Criminal Justice
C.J. Ciaramella | 11.22.2024 1:58 PM
In 2022, former New York City Department of Corrections Commissioner Louis Molina testified before the city council about the flood of fentanyl coming into Rikers Island, the city's infamous jail complex.
"How does fentanyl get into our jails?" he asked. "The short answer is that most of it enters in letters and packages laced with fentanyl, literally soaked in the drug, and mailed to people in custody."
To illustrate the problem, Molina had a powerful prop: A child's drawing of a reindeer that had been mailed to a Rikers Island inmate and tested positive for fentanyl. It was because of letters like this, Molina explained, that his department was proposing ending delivery of physical letters to jail inmates and instead sending them scanned and digitized copies.
There was only one problem: The field test used on that reindeer drawing wasn't reliable, and a drug lab would later invalidate the results. Rudolph was clean.
In fact, a report released Wednesday by the New York City Department of Investigation (DOI) found that, when it sent 71 pieces of mail that tested presumptive positive for fentanyl to a drug lab for verification, 85 percent of the items came back negative, including the reindeer drawing.
The DOI concluded that "field tests are not reliable, particularly with respect to the identification of fentanyl in items such as books, clothing, greeting cards and other materials sent through the mail."
The basis for........