 |
July
12, 2002
For Immediate Release |
Contact:
Albert O'Leary
212-298-9190
or
Joseph Mancini
212-298-9150
|
NYPD Taking Easy Way Out on Prisoner Escapes
PBA President Patrick J. Lynch today demanded more police officers,
better equipment, improved station house design and secured hospital
facilities to treat prisoners in order to reduce the potential
for escape from police custody.
"Given the serious shortage of police officers, the lousy equipment
and horribly designed police and hospital facilities, it is a
testimony to the good work of police officers that so few prisoners
have escaped," Lynch said. "We are calling on NYPD management
to be fair and honest in their assessment of this problem and
not to penalize dedicated, overworked police officers who are
fighting against all odds to keep criminals in custody. It is
much easier to suspend a cop than to fix the real problem in a
city where hospitals have no secured areas to treat prisoners
and where cops have to double park prisoner transport vans and
walk felons through neighborhood streets to get them into a station
house."
Lynch called for secured parking areas so prisoners do not have
to be walked on neighborhood streets into a station house and
for certain hospitals to be equipped with secure areas for the
treatment of ill or injured prisoners.
"Handcuffing a prisoner to a bed mixed in with the general hospital
population is a formula for disaster," Lynch said. "The department
should survey the existing hospitals, choose a few in each borough
and help those hospitals to create a special secured prisoner
treatment area for the protection of police and patients alike.
Suspending a cop looks good in the papers but doesn't solve the
problem."
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