Latest news with #SosoRamishvili
Yahoo
01-04-2025
- Yahoo
NYPD holding people arrested for low-level crimes much longer than last year: Legal Aid
The number of people arrested in New York City for low-level offenses who are being put through the system rather than being given desk appearance tickets rose sharply in the first two months of 2025, a trend the Legal Aid Society is linking to two in-custody deaths. In January and February, according to a snapshot of the trend, the number of people put through the system for minor drug possession has spiked 59% and the number of people held to arraignment on noncriminal violations has jumped 188%, figures cited by Legal Aid show. The public defense group pointed to the statistics Monday in calling on the city's inspector general, which has oversight of the NYPD, to open an investigation into whether the department is violating a law requiring desk tickets to be issued for a range of low-level arrests like shoplifting, possession of small amounts of drugs and noncriminal violations. 'The NYPD's practice of conducting full custodial arrests and detaining New Yorkers who should be issued appearance tickets and released represents a blatant violation of New York law,' wrote Meghna Philip, director of Legal Aid 's special litigation unit. 'And this practice is subjecting vulnerable New Yorkers to unnecessary arrests and risks to their health and safety, including death.' The letter ties the trend to the two recent in-custody charges — that of Soso Ramishvili on March 21 in a holding pen in Brooklyn Criminal Court, and a Senegalese man whose identity has not been released in a similar holding pen in Manhattan Criminal Court on March 26. Under criminal procedure law 150.20, the police are supposed to issue desk appearance tickets ordering a suspect to return to court at a future date for many low-level charges. The law contains a number of exceptions, the chief one being that police can hold people who they cannot immediately identify. But, as Legal Aid points out, the law also says '[t]here is no requirement that a person present photographic identification in order to be issued an appearance ticket in lieu of an arrest,' and that a 'person's self-identification' can be sufficient.' According to figures cited by Legal Aid, the number of people arrested for misdemeanor drug possession who were put through the system rose 59% in January and February 2025 compared with the same months in 2024 — 2,086 arrests versus 1,312. Similarly, 248 people arrested for noncriminal violations were put through the system in the first two months of 2025, compared to just 86 people in the same two months in 2024 — an increase of 188%. And, Legal Aid states in the letter, 75% of petty larceny suspects were put through the system in the first two months of 2025, compared to just 45% on average in 2021. 'During the period of time described in the letter the Legislature amended the law and expanded the criteria for a custodial arrest,' an NYPD spokesman told the Daily News. 'The statistics cited are a direct result of that change.' The letter mentions several specific examples of the trend appearing in cases involving the subway system. In one case, a man with no prior record was charged with disorderly conduct for taking up two seats on an R train. He did not have photo ID but gave his name and date of birth to the officer. The man ended up spending 24 hours in custody before he was arraigned. A judge immediately dismissed the case. A second person was arrested for taking up two seats on an F train. He was not given an appearance ticket even though he showed photo ID. That case was also dismissed. On March 22, the letter states, 13 people were arraigned in Brooklyn for failing to pay their subway fare — when they all should have been released with appearance tickets, Legal Aid claims. Ramishvili, 32, had been in custody for roughly three days and had gone back and forth to a hospital before he died, the Daily News previously reported. The West African man had been in custody for a shorter period. The city medical examiner's office has yet to issue a cause of death in either case.


New York Times
22-03-2025
- New York Times
Man Accused of Shoplifting Dies at Brooklyn Courthouse
A man accused of stealing power tools from a hardware store died in a holding cell at a Brooklyn courthouse just before his scheduled arraignment on Friday, according to court records and the police. The man, identified as Soso Ramishvili, 32, was being held in police custody at the Kings County Criminal Courts Building in Downtown Brooklyn. He faced charges of petty larceny and possessing stolen property and cocaine, the authorities said. After his arrest on Tuesday, Mr. Ramishvili had been scheduled for an arraignment on Wednesday morning. But the hearing was postponed several times this week and rescheduled for Friday morning, court records show. Then, just before Friday's scheduled appearance, Mr. Ramishvili was discovered unconscious by the police at 8:25 a.m. Emergency medical workers were called to the courthouse and pronounced him dead, the police said. The cause of Mr. Ramishvili's death was not immediately clear. But the police said he had been taken to the hospital multiple times after his arrest on Tuesday. Still, his death has caused outrage among lawyers and public defenders as well as renewed criticism of the treatment of people accused of crimes in New York City. 'The callous disregard that law enforcement continues to show towards New Yorkers is deeply shocking,' the Legal Aid Society and Brooklyn Defender Services, two public defense organizations, said in a joint statement on Friday. The groups also called for an 'urgent, thorough and independent' investigation into the matter. Mr. Ramishvili did not have a lawyer because he had not yet been arraigned, Legal Aid said. The authorities said that a security guard saw Mr. Ramishvili take power tools and other items from the shelves of a Home Depot in the Old Mill Basin neighborhood of Brooklyn on Tuesday morning, hide them under his jacket and walk out without paying. The guard, who noticed Mr. Ramishvili on surveillance footage, said he had stolen goods valued at $213 from the store, according to the authorities. He was also carrying a vessel of cocaine at the time, they said. Four other people have died this year in city jails or just after being released from custody. On Thursday, a woman who was being held at the Rikers Island jail complex was pronounced dead after being discovered unresponsive, according to the Department of Correction. Earlier this month, Ariel Quidone, 20, who had been accused of robbery, died in a hospital after collapsing in his Rikers cell. Two other men who were being held in New York City jails died within the same week last month.