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Office of the Inspector General
U.S. Department of Justice
OVERSIGHT * INTEGRITY * GUIDANCE
Review and Inspection of
Metropolitan Detention Center
Brooklyn Facilities Issues and
Related Impacts on Inmates
Evaluation and Inspections Division 19-04 September 2019
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Executive Summary
Review arid Inspection of Metropolitan Detention Center Brooklyn
Facilities Issues and Related Impacts on Inmates
Introduction during the power outage. This was particularly
I problematic in view of MDC Brooklyn's population of
According to the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP), pretrial inmates. Moreover, MDC Brooklyn and BOP
Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC) Brooklyn is an management did not provide sufficient notice or
administrative security Metropolitan Detention Center information to the public about the fire and the effect of
that houses approximately 1,700 federal pretrial the power outage on conditions of confinement,
inmates and federal inmates serving sentences (herein including that the power outage did not affect heating in
collectively referred to as inmates). On Sunday, the facility. As a result, within days of the fire, there
January 27, 2019, MDC Brooklyn experienced an was extensive media reporting about conditions at MDC
electrical fire that caused a partial power outage in its Brooklyn with a lack of definitive information from the
West Building. Although the fire was contained soon BOP; multiple legal actions were filed against the BOP;
after it began, the partial power outage lasted a full numerous members of Congress expressed concerns
week—until Sunday, February 3. The outage affected about facility conditions and sought to visit MDC
lighting in housing areas, computers, phones, and other Brooklyn; and inmates became disruptive following
institution systems and equipment. As a result, MDC protests outside the facility.
Brooklyn canceled legal and social visiting that week.
Accordingly, we found that existing MDC Brooklyn
Throughout the 7-day power outage, inmates, their contingency plans do not address how and when staff
attorneys and families, the public, and members of should alert and update external stakeholders about
Congress (all of whom we refer to as stakeholders) significant disruptions at the facility that affect legal and
expressed concerns that inmates were not receiving social visits and conditions of confinement. Updates to
food and appropriate medical attention and that the contingency plans and policies, which consider the
facility was without heat. The power outage coincided information needs of stakeholders as well as their roles
with a 6-day period of extremely cold temperatures in in the criminal justice system, would assist the BOP in
New York City. with a low temperature of 2 degrees more effectively managing crisis situations.
Fahrenheit on January 31.
The BOP Failed to Adequately Address Preexisting
Given the significance of these issues and concerns, on Heating and Cooling Issues at MDC Brooklyn, Resulting
February 7, 2019, the Office of the Inspector General in Certain Inmate Housing Areas Being Below the BOP
(OIG) initiated a review and inspection of MDC Brooklyn Target Temperature in January and February 2019
to determine whether the BOP took appropriate steps to
address issues caused by the fire and power outage, We found that before, during, and after the January
how those issues affected the conditions of confinement. power outage, temperatures in MDC Brooklyn's West
and whether the BOP had in place adequate contingency Building occasionally fell below the BOP's winter target
plans to respond to such an incident. of 68 degrees for periods of time, with the coldest
recorded temperature at 59 degrees 1 week before the
Results in Brief fire. We also found that temperature regulation issues
at the facility resulted in winter temperatures in certain
We found that during the power outage there were parts of the West Building far exceeding 68 degrees,
significant heating issues at MDC Brooklyn. These including temperatures in excess of 80 degrees.
