NEW YORK — Inmates at New York City's Rikers Island are suing the city claiming they were trapped in their cells during a jailhouse fire that injured 20 people last year.
The lawsuit filed Friday in federal court in Manhattan said the 15 men were among those kept locked in their rooms by corrections officers as a fire burned through a housing unit for people with acute medical conditions requiring infirmary care or Americans with Disabilities Act-compliant housing.
It claims the men ''choked on toxic black smoke, some vomiting, some losing consciousness, all gasping for air'' while corrections department staffers fled to safety.
''The idea that detainees who have not been convicted of any crime can be locked inside of a burning building and left to suffer and die is to most Americans, a barbaric notion reserved for movies and television shows depicting the cruelties and brutality of the past,'' the lawsuit reads.
Spokespeople for the city corrections department and health and hospitals department declined to comment, referring instead to the city's law department, which said it is reviewing the suit and will respond in the litigation.
The April 6, 2023, blaze, which injured 15 jail staffers and five inmates, was set by a 30-year-old inmate with a history for starting jailhouse fires. Officials said he used batteries, headphone wires and a remote control to start the conflagration in his cell, before adding tissues and clothing to fuel the flames.
Joshua Lax, a lawyer representing the 15 men, said the lawsuit centers on the corrections department's policy of keeping detainees at Rikers Island locked in their cells instead of evacuating them during fires that happen hundreds of times a year.
''This practice forces them to inhale smoke produced by structural fires containing various toxins, poisons, and particulate matter, all of which can produce life threatening conditions,'' he said in an email. ''The practice violates the U.S. Constitution, local and state fire regulations, medical standards of care, and of course, human decency.''