Police Magazine Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

NYPD Custody Procedures Questioned After Escapes

Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said that a suspect's recent escape from a police interrogation room in the Bronx amounted to "gross negligence" on the part of the detectives guarding him. Kelly ordered a review of how people in custody are handled in more than 100 police buildings.

May 8, 2002
2 min to read


Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly said that a suspect's recent escape from a police interrogation room in the Bronx amounted to "gross negligence" on the part of the detectives guarding him. Kelly ordered a review of how people in custody are handled in more than 100 police buildings.

Jose Santiago, a suspect in 16 sexual attacks in New York City, simply walked out of an unlocked first-floor interrogation room of the Special Victims' Squad, past a uniformed officer and into the street. The man, who had been brought in for questioning about the sexual attacks, was left alone in the interrogation room with handcuffs off, the police said.

Ad Loading...

It was at least the sixth episode of someone's escaping from the authorities this year, five of them in the last six weeks.

The police said that Mr. Santiago, 33, last lived on East 179th Street in the Bronx. They were able to identify him through fingerprints from a table he touched in the interrogation room, one police official said, and the prints matched a record of his arrest from Dec. 8 on a charge of unauthorized use of a motor vehicle.

The two detectives who were questioning him on Monday looked at a photograph of Mr. Santiago taken when he was arrested in December and confirmed that he was the escapee, the police official said. Mr. Santiago had twice been convicted of a crime, the police said. In 1992 he was convicted of third-degree sex abuse, and last year of grand larceny theft, the police said. Mr. Kelly said that the police were awaiting the results of DNA tests of a saliva sample the suspect had provided. The police have matching DNA evidence in all but one of the sexual attacks between March 5, 1997, and Feb. 26 of this year.

In response to the escape, Mr. Kelly said that senior police officials would address patrol officers on every shift in every command around the city on the importance of adhering to the department's policies on securing those in custody.

"I think there were significant lapses there, no question about it, no excuses for it," Mr. Kelly said yesterday at a City Hall news conference. "I've ordered a thorough investigation of the circumstances surrounding that escape."

Ad Loading...

Mr. Kelly said he had ordered an examination of all police facilities where suspects or prisoners are questioned or kept. And, he said that the two detectives who were guarding the prisoner would be disciplined. The detectives, whom the police declined to identify, will probably lose up to 30 vacation days and could also be transferred from their current assignments, another police official said.

More Technology

Tinted blue background image of traffic with inset images for an ALPR camera, a police dispatcher, and a logo for Flock Safety.
TechnologyApril 16, 2026

Flock Safety Introduces Audit Assistance, Its Latest Trust & Compliance Tool

Audit Assistance is the latest tool in the Flock Trust & Compliance suite, a first-of-its-kind set of products and services that provides communities with guardrails and customization for accountability, transparency, and responsible use of the Flock platform.

Read More →
image of one closed laptop and one open laptop with Toughbook logo on screen, all against a blue gradient background
TechnologyApril 16, 2026

Panasonic Connect Launches the Toughbook 56

The Toughbook 56, the latest rugged laptop from Panasonic Connect, delivers enhanced performance, refined design, new levels of security, and power-efficient workflows in demanding environments.

Read More →
Collection of traffic control signs against a city backdrop and logos for Radarsign and Sourcewell.
TechnologyApril 16, 2026

Radarsign Awarded Sourcewell Contract Expanding Access to Traffic Safety Solutions

Radarsign’s traffic safety portfolio, including radar speed signs, flashing beacon systems, and more, are now available through Sourcewell purchasing contracts.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Rooftop view off a drone detection devise with two small rubber antennas with an view overlooking a large domed event venue.
TechnologyApril 9, 2026

D-Fend Solutions’ EnforceAir C-UAS System Secures Key Event with RF-Cyber Counter-Drone Technology

D-Fend Solutions deployed its EnforceAir C-UAS system in support of local police to help secure a 19,000-attendee event, leveraging its non-jamming approach to keep communications and authorized drones operational while safeguarding against rogue drone threats.

Read More →
Graphic showing four priorities for secure enterprise cloud adoption and a logo for Genetec.
TechnologyApril 2, 2026

Genetec Highlights Why Governance Defines Secure Cloud Adoption in Enterprise Physical Security

With World Cloud Security Day on April 3, Genetec outlines how enterprises can strengthen resilience as they modernize physical security in the cloud.

Read More →
police car geotab thumbnail for services whitepaper
SponsoredApril 1, 2026

A police department’s guide to fleet management and vehicle health

Today’s police departments face rising fleet costs and must stay ready to respond, no matter the call. In this eBook, get powerful insights to enhance your police fleet’s cost-efficiency, reliability and performance through data-driven tactics.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
An automated license plate reader mounted on rear trunk of a car.
TechnologyMarch 26, 2026

Public Safety Surveillance Technology: Built on Compliance and Trust

ALPR solutions provider Leonardo explains why leveraging technology for safety must never come at the expense of constitutional rights or community trust. Every action within an ALPR system should be logged in a tamper-proof audit trail with query records of who accessed what data, when, and for what purpose.

Read More →
Promotional graphic for Patrolfinder featuring a police chief’s headshot inside a circular frame alongside a police SUV in the background. The headline reads: “Built for Patrol: How One Police Chief Fixed Communication, Boosted Visibility, and Changed the Culture.”
SponsoredMarch 17, 2026

Built for Patrol: How One Police Chief Fixed Communication, Boosted Visibility, and Changed the Culture

Patrol work hasn’t changed—but the expectations on officers have. See how one police chief helped officers get the right information at the right time, improve patrol visibility, and strengthen trust without adding complexity or surveillance. This real-world story shows how patrol-driven technology can make the job safer, smarter, and more effective—starting on day one.

Read More →
Back small device with headline ATD Gunshot Detection System and a logo for Acoem set against a tinted blue background image of a large city.
TechnologyFebruary 25, 2026

Acoem ATD to Showcase 96-Attribute Acoustic Intelligence Engine for Gunshot Detection

Unlike legacy gunshot detection architectures that require multiple sensors arranged in fixed meshes, Acoem ATD localizes threats with a single sensor by analyzing both the muzzle blast and the ballistic shockwave of a projectile.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Image of a persons hands on keyboard of laptop with screen that displays multiple images from security cameras
TechnologyFebruary 11, 2026

Genetec Adds New Capabilities for Security Center SaaS Users

Genetec has launched new investigation capabilities in Genetec Security Center SaaS to reduce investigation time from hours to minutes across complex, multi-site, and multi-vendor environments.

Read More →