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New York mayor-elect Eric Adams says he’ll restore solitary confinement on Rikers Island

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New York City mayor-elect Eric Adams said at a Thursday press conference that he will bring “punitive segregation” back to Rikers Island jail.

Adams, a retired New York Police Department chief, wants to reverse Mayor Bill de Blasio’s decision this week to move inmates — in all city jails — from solitary confinement, also known as “punitive segregation,” back into the general population. De Blasio cited concerns over inhumane treatment and being low on staff, according to New York Daily News.

“So the mayor announced December 31 he’s going to empty out punitive segregation,” said Adams. “They better enjoy that one-day reprieve because Jan. 1, they’re going back into punitive segregation if they commit a violent act,” he continued at the conference, announcing his pick for new Department of Correction commissioner, Louis Molina.

He argued that violent inmates must be separated from the general population except in extreme cases, in which case time in isolation should be limited.

“While you’re in jail, you commit a slashing on an inmate, [and] you don’t go to jail?” Adams questioned during the press conference. “I mean this is not making any sense. If you say to a violent person that slashed an inmate that nothing is going to take you out of [general] population so you don’t slash other inmates, that sends a terrible message.”

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He said he aims for it to be “segregation without it being inhumane,” denouncing “the days of being in the hole.” He did not specify what changes would occur. He called the facility an “embarrassment” — but plans to eventually shut it down, according to The New York Times.

“The Mayor-elect and I both want the same thing — a secure environment for our staff to work in and a safe setting for our inmates,” de Blasio said in a statement following Adams’ press conference. “As part of our plan to end the current form of punitive segregation we created special units which keep inmates who commit violent acts separate from the general population,” he added.

In solitary confinement, prisoners are kept isolated and indoors for at least 22 hours per day, and it’s possible that inmates are exposed to inhumane treatment and abuse, according to the United Nations. In 2011, the United Nations recommended that all countries abolish solitary confinement.

UN Special Rapporteur on torture Juan E. Méndez called solitary “torture” and said that its possible effects — hallucinations, self-directed violence, PTSD, and lasting mental illness — are “contrary to rehabilitation, the aim of the penitentiary system” [Business Insider].

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Terry A. Hurlbut has been a student of politics, philosophy, and science for more than 35 years. He is a graduate of Yale College and has served as a physician-level laboratory administrator in a 250-bed community hospital. He also is a serious student of the Bible, is conversant in its two primary original languages, and has followed the creation-science movement closely since 1993.

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