Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) Covid-19 updates to the Board of Correction (BOC) as of 7:00 am on Wednesday April 15, 2020.
Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) updates to the Board of Correction (BOC) as of 7:00 am on Wednesday April 8, 2020.
Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) Covid-19 updates to the Board of Correction (BOC) as of 7:00 am on Wednesday April 22, 2020.
Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) Covid-19 updates to the Board of Correction (BOC) as of 8:00 am on Wednesday April 29, 2020.
Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) Covid-19 updates to the Board of Correction (BOC) as of 11:59pm Tuesday, June 02, 2020.
Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) Covid-19 updates to the Board of Correction (BOC) as of 7:00 am on Wednesday May 13, 2020.
Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) Covid-19 updates to the Board of Correction (BOC) as of 11:59pm Tuesday, May 19, 2020.
Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) Covid-19 updates to the Board of Correction (BOC) as of 11:59pm Tuesday, May 26, 2020.
Correctional Health Services (CHS) and Department of Correction (DOC) Covid-19 updates to the Board of Correction (BOC) as of 7:00 am on Wednesday May 6, 2020.
Due to the COVID- 19 crisis, the Board of Correction (BOC) will not be submitting its first progress report (due July 1, 2020) on the impact on incarcerated individuals of closing jails on Rikers Island and constructing new facilities to replace such jails as required by Law 192 of 2019.
Under the city’s borough-based jails plan, Rikers Island will be replaced by jails in 4 of the 5 boroughs. The plan aims to create smaller & safer jails that allow people in custody to be closer to the courts where their cases are heard and their communities. IBO examines how these 2 goals overlap
NYC BY THE NUMBERS: Based on recommendations from the city’s Board of Correction, the de Blasio Administration is considering the release of some people now held in the city’s jails. How many people in custody might be released?
Per Administrative Code of the City of New York section 7-113, the City's Law Department must post information on civil actions alleging misconduct commenced against the Department of Corrections and individual officers on its website.
Per Administrative Code of the City of New York section 7-113, the City's Law Department must post information on civil actions alleging misconduct commenced against the Department of Corrections and individual officers on its website.
Per Administrative Code of the City of New York section 7-113, the City's Law Department must post information on civil actions alleging misconduct commenced against the Department of Corrections and individual officers on its website.
Per Administrative Code of the City of New York section 7-113, the City's Law Department must post information on civil actions alleging misconduct commenced against the Department of Corrections and individual officers on its website.
Pursuant to local law, this report provides data on the number of grievances submitted by individuals in custody throughout the quarter dis-aggregated by the method of submission, facility and housing area of submission, category of the grievance, and whether the grievance was grievable.
Pursuant to Local Law 132 of 2019, the Department of Correction is required to report when an individual in custody refuses to go to sick call, changes his or her mind, or attends another general service at the time they requested sick call and refuses sick call.