Benjamin v. Koehler

710 F. Supp. 91, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3592, 1989 WL 34609
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedApril 7, 1989
Docket75 Civ. 3073 (MEL), 83 Civ. 2128 (MEL), 76 Civ. 2854 (MEL), 79 Civ. 4914 (MEL), 76 Civ. 101 (MEL), 76 Civ. 190 (MEL) and 79 Civ. 4913 (MEL)
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 710 F. Supp. 91 (Benjamin v. Koehler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Benjamin v. Koehler, 710 F. Supp. 91, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3592, 1989 WL 34609 (S.D.N.Y. 1989).

Opinion

LASKER, District Judge.

Throughout the United States in large metropolitan areas, and now some smaller ones, the plague of cocaine-derived “crack” has prompted a substantial increase in criminal arrests. The result in New York City has been to swell the population of its correctional facilities. As a result, the City once again seeks modifications of this court’s order of June 23, 1981 which imposes limitations on the number of inmates who can be housed in a dormitory and the square footage which must be afforded to each inmate for “living” purposes. 1 The City moves for an order allowing it, until June 15, 1989, to house detainees at the North Facility and the Rose M. Singer Center (“RMSC”) at forty (rather than the existing sixty) square feet for a period not *92 exceeding fifteen days for a particular inmate; and to house 58, rather than 50, detainees in each dormitory at the Correctional Institute for Men (“CIFM”) and the Anna M. Kross Center (“AMKC”), for a period not to exceed fifteen days per inmate.

Such relief, on a temporary and then extended basis has previously been requested by the City on a nearly annual basis since 1981. 2 The legal standards set forth in an earlier opinion, Benjamin v. Malcolm, 646 F.Supp. 1550, 1552-54 (S.D.N.Y.1986), remain applicable. Two criteria articulated there govern evaluation of the present application:

First, did the rise in arrests caused by the “crack” epidemic constitute a new and unforeseeable condition sufficient to warrant modification of the decrees or does the City itself bear responsibility for failing to foresee the present overcrowding crisis?
Second, are the defendants’ requested modifications, each of which must be tested separately, constitutionally acceptable or are they in derogation of the primary purpose of the decrees to ensure constitutionally minimal conditions for detainees?

Id. at 1554. In connection with the City’s application the court and the parties visited the former Rikers Island Hospital, the North Facility and the RMSC on April 6th. The court was well-acquainted with the AMKC and CIFM as a result of earlier visits.

I. FORESEEABILITY

The City argues for temporary modification of the decree in order to accommodate a 25 percent increase in the inmate population during the past year. The City admits that it foresaw a surge in arrests and new detainees resulting from the Police Department’s Tactical Narcotics Team (“TNT”) program and that “detailed plans were developed to accommodate the increased jail population.” 3 But it argues that non-TNT arrests have increased significantly during the past year and that this increase was unforeseeable. 4 It also asserts that the State’s reluctance promptly to accept parole violators whose hearings have been completed, as well as recently enacted legislative restrictions on the eligibility of inmates to participate in supervised detention programs, have contributed to the rise in population. 5

In affidavits in support of its application and during argument, the City has demonstrated its good faith efforts to accommodate the significant growth in inmate population through additional construction, the use of barges and other temporary facilities, budget increases for expanded alternatives to incarceration, and other measures. Ironically, however, these positive initiatives also demonstrate that the growth in inmate population was foreseeable. In addition, the City’s plans to accommodate the increase were in some instances facially inadequate; 6 their failure does not merit relief.

Moreover, as plaintiffs persuasively argue, the 25 percent increase in prison population during the past year has been close to City projections and not inconsistent with past periods of high increases. 7 Specifically, the non-TNT increase in population during the past year has been approximately 19 percent, less than a comparable *93 increase of 20 percent in 1985-86 8 about which this court stated:

The City cannot evade the fact that it bears a significant share of responsibility for the current crisis in its jails. ... [T]he City has consistently underestimated the projected jail populations and continued to do so even after the “crack” crisis commenced.

Benjamin v. Malcolm, 646 F.Supp. 1550, 1554 (S.D.N.Y.1986). The presence of excess parole violators and other categories of State inmates in the City prisons is lamentable but was certainly foreseeable; it has been consistently cited as a problem by the City during previous requests for relief. 9 As to legislative restrictions on the implementation of the supervised detention program, these were announced approximately one year ago and are thus not unexpected. 10 In sum, the City must accept the responsibility for dealing with the increase in population.

II. CONSTITUTIONAL ACCEPTABILITY

As indicated above, a defendant seeking modification of a decree, even in circumstances of institutional reform litigation where such modification is considered on a more flexible and generous basis, bears the burden of establishing that the relief requested will further, rather than frustrate, the purposes of the decree. In this case that burden is made heavier because, in spite of the efforts of the parties and continual monitoring and prodding by the Office of Compliance Consultants (“OCC”) (the agency specifically established to assist in bringing about compliance with the decrees) such compliance has not been accomplished in full at any of the four institutions in question during the eight year period that the decrees have been in existence.

A. North Facility 11

Two years have passed since relief of the very nature now requested for the North Facility was granted. In the interim, North’s population has been increased by the “addition” of an annex, two ferries, and, most recently, conversion of the former Rikers Island Hospital essentially into a receiving room, all of which depend on the North Facility for essential services other than housing. In 1986, the relief granted authorized a maximum population of 1779, although, in fact, it rarely exceeded 1500. The City now asks to house as many as 2200 inmates at the North Facility. 12

Such numbers must inevitably strain the troubled service delivery at the North Facility. Plaintiffs contend, and defendants put no evidence before us to the contrary, that the “facility already appears to be short medical staff, social service staff, and mail staff, and uniformed staff is working on excessive overtime,”

Related

Benjamin v. Fraser
343 F.3d 35 (Second Circuit, 2003)
Benjamin v. Sielaff
752 F. Supp. 140 (S.D. New York, 1990)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
710 F. Supp. 91, 1989 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3592, 1989 WL 34609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benjamin-v-koehler-nysd-1989.