heating issues were unrelated to the fire and
subsequent power outage. which did not affect MDC MDC Brooklyn staff have long struggled to regulate
Brooklyn's heating systems. Instead, long-standing temperatures in the West Building. According to
temperature regulation issues caused temperatures in facilities staff, a significant reason for this is that MDC
certain housing units in MDC Brooklyn's West Building Brooklyn has not installed a Building Management
to drop below the BOP target of 68 degrees before, System (BMS), which would continuously monitor
during, and after the power outage. building temperatures and heating and cooling
equipment functionality. Additionally, a BMS would
We found that MDC Brooklyn and BOP management allow facilities staff to make corrective adjustments
took steps to ensure the safety and security of the more quickly. Absent a BMS, we found that facilities
facility during the power outage but failed to effectively staff used an unreliable method to measure West
manage other critical aspects of the situation. Building temperatures before and during the power
Specifically, MDC Brooklyn and the BOP did not outage. As a result, we cannot state with reasonable
effectively address two medical issues and did not assurance how many inmate housing areas experienced
effectively communicate with stakeholders MDC temperatures at or below the BOP target of 68 degrees
Brooklyn's decision to suspend legal and social visiting or for how long localized temperatures remained below
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Executive Summary
Review and Inspection of Metropolitan Detention Center Brooklyn
i 11 Facilities Issues and Related Impacts on Inmates
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the target. Though inmates' temperature sensitivities Third, we found that, while medical rounds continued
may vary, multiple inmates housed in units during the week of the power outage, preparations were
experiencing temperatures below 68 told us that they not made to handle inmates who used continuous positive
were "freezing" or very cold during the power outage. airway pressure machines. Further, although MDC
Brooklyn management told us inmates could have
We also found that environmental factors other than
submitted paper requests for refills of certain medications,
ambient air temperature could have made inmates feel we found that the standard electronic request method was
colder. First, exterior cell walls, which abut inmate
unavailable during the power outage.
beds, can have surface temperatures well below the
ambient air temperature. Second, airflows out of cell Fourth, we found that MDC Brooklyn management could
heating and cooling vents were at high speeds, making have done more to communicate to inmates and staff
it difficult for inmates to avoid exposure to fast moving the circumstances surrounding the power outage and
air. Third, cold-weather clothing such as thermal alternative methods for accessing vital services, such as
underwear and sweat suits are not standard issue at communicating with counsel and requesting prescription
MDC Brooklyn. Although available ambient air refills, when telephones and inmate computer systems
temperature readings did not indicate actual freezing were unavailable.
temperatures (i.e., below 32 degrees), these factors
likely contributed to the conditions that some inmates The BOP Did Not Communicate the Status of Conditions
described as very cold or freezing. at the Facility During the Power Outage or the Reason
for Canceling Legal and Social Visits in a Sufficient or
MDC Brooklyn Management Took Steps to Ensure the Timely Manner
Safety and Security of the Facility During the Power
Outage but Did Not Effectively Address Heating and Two MDC Brooklyn and the BOP did not take sufficient
Medical Issues proactive steps to inform defense counsel, the courts,
inmates' family members, the public, and members of
We found that MDC Brooklyn and BOP management Congress about the effect of the power outage on legal
took several steps to ensure the safety and security of and social visiting and the conditions of confinement at
the institution. For example, the Warden followed the MDC Brooklyn in the aftermath of the fire. In fact, the
institution's fire contingency plan, which included BOP did not issue a press release until 6 days after the
notifying regional BOP management and the BOP's fire, and then only in response to media reporting that
Central Office of the situation. MDC Brooklyn highlighted criticisms of MDC Brooklyn's management of
management also decided to keep inmates secured in the situation.
their cells for certain periods to maintain safety. The
Warden also made the judgment, which was supported This lack of information contributed to confusion about
by the acting BOP Director, not to evacuate the jail the nature of the situation at the facility, which in turn
because doing so would have presented a greater contributed to disruptions by inmates inside the jail,
security risk than keeping the inmates at MDC Brooklyn. protests outside the jail, multiple judicial actions,
congressional scrutiny, and rumors and speculation
While these judgments were not unreasonable, we
found certain significant flaws in the facility's about the seriousness of conditions at the facility.
management during the week of the power outage. We believe that these problems were due, in part, to the
First, as described above, the MDC Brooklyn fact that the BOP underestimated the degree of public
management did not effectively handle preexisting interest in the effect of the fire and power outage on
temperature regulation problems at the facility, which conditions at MDC Brooklyn and because MDC Brooklyn
became an issue once again during the power outage contingency plans did not provide sufficient guidance to
because of the extremely cold temperatures outside. staff about alerting and updating extemal stakeholders
about significant events that disrupt visiting and
Second, although the decision to cancel in-person legal significantly affect conditions of confinement.
