NYAPRS Note: The Legal Aid Society and Disability Rights New York have sued New York State for keeping incarcerated individuals with serious mental health conditions in state prisons, including maximum- security facilities, beyond the appropriate release date due to a shortage of community based housing and support services. Contained within the recently released Executive Budget is a critically important reference to the state’s plan to gain the authorization to restart Medicaid 30 days before release, a measure NYAPRS strongly supported when it came before the legislature several years ago.
While this measure would allow New York to be only the 2nd state in the country to fund earlier and more appropriate Medicaid funded discharge services and supports, it will have little meaning if community housing and supports are not in place.
Mentally Ill Prisoners Are Held Past Release Dates, Lawsuit Claims
By Ashley Southall New York Times January 23, 2019
On paper, a 31-year-old man found to have serious mental illnesses was released from a New York state prison in September 2017 after serving 10 years behind bars for two robberies.
But in reality, the man, who asked to be identified by his initials C.J., still wakes up each day inside a maximum-security prison in Stormville. Though he is technically free, he is still confined to a cell because of a Kafkaesque bureaucratic dilemma: The state requires people like him to be released to a supportive housing facility, but there is not one available.
Lawyers for C.J. and five other mentally ill men filed a federal lawsuit in Manhattan on Wednesday seeking to force Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo to address a shortage of housing for people with serious mental illnesses who need help adjusting to life outside prison walls.
The men are no longer being held in prison because they committed offenses, their lawyers argue, but because the state has determined they are likely to become homeless once released — a practice they contend amounts to discrimination under federal civil rights laws.
Four of the men, including C.J., have finished their maximum prison sentences and maintain their confinement also violates their constitutional rights to due process and protections against cruel and unusual punishment. The plaintiffs have asked the court to allow them to proceed anonymously because their lawsuit discusses sensitive personal information and they fear retaliation from prison guards.
Corrections records indicate the men are in “residential treatment facilities” — housing where residents are able to move about freely to seek jobs, visit family and pursue educational opportunities.
But the lawsuit says that label, as the state has applied it to 13 prisons, is a fraud, because the men are being held and treated as other prisoners are. They are locked in cells that have room for a bed and a few possessions. They are required to wear inmate uniforms. They cannot receive packages.
“Though labeled ‘releasees,’ they remain prisoners in every respect,” the complaint said.
The state continues to hold the men “because they are unable to secure a community-based mental health housing placement that does not exist due to lack of available beds,” the complaint said. In effect, the state has lengthened their incarceration, “undermining the most basic principle undergirding the criminal justice system: that a criminal sentence, once imposed by a judge, means what it says,” the lawsuit said
The lawsuit, which names the state corrections department and mental health office as defendants, was filed by the Legal Aid Society and Disability Rights New York, who are seeking class-action status on behalf of all inmates held in state prisons beyond their release dates solely because they are waiting to be placed in supportive housing.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/01/23/nyregion/prisoners-mentally-ill-lawsuit.html
Mentally Ill Inmates Suing Cuomo Over ‘Extended’ Prison Times
By Kaja Whitehouse New York Post January 23, 2019
A group of mentally ill prisoners is suing Gov. Cuomo and other state officials, claiming that they have been kept behind bars long past their release dates because the state doesn’t have anywhere to put them.
The Manhattan federal class-action lawsuit says state officials often require that mentally ill prisoners be placed in “community-based housing and supportive services” as a condition of their release. But due to a shortage of the housing and services, the suit says, prisoners across the state are often left to rot behind bars instead of getting sprung.
“M.G.,” 56, says the Parole Board granted him an open release date of May 10, 2017. But “prison staff informed M.G. that he would not be timely released due to a determination that he can be released only to community based mental health housing,” the suit claims. Almost two years later, he’s still at the maximum-security prison in Auburn.
The suit also names the Office of Mental Health, the Department of Corrections and the agencies’ heads.
https://nypost.com/2019/01/23/mentally-ill-inmates-suing-cuomo-over-extended-prison-times/