
23 Brooklyn inmates charged after rash of violence, including stabbing of Jam Master Jay's killer
NEW YORK (AP) — Twenty-three inmates at the troubled federal jail in Brooklyn have been charged with crimes ranging from smuggling weapons in a Doritos bag to the stabbing last month of a man convicted in the killing of hip-hop legend Jam Master Jay.
Federal prosecutors announced the charges Thursday amid a crackdown on violence and dysfunction at the Metropolitan Detention Center, the only federal jail in New York City. The facility's nearly 1,200 inmates include Sean 'Diddy' Combs, Luigi Mangione and Sam Bankman-Fried.
Fifteen of the inmates charged were accused in six separate stabbings, slashings or beatings.
Six inmates were charged in a Feb. 22 melee that left five inmates hospitalized, including Karl Jordan Jr., one of the two men convicted last year in the 2002 slaying of Jam Master Jay, the Run-D.M.C. star. Jordan, who was identified in court papers as John Doe 1, was stabbed in the back 18 times, prosecutors said. At least 10 inmates had wounds consistent with being stabbed or slashed, prosecutors said.
The arrests come in the wake of a sweep last October in which investigators from the federal Bureau of Prisons, the Justice Department inspector general and other local, state and federal law enforcement agencies seized drugs, homemade weapons and electronic devices from the Brooklyn jail.
Five inmates were charged with attempting to smuggle contraband into the jail by throwing a rope out a window and having someone on the outside hook items onto it.
Correctional officers caught four of the men last June as they pulled a rope loaded with contraband through the window of their housing area's recreation room, prosecutors said. Attached to it, prosecutors said, was what appeared to be suboxone, marijuana, a scalpel, a phone charger, lighters, and cigarettes.
Another inmate was caught last October with 21 ceramic blades after pulling them out of a bag of Doritos and placing them in his shirt in the jail's visiting room, prosecutors said.
In a previously announced case, a now-former correctional officer was charged with trying to smuggle bags of marijuana and cigarettes into the jail in vacuum-sealed bags in January. Another man, who was not an inmate at MDC Brooklyn, was charged with supplying contraband to inmates after officers in December found a package on a jail roof that contained cellphones, marijuana and alcohol. Inmates were attempting to smuggle in the package by rope, prosecutors said.
The Bureau of Prisons has said it's working to remedy problems at the Brooklyn jail, where detainees, advocates and judges have routinely complained about 'dangerous, barbaric conditions,' including rampant violence.
A group of senior Bureau of Prisons officials known as the Urgent Action Team has focused in recent months on bringing the Brooklyn jail back to adequate staffing levels and ensuring it is in good repair. They have made repeated visits to the facility and meet weekly to address issues at the jail.
In September, federal prosecutors charged nine inmates in a spate of attacks at the jail and a correctional officer was charged with shooting at a car during an unauthorized high-speed chase. In October, an inmate was charged in a murder-for-hire plot that led to the death of a 28-year-old woman outside a New York City nightclub.
An ongoing Associated Press investigation has uncovered deep, previously unreported flaws within the Bureau of Prisons, an agency with more than 30,000 employees, 158,000 inmates, 122 facilities and an annual budget of about $8 billion.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
A small plane crashes into the terrace of a house in Germany. 2 people are dead
BERLIN (AP) — A small plane crashed into the terrace of a residential building in western Germany on Saturday and two people were killed, police said. The crash happened in Korschenbroich, near the city of Mönchengladbach and not far from the Dutch border. The plane hit the terrace of the building and a fire broke out. Police said two people died and one of them was probably the plane's pilot, German news agency dpa reported. It wasn't immediately clear whether the other person had been on the plane or on the ground. Officials had no immediate information on the cause of the crash.


San Francisco Chronicle
an hour ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
A small plane crashes into the terrace of a house in Germany. 2 people are dead
BERLIN (AP) — A small plane crashed into the terrace of a residential building in western Germany on Saturday and two people were killed, police said. The crash happened in Korschenbroich, near the city of Mönchengladbach and not far from the Dutch border. The plane hit the terrace of the building and a fire broke out. Police said two people died and one of them was probably the plane's pilot, German news agency dpa reported. It wasn't immediately clear whether the other person had been on the plane or on the ground.


New York Times
3 hours ago
- New York Times
Tech Bro Had to Go
Elon Musk came to Washington with a chain saw and left with a black eye. Shrinking government is hard, particularly when you do it callously and carelessly — and apparently on hallucinogens. As with President Trump's tariffs, DOGE has created more volatility than value. A guy who went bankrupt six times doesn't really care about spending. And Trump certainly didn't want to see the headline, 'Trump Cuts Social Security.' He just wanted to get revenge on 'the bureaucracy' by deputizing Musk to force out a lot of federal employees and give the impression they were cutting all the waste. As always with Trump, the former reality star, the impression matters more than the reality, especially the reality of his own sins. This past week, Trump tried to recast the very nature of crime. As The Times's Glenn Thrush wrote: 'President Trump is employing the vast power of his office to redefine criminality to suit his needs — using pardons to inoculate criminals he happens to like, downplaying corruption and fraud as crimes, and seeking to stigmatize political opponents by labeling them criminals.' It is sickening that the Justice Department is considering settling a wrongful-death lawsuit by giving $5 million to the family of Ashli Babbitt — who was shot on Jan. 6, 2021, by a Capitol police officer when she ignored his warnings and tried to climb through a smashed window into the Speaker's Lobby in the Capitol. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.