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Kalief Browder: A Decade Later

Kalief Browder: A Decade Later

Ten years after his suicide, lessons from what Browder shared with The New Yorker about his time in solitary confinement.

The New Yorker Radio Hour

July 8, 202518m 17s

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Show Notes

Kalief Browder was jailed at Rikers Island at the age of sixteen; he spent three years locked up without ever being convicted of a crime, and much of that time was spent in solitary confinement. In 2014, the New Yorker staff writer Jennifer Gonnerman wrote about Browder and the failings of the criminal-justice system that his case exposed: unconscionable delays in the courts, excessive use of solitary confinement, teen-agers being charged for crimes as adults, brutality on the part of correction officers. Ten years ago, on June 6, 2015, Browder died by suicide. On The New Yorker Radio Hour, Gonnerman shares excerpts from the interviews she recorded with Browder, in which he described the psychological toll of spending years in a twelve-by-seven cell.

This segment originally aired on June 3, 2016.

Topics

kalief browdermass incarcerationpoliticsprotestjailrikers islandcrimeprisonprison industrial complexjennifer gonnerman