NEW YORK — A judge on Wednesday found New York City in contempt for failing to staunch violence and brutality at its jails, a scathing ruling that puts the troubled Rikers Island jail complex on the verge of a federal takeover.
In a written decision, U.S. District Judge Laura Taylor Swain in Manhattan said the city had placed incarcerated people in ''unconstitutional danger'' by failing to comply with 18 separate provisions of court orders pertaining to security, staffing, supervision, use of force and the safety of young detainees.
The long-squalid conditions have worsened significantly in the nine years since the city settled abuse and violence claims, she wrote, exacerbated by jail leadership's ''unwillingness or inability'' to implement ordered reforms.
As a result, Swain ordered the city and lawyers suing on behalf of detainees to confer with a court-appointed monitor on a proposed framework for a federal receivership — an extraordinary intervention that would cede city control of one of the nation's largest, most notorious jail systems.
Mayor Eric Adams, who has vehemently opposed a federal takeover, said on Wednesday that the city had made ''significant progress towards addressing the decades-long neglect and issues on Rikers Island.''
''We are proud of our work, but recognize there is more to be done and look forward to working with the federal monitoring team on our shared goal of continuing to improve the safety of everyone in our jails,'' his statement continued.
But in her ruling, Swain found the administration's efforts were ''insufficient to turn the tide within a reasonable period.'' The city appears to have acted in bad faith at times in its failure to comply with court-ordered reforms, repeatedly ''withholding essential information'' from the monitor, she wrote.
''The Court is inclined to impose a receivership: namely, a remedy that will make the management of the use of force and safety aspects of the Rikers Island jails ultimately answerable directly to the Court,'' Swain wrote, ordering the sides to provide her by Jan. 14 a plan for an ''efficient, effective receivership.''