and social visiting during the power outage due to
existing security concerns was not unreasonable under Recommendations
the circumstances, we believe that MDC Brooklyn
management could have better prepared for this We make nine recommendations to ensure that the BOP
contingency by having an alternative visitation plan is better able to minimize the effect that future facilities
available to use once it became clear that the power issues and disruptive events have on inmates at MDC
outage would not be resolved promptly. Brooklyn and other BOP institutions.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION 1
Background 1
MDC Brooklyn 2
Male Inmate Management 2
Legal and Social Visiting for Male Inmates 4
West Building Electrical System 4
The January 27 Fire, 7-day Power Outage, and Electrical Repair 5
Prior OIG Work Related to MDC Brooklyn 8
Scope and Methodology of the OIG Review and Inspection 9
TIMELINE OF MAJOR EVENTS AT MDC BROOKLYN, JANUARY 27-
FEBRUARY 3, 2019 10
RESULTS OF THE REVEW 11
The BOP Failed to Adequately Address Preexisting Heating and Cooling
Issues at MDC Brooklyn, Resulting in Certain Inmate Housing Areas Being
Below the BOP Target Temperature in January and February 2019 11
MDC Brooklyn Management Took Steps to Ensure the Safety and Security
of the Facility During the Power Outage but Did Not Effectively Address
Heating and Two Medical Issues 22
The BOP Did Not Communicate the Status of Conditions at the Facility
During the Power Outage or the Reason for Canceling Legal and Social
Visits in a Sufficient or Timely Manner 31
CONCLUSION AND RECOMMENDATIONS 41
Conclusion 41
Recommendations 42
APPENDIX 1: PURPOSE, SCOPE, AND, METHODOLOGY 44
Standards 44
Site Visits 44
Interviews 44
Data Analysis 45
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Document and Policy Review 46
APPENDIX 2: OTHER MDC BROOKLYN HVAC ISSUES 47
APPENDIX 3: JUDICIAL ACTIONS RELEVANT TO THE MDC BROOKLYN FIRE
AND POWER OUTAGE 48
APPENDIX 4: FIRST BOP PRESS RELEASE ADDRESSING THE MDC BROOKLYN
POWER OUTAGE 49
APPENDIX 5: SECOND BOP PRESS RELEASE ADDRESSING THE MDC
BROOKLYN POWER OUTAGE 50
APPENDIX 6: DOJ PRESS RELEASE ADDRESSING THE MDC BROOKLYN
POWER OUTAGE 51
APPENDIX 7: THE BOP'S RESPONSE TO THE DRAFT REPORT 52
APPENDIX 8: OIG ANALYSIS OF THE BOP'S RESPONSE 56
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INTRODUCTION
Background
On Sunday, January 27, 2019, an electrical fire at the Federal Bureau of
Prisons' (BOP) Metropolitan Detention Center (MDC) Brooklyn caused a partial
power outage in its West Building, which houses male federal pretrial inmates and
federal inmates serving sentences) Although the fire was contained soon after it
began, the partial power outage lasted a full week—until Sunday, February 3 (see
the Timeline of Major Events at MDC Brooklyn). The outage affected the West
Building's lighting and electrical outlets in inmate cells and common areas, inmate
and staff computer systems, inmate phones, and other systems and equipment.2
Due to the outage, MDC Brooklyn canceled legal and social visiting for the entire
MDC facility, limiting inmates' access to legal counsel during the week.3 Concerns
were also raised that parts of MDC Brooklyn were without heat and inmates were
not receiving food and appropriate medical attention during the outage.° Given the
significance of these issues, and in response to both congressional and U.S.
Department of Justice (Department, DOJ) requests, on February 7, 2019, the DOJ
Office of the Inspector General (OIG) initiated a review and inspection of MDC
Brooklyn to determine whether the BOP took appropriate steps to address issues
caused by the fire and power outage, how those issues affected the conditions of
confinement for inmates, and whether the BOP had in place adequate contingency
plans for such an incident.5
According to 28 C.F.R. § 551.101, the term "pretrial inmate" describes "a person who is
legally detained but for whom the Bureau of Prisons has not received notification of conviction. Thus,
a 'pretrial inmate' ordinarily includes a person awaiting trial, being tried, or waiting a verdict." MDC
Brooklyn houses approximately 1,700 federal pretrial inmates and federal inmates serving sentences
(herein collectively referred to as inmates).
