A DOI investigation has revealed that members of Department of Correction (“DOC”) staff,
including Deputy Commissioner for the Investigation Division and Correction Intelligence Bureau Gregory
Kuczinski, engaged in unauthorized surveillance of DOI undercover operations. Specifically, over a
period of months this year, DOC staff, including at the direction of DC Kuczinski, used DOC technology to
listen to calls placed between DOI and certain confidential informants. DOI’s investigation demonstrated
that this was not inadvertent, but that DOC staff deliberately targeted DOI investigators for surveillance,
and that they continued the surveillance even after written directives that such surveillance was to end.
City rules expressly prohibit surveillance by DOC of calls made to DOI investigators. None of the DOC
staff were able to provide a coherent explanation for this misconduct. DOI is particularly concerned that
there was a renewal of this activity, directed by DC Kuczinski, immediately after he and other senior staff
were informed that DOI was preparing a Report on their improper use of City vehicles. Our investigation
provided no alternative explanation that would suggest this timing was coincidental.
We have sent a letter describing those findings to Mayor de Blasio. Because the letter contains
significant technical information about security operations, we will not be making the letter available at this
time beyond the summary of findings above. However, we note that the letter contains the following five
recommendations, each of which the Mayor’s office has now agreed to implement immediately:
All members of DOC that are tasked with listening to inmate calls must immediately be
retrained. This investigation determined that DC Kuczinski did not know the rules and at no
time provided training or guidance on these rules to his staff.
DOC’s current organizational structure for telephone monitoring must immediately be overhauled
to ensure sufficient safeguards are in place and DOI investigations are not further
compromised.
DC Kuczinski must be terminated from his current position. His failure to demonstrate sound
judgment in this matter raises concerns about his ability to oversee the Investigation and
Intelligence Divisions, two crucial units to DOC operations.
DOC must sign a Memorandum of Understanding dictating that a newly created “Telephone
Monitoring Unit” be under the direct supervision of DOI.
In order to make sure that similar problems do not occur at any agency, the Mayor should
send a memo to all agency heads and agency general counsel reviewing the City rules
mandating cooperation with DOI.
I want to thank City Hall for taking this issue of improper surveillance by DOC seriously and for
acting quickly to resolve the problems. Interference, by anyone, with a DOI investigation is a very serious
matter that will not be tolerated. In particular, surveillance of DOI activities in the City’s jails by the very
agency DOI is investigating, not only compromises investigations but can potentially put the lives of
investigators, correction officers, inmates and others at risk.