New York City

NYC Will Pay $3 Million to Settle Kalief Browder Lawsuit

City law department officials said they hope Thursday's settlement in the case of Kalief Browder brings "some measure of closure" to his family

What to Know

  • NYC will pay $3 million to the estate of a young man who committed suicide after spending three years in jail awaiting trial
  • Kalief Browder spent half of that time in solitary confinement. His death made him a symbol of a broken criminal justice system
  • City law department officials said they hope Thursday's settlement brings "some measure of closure" to his family

New York City will pay $3 million to the estate of a young man whose long detention in solitary confinement and subsequent suicide made him a symbol of a broken criminal justice system.

City law department officials said they hope Thursday's settlement in the case of Kalief Browder brings "some measure of closure" to his family.

Browder was 16 when he was arrested and accused of stealing a man's backpack. He spent three years in jail awaiting trial, about half that time in solitary confinement.

Prosecutors eventually dropped the charge. Browder was freed, but he killed himself at age 22 in 2015.

His story led to reforms at the city's jails and at federal prisons nationwide.

Sanford Rubenstein, a lawyer for Browder's estate, called the settlement "fair and reasonable."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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