2 The fire did not affect the power supply to MDC Brooklyn's East Building, which houses
female inmates.
3 Inmate housing unit telephones that connect directly to the Federal Defenders of New York
were operational during the power outage. Therefore, inmates represented by the Federal Defenders
of New York could speak with counsel by telephone.
4 For example, public defenders, Federal Defenders of New York, Inc. v. Federal Bureau of Prisons
and Warden Herman Quay (E.D.N.Y., filed Feb. 4, 2019); media reporting, "No Heat for Days at a Jail in
Brooklyn Where Hundreds of Inmates Are Sick and 'Frantic,' " The New York Times, February 1, 2019, and
"Power Restored to Brooklyn Jail Where Inmates Went a Week Without Heat," NPR, February 4, 2019. See
also Jerry Nadler, Press Release, "Lawmakers Press for Answers. Following MDC BK Heat. Power Outage "
February 6, 2019, www.nadler.house.govinews/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=392787 (accessed
September 17, 2019).
5 U.S. Congress, letter to Michael E. Horowitz, Inspector General, U.S. Department of Justice,
February 6, 2019, www.velazquez.house.gov/sitesivelazquez.house.gov/files/02-06-
19%20D000200IG'/020letter%2Ore%20MDCY020Brooklyn.pdf, and BOP, Press Release 'Statement on MDC
Brooklyn ssues," February 6, 2019, wvwv.int.nyt.com/data/documenthelper/600-the-department-of-
justice-stat/651039689cdea2771cc6/optimized/full.pdf (both accessed September 17, 2019).
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MDC Brooklyn
MDC Brooklyn is the largest federal Metropolitan Detention Center in the
country and houses approximately 1,700 male inmates in its West Building and
approximately 40 female inmates in its East Building. When the Special Housing
Unit (SHU) in the West Building is at capacity, MDC will house additional male SHU
inmates in the East Building.' The institution's mission is to house federal inmates
from the New York City metropolitan area who are processing through the federal
judicial system. As an administrative security facility, MDC Brooklyn houses
inmates at all security levels, sometimes including high-profile inmates with a
variety of criminal histories, including terrorism, organized crime, and drug
smuggling.' Generally, MDC Brooklyn houses inmates on a short-term basis,
averaging 120 to 180 days. After inmates are convicted and sentenced, the BOP
assigns them to one of its long-term correctional facilities. MDC Brooklyn's West
Building houses male inmates in 18 housing units on 6 floors. The two units on the
top floor are SHUs, which house inmates who are either on administrative detention
or in disciplinary segregation.' The East Building houses female inmates in one
housing unit on one floor, and, as stated above, also houses male inmates in one
additional SHU on another floor. The two buildings are connected by an
underground tunnel, which MDC Brooklyn staff call "the link."
Male Inmate Management
On a typical day, MDC Brooklyn Correctional Officers release non-SHU
inmates from their cells at 6 a.m. and inmates can occupy the housing unit
common area until they are secured for the evening following a 9:30 p.m. inmate
accountability check. Each unit, which can house more than 100 inmates, is
supervised by 1 Correctional Officer. Throughout the day, inmates can eat and
socialize in the common area; attend Education, Religious, or Psychology
Department programming; and utilize unit recreation facilities, such as a caged
recreation deck with outdoor exposure. During the normal course of operations,
inmates can also use:
• private showers located in the common area;
• The West Building opened in November 1999. The West Building has a rated capacity of
1,753 male inmates. The East Building opened in January 1994. The rated capacity of the East
Building, as currently configured, is 125 female inmates.
7 Administrative facilities are institutions with special missions, and inmates are assigned to
them based on factors other than security and/or staff supervision (for example, medicaVmental
health issues or pretrial or holdover status). See BOP Program Statement 5100.08, Inmate Security
Designation and Custody Classification, September 12, 2006.
• Administrative detention status removes the inmate from the general population when
necessary to ensure the safety, security, and orderly operation of correctional facilities or to protect
the public. Administrative detention status applies only to SHU inmates, is non-punitive, and can
occur for a variety of reasons, according to the BOP. Disciplinary segregation status is a punitive
status imposed only by a Discipline Hearing Officer as a sanction for committing prohibited acts. See
BOP Program Statement 5270.11, Special Housing Units, November 11, 2016.
