Albro v. Onondaga County, NY

681 F. Supp. 991, 1988 WL 30995
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. New York
DecidedApril 5, 1988
Docket5:85-cv-01425
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 681 F. Supp. 991 (Albro v. Onondaga County, NY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albro v. Onondaga County, NY, 681 F. Supp. 991, 1988 WL 30995 (N.D.N.Y. 1988).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM — DECISION AND ORDER

MUNSON, Chief Judge.

Once again, the persistent overcrowding and other unsafe conditions at the Onondaga County Public Safety Building draw the attention of this court. Over the course of the past 27 months, this court has issued a succession of increasingly detailed orders designed to temporarily and partially correct some of these conditions at the Public Safety Building. These orders were also designed to show, through a recitation of the facts and the law, what needed to be done and why. It was the hope of this court that those responsible for the Public Safety Building would discern from these orders and the proof in the hearings upon which the orders were based the problems involved and the need for their prompt resolution. The court has been informed that the county defendants, who have primary responsibility for the Public Safety Building, have recently evidenced efforts to responsibly confront the issues which necessitated plaintiffs’ commencement and continued prosecution of this action.

Despite these efforts, more needs to be done. The court is well aware that the expenditure of tax dollars on prisons is unpopular with the public and an anathema to politicians. Nonetheless, the time for delay is over, difficult choices must now be made.

The public should realize that this order is directed towards conditions at the Public Safety Building rather than at the Onondaga County Correctional Facility at James-ville, New York. The Jamesville Penitentiary holds inmates who have been convicted and sentenced to prison terms. By contrast, the Public Safety Building's population is made up almost entirely of pre-trial detainees, persons who not only have not been tried, but who are presumed to be innocent under the United States Constitution. Moreover, the prison’s staff numbers in the hundreds and includes approximately 150-170 guards who are directly exposed to any dangers created by the conditions at the Public Safety Building. Thus, the problems at the Public Safety Building are indeed quite human in their dimensions, and their resolution will benefit many, both inside and outside the facility.

In reaching the conclusions contained in this Memorandum-Decision and Order, the court draws from the previous testimony of witnesses and the facts stipulated to by the parties. It is the court’s intention, barring unforeseen circumstances, that this Memorandum-Decision and Order shall serve as the final adjudication of the merits in this action and shall resolve plaintiffs’ request for a permanent injunction.

I.

While the parties are surely familiar with this court's Memorandum-Decision and Or *993 der of January 31, 1986, as amended on February 3, 1986, and its Order rendered from the bench on June 26, 1987, a short review is appropriate. Plaintiffs commenced this action in October of 1985 pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. They pointed to the combined effect of the consistent overcrowding at the Public Safety Building, the housing of inmates on mattresses on catwalks, the failure to segregate mentally stable and unstable inmates, the insufficient number of deputies, the threat of violence and other problems in support of their claim that their rights protected by the first, fourth, fifth, sixth, eighth, ninth and fourteenth amendments to the United States Constitution, the Constitution of the State of New York and various New York statutes and regulations were being violated.

Plaintiffs initially sought preliminary in-junctive relief and a hearing in that regard was held on October 31 and November 1, 1985. Much of the salient testimony from that hearing is reviewed in this court’s January 31, 1986 Memorandum-Decision and Order. As the court then noted, overcrowding by as much as 31.1% over the prison’s rated capacity of 212 inmates had existed since July of 1983. Other testimony confirmed the existence and severity of the problems cited by plaintiffs and led the court to conclude that preliminary relief was appropriate. That relief required that no inmate be housed on a corridor floor and that mentally stable and unstable inmates be segregated. The court suggested, but did not require, that the county discontinue accepting discretionary inmates, who include certain parole violators and those accepted pursuant to contracts with other counties and the Federal government. The court also urged the parties to devise and present specific proposals designed to effectuate a reduction in the Public Safety Building’s inmate population.

Soon after the issuance of the court’s Memorandum-Decision and Order the county terminated its contracts with the federal government and other counties; however, no further efforts were undertaken to reduce the prison’s population. On July 17, 1986, after several months of fruitless efforts between the parties, the court appointed Mr. Donald Stoughton as the court’s Special Master. Despite Mr. Stoughton’s efforts, the parties remained unable to accomplish and maintain a reduced prison population. One principal barrier was the state’s intransigence concerning removal of its state-ready prisoners. That problem, along with others, compelled the court to direct the parties to appear at a hearing in order to show cause why a maximum prisoner capacity or other appropriate interim relief should not be ordered.

That hearing was held on June 18, 1987. The court rendered its decision from the bench on June 26,1986. Prior to rendering its decision, the court heard from Mr. Stoughton who informed the court of the then current inmate population figures, figures which were only somewhat higher than those for the preceding months. During the week of June 26 the inmate population averaged 288 inmates, nearly 36 percent above capacity. Included in that total were 91 state-ready prisoners.

Following Mr. Stoughton’s brief report, the court once again cited the litany of problems plaguing the Public Safety Building — the overcrowding, the failure to properly segregate prisoners, the lack of adequate recreational facilities, the dangers to prisoners and guards alike posed by housing prisoners on walkways and the chronic shortage of prison personnel, including guards. Particularly disturbing to the court was the fact that, in the 17 months following the court’s January 31, 1986 Memorandum-Decision and Order, the parties had been unable to arrive at any plan designed to reduce overcrowding at the Public Safety Building. Unswayed by the county’s assertion that if the state were to remove all of its prisoners the Public Safety Building’s population would be within the 212 limit, yet disturbed by the state’s lack of cooperation, the court entered an Order directed at both county and state defendants.

The state was directed to reduce the number of state-ready inmates to 40 by July 24, 1987 and to a maximum of 10 by *994 August 21, 1987. The county, in turn, was directed not to permit the prison population to exceed 248 from July 24, 1987 onward. In a manner similar to that found in its January 31, 1986 Memorandum-Decision and Order, the court suggested means for the county to effectively reduce the Public Safety Building’s population to the newly imposed limit. These suggestions included the extreme measures of releasing prisoners or terminating the delivery of new inmates.

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681 F. Supp. 991, 1988 WL 30995, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albro-v-onondaga-county-ny-nynd-1988.