The family of
24-year-old Esias “Izzy” Johnson is seeking answers after the gay man died at
New York’s Rickers Island prison September 7.
Johnson’s
family says jail officials ignored his pleas for help. He’d spent a month
trying to get out of jail on a $1 bail, according to Gay City News.
Twelve people, including Johnson, have died in New York
City jails so far this year.
New York’s
chief medical examiner said that determining the cause of Johnson’s death would
require more time, the outlet reported. The family requested a toxicology
report.
“Inmates came
forward saying he had been complaining of stomach pain for days,” Johnson’s
mother, Tracy Johnson, told Gay City News. “Inmates said he
had been screaming all night for help, and come morning time, he couldn’t get
out of bed. He never got out of bed for breakfast.”
The
New York Daily News reported the death could have been due
to an overdose — something Johnson’s family disputes.
“I think they
put a drug overdose to cover up that they weren’t taking care of him or helping
him,” Tracy Johnson said. She said her son had Asperger’s syndrome and had
social anxiety.
He had been
awaiting court dates for several misdemeanor charges. A lawyer for the family,
Jamie Santana, said inmates heard Johnson screaming in pain and that his calls
for help were known to Rikers Island officials.
“We do believe
that Rikers Island was negligent with respect to the duty of care,” Santana
said. “It certainly appears they failed at providing any medical attention.”
Johnson’s
family said he should have never been at Rikers.
Tracy Johnson
told the Daily News earlier this month, “We tried paying the
bail online, but they said we couldn’t. … He had commissary money and could
have paid, but they said he still needed to be seen by a judge. But they
weren’t bringing him to court.”
“He said he
had problems with his court dates,” she told Gay City News recently.
“He wasn’t being taken to them. He had a date on the 18th of August and I
gave him all the info. He passed all the information to the appropriate people.
It was a phone court appointment, but they never set it up for him. He said,
‘I’m missing court dates like crazy, Mom, they’re not doing anything.’”
The New York
City Department of Correction told the outlet, “The circumstances surrounding
this death will receive a full investigation.”
“He was
supposed to be home this week sometime,” Tracy Johnson said. “It’s a bit hard
right now because we didn’t get to see him for his birthday. He was excited to
be home so he could celebrate — and as a mom, it hurts more because he could
have been helped.”
Johnson, from
Massachusetts, moved to New York after meeting a man online. Once he moved
there, his family says, he had some negative situations and periods.
“We are going
to try our very best to pursue the highest level of accountability,” Santana
said. “Unfortunately, no amount of justice will bring back Esias.”
Gay City News noted that Johnson’s death comes two years after the death of
Layleen Polanco, a Black trans woman held at Rikers who died after suffering a
medical emergency. Her family received a settlement of $5.9 after an
investigation revealed she was neglected by jail officials.
“Rikers is a
death trap,” Beverly Tillery, the executive director of the New York City Anti-Violence
Project, said in a press release.
“We have been
sounding the alarm about the dangers at Rikers for several years now, but
despite pledges to close the facility, city officials continue to drag their
feet, leaving thousands of New Yorkers in peril,” Tillery added.
“Esias Johnson and Layleen Polanco should have been released on bail, but
instead [they] were left to languish at Rikers for weeks with no end in
sight.”
Johnson's
family has set up a Facebook
fundraiser to help with burial costs.
SOURCE: ADVOCATE
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