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• laundry machines to wash personal clothing;
• phones to speak with family, friends, and legal counsel ; 9
• unmonitored phones that connect to the Federal Defenders of New York;10
and
• monitored computers to perform legal research, request nonemergency
medical attention, refill prescriptions, and communicate with friends and
family."
Inmates who work in Food Services prepare meals in a central kitchen inside
the West Building, and Correctional Officers then deliver large meal carts to each
unit.12 Breakfast is usually a cold meal, whereas lunch and dinner are hot meals.
During typical weekday operations, Correctional Officers deliver breakfast to the
housing units around 7 a.m., lunch around 11 a.m., and dinner around 5 p.m.
Before dinner, from 4 to 4:30 p.m., Correctional Officers perform a census count,
during which all inmates are confined to their cells.
MDC Brooklyn's Health Services staff deliver required medication or insulin to
inmates every morning and evening. Inmates line up in their housing unit common
area, and a staff member administers the prescribed dosages. If inmates are
confined to their cells, Health Services staff administer prescribed dosages to
inmates at their cells. Staff and inmates refer to these deliveries as "pill line" and
"insulin line." Pill line and insulin line may occur simultaneously or at different
times, meaning that Health Services staff make two to four visits to each housing
unit every day. Health Services staff provide inmates with multiday supplies of
certain drugs that have a low risk of abuse, and inmates are encouraged to request
a refill through the inmate computer system within 5 days of exhausting their
supply. If inmates cannot make a timely electronic request, they can make a
written request or ask Health Services staff for a refill during pill or insulin line.
Inmates in the SHU are confined to their cells for 23 hours per day and are
allowed 1 hour of outdoor recreation time. Like inmates in regular housing units,
SHU inmates receive three meals a day and, if necessary, medication or insulin
twice a day. Unlike cells in regular housing units, SHU cells have a shower. SHU
9 The BOP monitors all calls made on inmate phones. If inmates need to make an
unmonitored legal call to a private attorney, they can use staff phones.
I° The Federal Defenders of New York represents clients in the Eastern and Southern Districts
of New York who have been charged with federal crimes and cannot afford to hire an attorney. See
Federal Defenders of New York, "About www.federaldefendersny.org/about-us (accessed
September 17, 2019). Only inmates represented by the Federal Defenders of New York are allowed to
use these unmonitored phones.
11 BOP inmate computer systems allow inmates to perform legal research, request
nonemergency medical attention, refill prescriptions, communicate with friends and family, and file
Prison Rape Elimination Act of 2003 complaints.
12 Though the BOP generally requires sentenced inmates to work, pretrial inmates are not
required to do so. However, some pretrial inmates choose to perform paid work in a number of
capacities at MDC Brooklyn.
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inmates may have unlimited contact with legal counsel, but they can make only one
call to friends or family every 30 days.i3
Legal and Social Visiting for Male Inmates
MDC Brooklyn's regular attorney visiting hours are 8 a.m.-7:30 p.m. Monday
through Friday and 8 a.m.-3 p.m. on weekends and holidays. There are no limits
to the number of visits inmates can have with their attorney. MDC Brooklyn's
regular social visiting hours are 12-3 p.m. and 5-7:30 p.m. each day. MDC
Brooklyn assigns housing units a different day of the week for social visiting and
allots each inmate one 1-hour social visit per week with up to four visitors. While
BOP regulations state that "the Warden shall provide the opportunity for pretrial
inmate-attomey visits on a seven-days-a-week basis," regulations also state that
Wardens may restrict inmate visiting "when necessary to ensure the security and
good order of the institution."14
West Building Electrical System
MDC Brooklyn's West Building receives a high-voltage electrical current from
its electrical utility provider. The electrical current is delivered to three switchgears,
each of which protects an electrical distribution panel by shutting off the electrical
current in the event of a power surge. Once the electrical current is clear of the
switchgear, it is delivered to electrical distribution panels, which distribute the
current to different systems and equipment in the West Building. MDC Brooklyn
labels its switchgears and electrical distribution panels as Priority 1, Priority 2, or
Priority 3.
