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		Inmates shiver in frigid cells at New 
		York jail, lawmakers say 
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		 [February 04, 2019] 
		By Jonathan Allen 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - Inmates at a federal 
		jail in Brooklyn have suffered for days without heat or power during a 
		wintry cold snap, according to lawyers and U.S. lawmakers who rallied 
		outside the jail on Saturday demanding the problems be fixed and ill 
		inmates moved.
 
 A fire last Sunday at the Brooklyn Metropolitan Detention Center cut off 
		power and heat to parts of the jail just as freezing Arctic air began 
		rolling towards the East Coast, according to motions filed this week in 
		federal court by lawyers from the Federal Defenders who represent some 
		of the inmates.
 
 Since then, at least some of the more than 1,600 men and women 
		incarcerated at the jail have suffered in near-freezing temperatures and 
		in darkness after the sun goes down while locked in their cells for 23 
		hours a day, according to the court filings. On Wednesday night, the 
		temperature in New York City dropped to nearly 0 Fahrenheit (minus 18 
		Celsius.)
 
 "Inmates were wrapped head to toe in towels and blankets," Deirdre von 
		Dornum, who oversees the Federal Defenders' Brooklyn team, said in a 
		telephone interview on Saturday, recounting her tour of the jail the day 
		before. "Their windows were frosted over. Even more disturbingly perhaps 
		for the inmates, their cells were pitch black and they don't have 
		flashlights."
 
		
		 
		
 She said senior officials at the jail were "indifferent" to the problems 
		during her tour even as guards complained to her of the cold. The power 
		problems have also meant inmates cannot easily call family or lawyers 
		nor get any needed medication refilled, lawyers said.
 
 Telephone calls to the jail went unanswered on Saturday, but it said in 
		a statement that power had been affected in one building and that repair 
		work should be completed on Monday. Additional blankets, provided by New 
		York City's government, and clothing were to be given to inmates on 
		Saturday, the statement said. A notice on the jail's website said all 
		visits have been suspended until further notice.
 
		Officials at the jail and the Bureau of Prisons had said in emails this 
		week to the New York Times, which first reported the problems on Friday, 
		that the cells still had heat and hot water.
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			Protesters attend a rally at Metropolitan Detention Center demanding 
			that heat is restored for the inmates in the Brooklyn borough of New 
			York City, New York, U.S., February 2, 2019. REUTERS/Go Nakamura 
            
 
            One inmate, Dino Sanchez, has only a short-sleeved jumpsuit, a 
			T-shirt and a single standard-issue thin blanket to keep him warm, 
			according to a court filing by his attorney. Sanchez has asthma, 
			which the cold has exacerbated, and fears collapsing in the dark 
			without anyone noticing and coming to his aid, his lawyer wrote.
 Nydia Velazquez, who represents parts of New York City in the U.S. 
			House of Representatives, was one of the lawmakers who visited the 
			jail on Saturday. She said the Bureau of Prisons was disregarding 
			inmates' rights.
 
 "This appalling situation needs to be fixed," she wrote on Twitter. 
			She noted that some heat had been restored, but that the heating 
			system was still "not at fully capacity" and that staff at the jail 
			were still complaining about the cold on Saturday.
 
 Hugh Hurwitz, the Bureau of Prisons' acting director, told lawmakers 
			in telephone conversations he agreed that conditions in the jail 
			were "unacceptable", according to Velazquez.
 
 New York Governor Andrew Cuomo said in a brief statement that the 
			conditions at the jail were unconstitutional and demanded an 
			immediate fix.
 
 Judge Analisa Torres ordered the Bureau of Prisons to produce 
			witnesses at a hearing in federal court in Manhattan on Tuesday to 
			explain how the complaints raised by inmates' lawyers were being 
			addressed.
 
 (Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Daniel Wallis)
 
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