DOJ Plans To Close MCC Jail
& Move Inmates to MDC In Brookyn Where
Ex-DEA Agent Died
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Video
BBC
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SDNY COURTHOUSE,
August 26 -- After scandals
from inmates left without soap
during the COVID pandemic to
the death of Jeffrey Epstein,
on August 26 it emerged that
the Department of Justice aims
to close the Metropolitan
Correctional Center, at least
temporarily.
But the
MDC where they plan to move
many inmates has problems of
its own, including as Inner
City Press has reported the
recent death of a former DEA
agent on the day he was
convicted of child porn, here.
We'll have more on this.
Back in
March 2020, just before the
COVID lock downs, during the
guilty plea of Christian
Navedo on March 3 to lesser
included offenses involving
gun possession and use in
connection with a conspiracy
to distribute heroin and
fentanyl, it emerged that he
and other in the Metropolitan
Correctional Center have had
not visitors, or hot food or
showers, for five days. Inner
City Press reported it, here,
then continued its inquiries.
On the
evening of March 4, on Park
Row behind the MCC, Inner City
Press witnessed and filed a
large group with identical
rolling bags going into the
MCC. Video
here. It appears that
the Bureau of Prison has
brought in new staff.
On March 4,
U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York
Magistrate Judge Kevin N. Fox
asked Navedo if these
conditions impacted his
ability to understand the
proceedings and plead guilty
with a clear mind.
"You mean, does
it impact me?" Navedo asked.
His lawyer
whispered to him, and he
confirmed that his competence
to plea guilty was not
impacted.
On March 4
a defendant charged with
violations of supervised
release argued through counsel
to Judge Fox that he should
not be detained in the MCC as
he would not received the 100
mg of methadone he is on.
Inner City Press will have
more on this.
The lack of
visitors in the MCC arose on
March 2 when Larry Ray
appeared before Judge Fox; his
Federal Defender said she had
been unable to show him the
government's video
evidence.
Navedo's lawyer
put into the record the MCC
conditions, likening them to
the conditions in the MDC in
Brooklyn which have given rise
in many cases to reduced
sentencing. Here, Navedo has
agreed to not appeal or
otherwise collaterally attack
any sentence below 327 months.
The case is US v. Navedo,
19-cr-259 (Fox /
Berman).
***
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