Among other systems and equipment, the three electrical panels distribute
electricity to:
Priority 1: Emergency lighting throughout the West Building; heating, ventilation,
and cooling (HVAC) equipment; fire alarms; security cameras; and
electrical outlets used for medical and other life-safety equipment
Priority 2: Emergency lighting throughout the West Building, electrically
controlled doors and gates, other HVAC equipment, kitchen
equipment, and unmonitored phones connecting to the Federal
Defenders of New York
Priority 3: Overhead lighting and electrical outlets in inmate cells and common
areas, inmate phones, inmate computer systems, overhead lighting
and electrical outlets in staff offices and common areas, and other
kitchen equipment
As discussed below, the fire at MDC Brooklyn in January 2019 destroyed the
switchgear protecting the Priority 3 electrical panel, making it inoperable; the fire
13
See BOP Program Statement 5270.11.
14
See 28 C.F.R. §§ 551.117 and 540.40 and BOP Program Statement 5267.09, Visiting
Regulations. December 10, 2015.
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did not damage or otherwise affect the Priority 1 or Priority 2 electrical panels,
which control heat in the facility.
The January 27 Fire, 7-day Power Outage, and Electrical Repair
Photograph 1: Remains of Priority 3 On Sunday, January 27, at
Switchgear approximately 12:55 p.m., MDC Brooklyn
had an electrical fire in the West
Building's mechanical room.15 According
to BOP records, immediately upon
discovery of the fire, MDC Brooklyn staff
contacted the New York City Fire
Department, which responded to the
facility in less than 15 minutes and
extinguished the fire. Several MDC
Brooklyn staff members donned self-
contained breathing apparatuses and
gave fire department personnel access to
the mechanical room. Although there
were no serious injuries, some of the MDC
Brooklyn staff members who responded to
the fire were treated for smoke inhalation.
By the evening of January 27, the MDC
Brooklyn Facilities Manager and his staff
determined that the fire had destroyed
the switchgear protecting the Priority 3
electrical panel. Photograph 1 shows its
fire-damaged remains.
As a result of the damage to the
switchgear, the Priority 3 electrical panel
and its subordinate electrical systems and
equipment could no longer receive
Source: OIG photograph, February 7, 2019 electrical current. According to the
Facilities Manager, the fire did not
interrupt delivery of the electrical current
to the building as a whole, nor did it damage the Priority 1 and 2 switchgears and
electrical distribution panels.i6 Electrical systems and equipment powered by the
Priority 1 and 2 electrical panels, such as HVAC equipment and outlets for most
medical equipment, continued to operate normally. However, the medical x-ray
machine in the West Building, which is powered by a circuit breaker supported by
the Priority 3 electrical panel, was nonoperational. MDC Brooklyn maintains a
second medical x-ray machine in the East Building, which was available for use by
16 As of the issuance of this report, the BOP has not determined the cause of the fire.
16 If a switchgear is damaged, an electrical current cannot be safely delivered to the
corresponding electrical distribution panel. Therefore, even MDC Brooklyn's three backup generators
could not provide an electrical current to the Priority 3 electrical distribution panel.
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MDC Brooklyn staff if an inmate in the West Building required x-ray imaging.
Additionally, the MDC Brooklyn Facilities Manager told us that, as designed, the
HVAC system automatically turned off when the fire alarm was activated to prevent
smoke from circulating throughout the building. We were further told that, as soon
as it was deemed safe to do so, approximately 2-3 hours after the fire was
extinguished, MDC Brooklyn facilities staff reactivated the HVAC system.
Additionally, we were advised that emergency lighting in the West Building,
which receives its electrical current from the Priority 1 electrical distribution panel,
was activated when the Priority 3 panel (which controls cell and common area
lighting) went down. In Figure 1, we provide a simplified diagram of the West
Building electrical system and how the fire affected it.
Figure 1
Simplified Diagram of MDC Brooklyn West Building Electrical System and
the Effects of Fire Damage
Priority 1 Priority 2
Power On Power On
Surveillance
cameras 9
Kitchen
Cell and equipment
Staff and Automat C common
Federal doors area
Li Defender and gates overhead (I el
HVAC Fire alarms phone lines lighting
equlpmen
Cell and staff
area outlets
I .
