Outrage over death in Sunset Park prison 
 Inmate suffered ‘permanent’ injuries from metal in food prior to death: lawsuit 
 BY ROSE ADAMS 
 Years before inmate Jamel  
 Floyd died after being pepper  
 sprayed inside a Sunset Park  
 federal prison, the 35-year-old  
 said he had suffered “permanent” 
   intestinal  damage  from  
 swallowing a paperclip in his  
 food at a Long Island jail — and  
 had been barred  from fi ling  a  
 grievance report about the incident, 
  court records allege. 
 “I had concerns about internally  
 bleeding because it  
 felt like it was ripping my insides  
 open,” Floyd wrote in his  
 2009 lawsuit, which he fi led six  
 months after the incident. 
 Floyd had been jailed at the  
 Nassau County Correctional  
 Center prior to his trial in 2010.  
 Following his conviction, he  
 began serving out his sentence  
 at various prisons — including  
 Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention  
 Center, where he was  
 incarcerated from October 2019  
 until his death on June 3.  
 While he was at the Long  
 Island detention facility, Floyd  
 reportedly ingested the metal  
 shard while eating a meal in  
 January of 2009, causing bleeding  
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 in his mouth and intense  
 abdominal pain, according to  
 the lawsuit.  
 Staffers took Floyd to the  
 hospital on the day of the injury, 
  and an x-ray showed the  
 paper clip fragment in his digestive  
 tract, according to the  
 complaint.  
 Two separate x-rays conducted  
 in  the  following weeks  
 determined the metal was no  
 longer in his body, according  
 to the court documents — but  
 Floyd said he continued to feel  
 pain in his abdomen for months  
 after the incident. 
 “As a result of the defendants  
 callous indifference,  
 plaintiff has been permanently  
 damaged. His stomach  
 cramps up alot and every now  
 and then there is spotted blood  
 when ever he use the bathroom  
 sic,” wrote Floyd in the complaint. 
 Floyd  also  alleged  that  the  
 jail denied him adequate medical  
 care and that its food services  
 system — which employs  
 inmates to prepare food —  
 doesn’t include enough professional  
 oversight, putting other  
 inmates  in  danger.  He  sought  
 $5 million in damages. 
 After the incident, Floyd  
 said he had attempted to fi le  
 a grievance report within the  
 fi ve-day  window  required  before  
 inmates can take legal action  
 — but claimed his attempts  
 were “denied,” and that he was  
 held in a “dry cell” that banned  
 outside materials in the week  
 following the incident, preventing  
 him from fi ling any report,  
 according to the court order. 
 Still, a judge claimed that  
 Floyd “failed to exhaust his  
 claims pursuant to the available  
 administrative remedy”  
 and dismissed the case, agreeing  
 with the defendants’ argument  
 that the incident was a  
 “mistake,” rather than evidence  
 of unconstitutional practices at  
 the jail. An appeal of the case in  
 2011 was also dismissed. 
 The  case  came  more  than  
 10 years before corrections offi  
 cers used mace in an attempt  
 to restrain Floyd, who became  
 “disruptive”  and  “potentially  
 harmful to himself and others”  
 inside his cell at Sunset Park’s  
 Metropolitan Detention Center  
 on June 3, according to the Federal  
 Bureau of Prisons.   
 “Responding staff observed  
 inmate Jamel Floyd barricaded  
 inside his cell and breaking  
 the cell door window with  
 a metal object,” the Bureau of  
 Prisons said in a statement on  
 June 3. “Pepper spray was deployed  
 and staff removed him  
 from his cell.” 
 Floyd became unconscious,  
 and medics transported him  
 to a nearby hospital, where he  
 was pronounced dead, according  
 to the statement. 
 Floyd’s mother, Donna  
 Mays,  told the Daily News that  
 her son was asthmatic, making  
 pepper spray potentially lifethreatening. 
 His death sparked outrage  
 from local politicians and activists, 
  who demonstrated outside  
 the facility on June 4 as part  
 of nationwide protests against  
 law enforcement that have  
 swept the city since May 28.  
 During that demonstration,  
 Mays blasted the corrections  
 offi cers for using the chemical  
 agent against her son. 
 “They murdered him,” said  
 the distraught mother.  
 Jamel  Floyd,  an  inmate  at  the  Metropolitan  Detention  Center,  died  on  
 June 3 after being maced by staffers.  Photo by Paul Frangipane 
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