criminal justice reforms, which make “most non-violent crimes ineligible for bail.”
“We continue to consider the least restrictive means that will ensure a defendant’s return to court, including supervised release and other options,” the spokesperson said.
The missive calls on the DA’s to immediately stop requesting bail in all cases to “ensure that not a single additional person is held in the inhumane conditions at Rikers” or at the least, consent to bail modifications so people who can pay can be released.
“Because your offices control bail requests, you can stem the flow of people to Rikers right now. Every time your ADAs request bail be set, particularly when they know that bail is unaffordable, they demonstrate a callous disregard for human life,” the letter reads.
“Jail is not supposed to be a death sentence. You must act now.”
In response to the ongoing issues on Rikers Island, the Manhattan DA’s office said it already consented to the pretrial release of 24 felony defendants, immediately resolved six felony cases that allowed detainees to leave the jail and dismissed two misdemeanor cases for defendants being held on $1 bail. The office noted that the DOC could still be detaining some individuals if they have other holds, such as a parole violation, or if they’re facing charges in other counties.
The office also implemented temporary policy changes last week, which are still in effect, to reduce the number of defendants being sent to the problem-plagued complex, a spokesperson said.
“We will refrain from making justified bail applications in situations where defendants are likely to fail to appear if bail is not set, but where we believe the threat of confinement under these conditions outweighs the threat to the community,” the office told its prosecutors in a memo last week.
The letter calls on DAs to immediately stop requesting bail in all cases. AP Photo/Jeenah MoonThey told prosecutors to not ask for bail on “non-violent crimes committed by non-violent offenders, in circumstances that do not implicate the safety of other people,” the office said.
“We hope that the conditions on Rikers Island improve quickly. While we are duty bound to insure [sic] public safety, we are also aware that no one can avert their eyes from the conditions being reported at Rikers,” the memo stated.
“In light of the conditions faced by those individuals detained at Rikers, we have endeavored to ensure that our practices are as equitable as possible, even though we understand that releasing some individuals may, unfortunately, lead to additional low level crime.”
DAs in the Bronx and Staten Island didn’t return a request for comment.