Outlets in
ga
p
HVAC
F Kitchen
medical Emergency equipment equipment Detainee
exam rooms lighting phones for Detainee
personal use computers
Electrical dist lbutiOn panel Electrical distribution panel Electrical distribution panel
• I
Switchgear Switchgear Switchgear
High-voltage
electrical current
Source: OIG, based on electrical repair documents and MDC Brooklyn facilities staff interviews
After initially assessing the damage, MDC Brooklyn's Facilities Manager
contacted a local electrical repair firm. The repair firm arrived at MDC Brooklyn the
next morning, Monday, January 28. Together with MDC Brooklyn facilities staff, the
repair firm further diagnosed the damage and developed a plan to restore electricity
to the Priority 3 electrical systems and equipment. Specifically, the repair firm
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Photograph 2: Temporary Priority 3 determined that it needed to remove and
Switchgear replace the fire-damaged Priority 3
switchgear, wires connecting the utility-
provided electrical current to the Priority 3
switchgear, and copper busses that
distribute the electrical current from the
Priority 3 switchgear to the Priority 3
electrical distribution panel. Before
executing this plan, MDC Brooklyn hired a
separate electrical engineering firm to
determine the practicality and safety of the
proposed repair plan. The engineering
firm evaluated and approved the repair
plan on Tuesday, January 29. t7
We were told that, throughout the
rest of the week, the repair firm and MDC
Brooklyn staff made repairs to restore
electricity. According to MDC Brooklyn's
Facilities Manager and the owner of the
electrical repair firm, one of the more
challenging tasks was sourcing and
installing a replacement switchgear
compatible with the facility's electrical
system. As Photograph 2 shows,
switchgears are large pieces of equipment.
The Facilities Manager and the repair firm
owner stated that this temporary
switchgear needed to be disassembled to
fit inside the facility, reassembled in the
mechanical room, and then modified to
Source: OIG photograph, February 7. 2019 integrate with MDC Brooklyn's electrical
system.
The MDC Brooklyn Facilities Manager and the repair firm owner told us that
the electrical repair firm had almost completed its work by Saturday, February 2,
but that it still needed to source one additional part before it could complete the
repair and safely restore electricity. The repair firm owner and MDC Brooklyn staff
did not anticipate that the firm would be able to source the part until suppliers
17 In a court declaration, the Facilities Manager explained that he was able to locate some
spare circuits that received power from Priority 1 and Priority 2. He reprogrammed those circuits to
provide additional lighting to certain areas, including medical treatment areas, food services areas,
and the Receiving and Discharge areas (where inmates are searched before entering or leaving the
building). The Facilities Manager explained that he could not use this method to restore power to all
areas and all systems, including inmate cells, because there was not enough electrical amperage in
the spare circuits to supply such a large power demand. Declaration at 4 and 5, Federal Defenders of
New York. Inc. v. Federal Bureau of Prisons and Warden Herman Quay.
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reopened for business on Monday, February 4. However, the repair firm owner told
us that he sourced the necessary part over the weekend and restored power to the
remaining Priority 3 systems, including overhead lighting for inmate cells and
common areas, by 6 p.m. on Sunday, February 3.'
Previous to the events that prompted this review and inspection, in early
January 2019 MDC Brooklyn experienced another significant electrical issue
resulting in a power disruption. We describe the issue in the text box.
Previous MDC Brooklyn Electrical Issue
According to the MDC Brooklyn Facilities Manager, on Friday, January 4, 2019, at
approximately 6 a.m., a Priority 3 circuit breaker tripped, disrupting the electrical supply to the
Priority 3 systems and equipment. Facilities staff members could not reset the circuit breaker; but,
because there was no damage to the switchgear, they were able to use MDC Brooklyn's diesel
generators to power the Priority 3 systems and equipment within 5 minutes of the power outage.
However, at approximately 1 a.m. on Saturday, January 5, a generator malfunction cut off power
to Priority 3 systems and equipment. By 5 p.m., MDC Brooklyn facilities staff were able to reset
the tripped circuit and reestablish the electrical supply. The electrical repair firm, MDC Brooklyn's
Facilities Manager, the Warden, and BOP Regional and Central Office facilities management staff all
told us that they found no evidence to suggest that the circuit breaker and generator failures were
related to the January 27 electrical fire.
