New York Guard Faces Manslaughter Verdict for Failing to Stop Fatal Prison Beating
A New York jury has begun deliberating whether former corrections officer Michael Fisher is guilty of second-degree manslaughter for allegedly standing by for about seven minutes as fellow guards fatally beat inmate Robert Brooks in the Marcy Correctional Facility infirmary on Dec. 9, 2024. Special prosecutor William Fitzpatrick argued in closing that body‑camera video shows Fisher close enough to physically intervene yet doing nothing while officers struck Brooks with a shoe, lifted him by the neck and dropped him, contributing to the 43‑year‑old Black man’s death. Fisher’s attorney, Scott Iseman, countered that his client walked in after the assault was under way, lacked a full view of the scene and could not know the extent of Brooks’ injuries "without the benefit of 20/20 hindsight." The case is the last of 10 indictments stemming from the beating, following one murder conviction, two acquittals and six guilty pleas, and comes amid broader turmoil in New York’s prisons that included an illegal three‑week guards’ strike, more than 2,000 firings, National Guard deployments and a separate set of indictments over another inmate death. Advocates say that despite some reforms triggered by the Brooks footage, chronic understaffing and systemic brutality persist across the state system.
📌 Key Facts
- Former officer Michael Fisher, 55, is charged with second-degree manslaughter in the Dec. 9, 2024 death of inmate Robert Brooks at Marcy Correctional Facility.
- Body‑camera video presented at trial shows guards striking Brooks with a shoe and lifting and dropping him by the neck in the infirmary while Fisher stands near the doorway.
- Ten guards were indicted in February 2025; six pleaded guilty, one was convicted of murder, two were acquitted, and Fisher is the last to face a jury.
- New York’s prison system has been operating with roughly 3,000 National Guard members after a wildcat guard strike led to more than 2,000 corrections officers being fired and to additional indictments over another inmate death.
📊 Relevant Data
Black people constitute 14% of the U.S. population but 41% of the prison and jail populations in 2025.
Mass Incarceration: The Whole Pie 2025 — Prison Policy Initiative
In state prisons, Black people are incarcerated at a rate 5 times higher than White people on average across the U.S. as of 2021 data analyzed in 2024 reports.
Mass Incarceration Trends — The Sentencing Project
U.S. prison mortality rates increased by 61% from 2019 to 2020, with 6,182 deaths documented in 2020 compared to 4,240 in 2019.
UCLA Law researchers find prison mortality rates skyrocketed during pandemic — UCLA Newsroom
New York state prisons face staffing shortages due to high vacancy rates, mandatory overtime, poor morale, and dangerous working conditions, with vacancy rates surging to 27.4% following events in early 2025.
Staff vacancies surge in N.Y. following prison strike — Corrections1
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