KALIEF BROWDER AND THE AMERICAN “INJUSTICE SYSTEMâ€
Published On June 20, 2015 | By James Hoff | Fighting Racism

In May of 2010, 16-year-old Kalief Browder and a friend were walking home through their North Bronx neighborhood when they were stopped and interrogated by police. A man riding with the police claimed that Browder had stolen his backpack, and though he had none of the man’s possessions and had been at a party most of the night, he and his friend were arrested and taken to the 48th Precinct in the Bronx. Afterwards, Browder was charged with robbery, processed through central booking, and then transported to the notorious Riker’s Island prison where he would spend the next three years awaiting a trial that would never come. While his friends were graduating from high school and beginning their adult lives, he was suffering physical and psychological abuse and torture at the hands of the guards and inmates at this prison, often spending weeks on end in solitary confinement.
When Browder was finally released on May 29, 2013, he had spent more than 1,100 days in custody and more than seven of the last eight months in solitary confinement. On Saturday, June 6, 2015, a little more than two years after his release, he removed the air conditioning unit and hung himself from the window of his parents’ Bronx apartment. Browder, who had previously tried to kill himself several times since his arrest, had told his mother, according to his obituary published in the New Yorker, “I can’t take it anymore,†and complained that he was afraid the police were after him.
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