A flurry of stories for your Thursday.
A flurry of stories for your Thursday. ·  View in browser
NEWSLETTER

Funding local news is more important than ever, and it will take a village to succeed. Join us in our work to rebuild local journalism as a pillar of democracy in New York.

Sierra Johnson alleges that three corrections officers and a doctor sexually assaulted her during two separate stints in New York state prisons. Courtesy of Sierra Johnson
Sierra Johnson is one of nearly 1,600 women who filed claims under the Adult Survivors Act alleging sexual abuse in state prisons.
By Jessy Edwards

Diagnosed with a terminal heart condition, Sierra Johnson sometimes spends weeks at a time in the hospital. But she’s determined to not let her health get in the way of her lawsuit against the state of New York.

The 36-year-old Native American resident of the Mohawk Nation at Akwesasne sued the state in 2023, alleging that four of its employees sexually assaulted her while she was incarcerated in two state prisons in 2014 and 2017.

At the end of May, Johnson spoke with Hell Gate and New York Focus from her hospital bed at the University of Vermont Medical Center, where she was recovering from a two-week stint in intensive care after suffering a severe heart attack and cardiogenic shock. Doctors have diagnosed her with end-stage heart failure, and have twice told her that she has days to live. Johnson, who has a teenage daughter, said she intends to spend the time she has left making state prisons safer for the women who will be held in them in the future.

“It’s not just about me. If it was, I would have just ate it,” she said. “But I don’t know if I’m gonna make it through this year. And no matter what, when it comes to the treatment of inmates, we should be treated as human beings.”

Johnson filed her lawsuit under the Adult Survivors Act, which in 2022 temporarily allowed sexual assault survivors to file complaints outside of the typical statute of limitations. She’s one of nearly 1,600 women who have filed claims against the state of New York alleging they were sexually abused by prison staff, according to a Hell Gate and New York Focus analysis. Collectively, the complaints paint a damning portrait of a longstanding, systemic pattern of sexual abuse in the state prison system, according to the women’s attorneys.

Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie in early June. New York state Assembly Majority
Wrangling over a major bill to cut packaging waste continued until the final hours of the legislative session, assemblymembers said.
By Colin Kinniburgh

The New York Assembly closed the legislative session late Tuesday night without passing the year’s most closely watched environmental bill: a measure to reduce plastic pollution by holding companies responsible for the packaging waste they generate.

The fight over the packaging reduction bill continued until the final hours of the session, assemblymembers told New York Focus, but Speaker Carl Heastie ultimately declined to bring it to the floor for a vote — despite saying he supports it himself. A spokesperson for the speaker suggested that the bill did not have the votes to pass, though a majority of lawmakers in the chamber had signed onto it.

In the end, it may have come down to a cluster of reticent lawmakers who indicated that they were prepared to vote for the bill if it came to the floor — but hoped it wouldn’t.

Related: As Albany Debates Plastics Crackdown, Industry Pushes Softer Alternative

For every three dollars Comptroller Tom Dinapoli has returned to its owners since he took office in 2007, he has given roughly five to the state government to shore up its annual budgets. Photo: Office of the New York State Comptroller | Illustration: Leor Stylar
Drew Warshaw is taking on Comptroller Tom DiNapoli with a pledge to repay the entire pot of unclaimed funds as soon as ‘humanly possible.’
By Chris Bragg

The New York state government is sitting on $20 billion of the public’s money, and an upstart challenger wants to give it all back.

Banks, insurers, and other companies often owe money to customers from inactive accounts, uncashed checks, security deposits, and other sources. If they don’t return it directly, they eventually have to hand it over to the state comptroller’s office, which takes over the job of getting the money back to its rightful owners.

Yet the mountain of cash keeps growing, and the governor and legislature routinely spend huge sums from the pot with little expectation of repaying it. Last fiscal year, lawmakers treated nearly $900 million in unclaimed funds as revenue to spend however they saw fit.

If the bill suddenly became due, it could blow a massive hole in the New York state budget.

And a recently declared comptroller candidate would take steps towards doing just that.

New York is sitting on a $20 billion pot of unclaimed money, and some of it might be yours. Here’s how to see if you’re on the list.
By Chris Bragg

There’s a good chance that the New York State Comptroller is holding onto your money.

The comptroller’s office manages a giant pot of funds — about $20 billion — that businesses turned over to the state from sources like dormant bank accounts, uncashed checks, and unreturned security deposits. As I recently reported, New York state has essentially borrowed most of this money — and spent it.

But it’s very easy to see if a part of the $20 billion is yours.

Copyright © New York Focus 2024, All rights reserved.
Staying Focused is compiled and written by Alex Arriaga
Contact Alex at alex@nysfocus.com

Feedback? Tips? Pitches? Contact us at: editor@nysfocus.com

Support our work!

Interested in sponsoring these emails? Get in touch! Email editor@nysfocus.com.

This email was sent to *|EMAIL|*

unsubscribe from this list  ·  update subscription preferences

New York Focus · *|HTML:LIST_ADDRESS_HTML|* · USA