Sources: OIG interviews with the electrical repair firm owner, MDC Brooklyn's former Warden,
MDC Brooklyn's Facilities Manager, and BOP Regional and Central Office facilities management staff
and court testimony from the MDC Brooklyn Facilities Manager
Prior OIG Work Related to MDC Brooklyn
The OIG has conducted multiple investigations and reviews related to MDC
Brooklyn. Below, we highlight some of the findings from our body of work:
• In a recent criminal investigation, the OIG determined that, between 2013
and 2016, two Lieutenants and one Correctional Officer engaged in criminal
sexual assaults against female inmates at MDC Brooklyn. As a result of the
OIG's investigation, all three former MDC Brooklyn employees were indicted
and eventually convicted, the most recent in 2019.19
• In our 2018 report on the BOP's management of its female inmate
population, we reviewed the impact of the transfer of 366 female inmates
from the BOP's Federal Correctional Institution Danbury facility to MDC
Brooklyn. Even though MDC Brooklyn is intended for short-term confinement
of pre-sentenced inmates, we found that some of the 366 low security
sentenced female inmates remained at MDC Brooklyn for nearly 3 years. We
found that MDC Brooklyn offered female inmates no access to outdoor space
18 The total cost of services provided by the repair firm was $58,948.
18 U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York, Press Release "Three Federal
CorrectionaLafficAtS_Charged_with Sexually Abusing_Eemale Inmates," May 25, 2017,
www.oig.justice.gov/press/2017/2017-05-25.pdf (accessed September 17, 2019).
8
EFTA00127755
and less natural light and fewer programming opportunities than would
otherwise be available to female inmates at BOP facilities designed to house
sentenced inmates in long-term confinement.20
• In our 2015 report on MDC Brooklyn's management of its Special Programs
Unit, we identified concerns with the BOP's placement of a particularly
dangerous inmate in its Special Programs Unit with vulnerable inmates
without implementing safeguards or providing guidance to correctional staff.
We further found that MDC Brooklyn staff were not always aware of new
security information or policies relevant to their work and that
communication related to safety and security issues needed to be improved
at the facility?'
Scope and Methodology of the OIG Review and Inspection
The OIG initiated this review and inspection to determine whether the BOP
took appropriate steps to address issues caused by the fire and power outage, how
those issues affected the conditions of confinement for inmates, and whether the
BOP had in place adequate contingency plans for such an incident.22
We visited MDC Brooklyn on three different occasions, during which we
toured the facility; tested air and water temperatures in housing units; reviewed
surveillance video; and interviewed management staff, medical staff, correctional
staff, and 11 inmates. We also interviewed relevant BOP Central Office personnel
in Washington, D.C., including the then acting BOP Director and the BOP's public
relations staff, as well as the BOP's Northeast Regional Director. Further, we
interviewed an Attorney-in-Charge from the Federal Defenders of New York and a
representative of the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York,
both of whom toured the facility during the week of January 27. Finally,
Congresswoman Nydia Velazquez, whose Congressional District includes MDC
Brooklyn, provided us with a statement detailing her experience touring the facility
during the power outage. A more detailed description of the methodology of our
review and inspection is in Appendix 1.
20 DOJ OIG Review of the Federal Bureau of Prisons' Management of Its Female Inmate
Population Evaluation and Inspections Report 18-05 (September 2018), uwow.oig.justice.gov/reports/
2018/e1805.pdf (accessed September 17, 2019).
21 DOJ OIG Management of the Special Programs Unit at the Federal Bureau of Prisons
Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn. New York, Evaluation and Inspections Report 15-08
(September 2015), www.oig.justice.gov/reports/2015/e1508.pdf (accessed September 17, 2019).
22 We did not assess the overall efficacy of medical care at MDC Brooklyn; however, we
reviewed surveillance video footage to determine whether MDC Brooklyn staff delivered medication
and insulin to housing units during the power outage.
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EFTA00127756
TIMELINE OF MAJOR EVENTS AT MDC BROOKLYN,
JANUARY 27-FEBRUARY 3, 2019
To help readers track the major events discussed in this report, we provide
the timeline below.
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