Bronx Times: Your neighborhood, your newsBronx Times: Your neighborhood, your news
  • Home Pros
  • Jobs
  • News
    • All
    • By Neighborhood
    • Arts
    • Business
    • Coronavirus
    • Development
    • Education
    • En Español
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Police & Fire
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • Opinion
    • Transit
  • Best of
  • Things to Do
    • Local Events
    • Post an Event
    • Business Events
    • Games
  • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
  • Our Network
    • amNY
    • Bronx Family
    • Brooklyn Paper
    • Brownstoner
    • Caribbean Life
    • Gay City News
    • QNS
  • Digital Editions
  • Print Subscriptions
  • Webinars
  • Podcasts
Bronx Times: Your neighborhood, your newsBronx Times: Your neighborhood, your news
  • Home Pros
  • Jobs
  • News
    • All
    • By Neighborhood
    • Arts
    • Business
    • Coronavirus
    • Development
    • Education
    • En Español
    • Health
    • Lifestyle
    • Police & Fire
    • Politics
    • Sports
    • Opinion
    • Transit
  • Best of
  • Things to Do
    • Local Events
    • Post an Event
    • Business Events
    • Games
  • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
  • Our Network
    • amNY
    • Bronx Family
    • Brooklyn Paper
    • Brownstoner
    • Caribbean Life
    • Gay City News
    • QNS
  • Digital Editions
  • Print Subscriptions
  • Webinars
  • Podcasts
Bronx Times: Your neighborhood, your newsBronx Times: Your neighborhood, your news
  • News
  • All
  • By Neighborhood
  • Arts
  • Business
  • Coronavirus
  • Development
  • Education
  • En Español
  •  
  • Health
  • Lifestyle
  • Police & Fire
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Opinion
  • Transit
  • Things to Do
  • Local Events
  • Post an Event
  • Business Events
  • Games
  • Our Network
  • amNY
  • Bronx Family
  • Brooklyn Paper
  • Brownstoner
  • Caribbean Life
  • Gay City News
  • QNS
  • Home Pros
  • Jobs
  • Best of
  • Contact Us
  • Subscribe
  • Digital Editions
  • Print Subscriptions
  • Webinars
  • Podcasts

Bronx Defenders form alliance to protect New York evidence sharing requirements

By Sadie Brown Posted on January 17, 2025
The Bronx Defenders launched a coalition with exonerated New Yorkers, advocates, and other public defenders to protect "Kalief's Law," named for the Bronx man who died by suicide in 2015 after being wrongfully imprisoned on Rikers Island for three years.
The Bronx Defenders joined advocates and exonerees to protect “Kalief’s Law,” named for a Bronx teen, pictured, who died after three years of wrongful imprisonment on Rikers Island.
Courtesy of the Kalief Browder Foundation

The Bronx Defenders, a public defense nonprofit, joined forces with more than a dozen criminal justice organizations on Monday to launch a coalition aimed at protecting a state law that requires the prompt sharing of evidence with defendants.

The coalition, concerned about preserving New York’s evidence-sharing requirements—known as “Kalief’s Law”—warns that lawmakers and district attorneys are seeking to weaken critical aspects of the law. Such efforts, the coalition argues, could jeopardize New Yorkers’ Sixth Amendment rights to a fair and speedy trial.

The discovery reform law, which mandates timely evidence sharing, took effect in 2020. It was inspired by the tragic story of Kalief Browder, a Bronx teenager who spent three years on Rikers Island awaiting trial, ultimately leading to his death.

Browder was falsely accused of stealing a backpack in 2011, but stronger evidence-sharing laws could have resulted in a quick dismissal of the charges, sparing him from years of abuse and the torment of solitary confinement. In 2015, at just 22 years old, Browder died by suicide.

“This is basic due process,” said Juval O. Scott, Executive Director of The Bronx Defenders. “In the Bronx, we’ve seen how timely access to evidence allows the people we represent to make fully informed decisions about their cases and holds law enforcement accountable. Rolling back this critical law would dishonor the legacy of Kalief Browder and devastate the progress we’ve made toward transparency and fairness.”

The alliance said that several elected officials, such as Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, have indicated that the law may be weakened this legislative session. The law’s opponents argue that it has led to a spike in dismissals, a characterization the defenders said is misleading.

In a Center For Urban Future Fireside Chat with DA Bragg, which he posted on X, he questioned the law.

“The most significant problem with the statute is the remedy,” said DA Bragg. “If a document or documents are inadvertently not disclosed, a lot of the courts are dismissing our cases.”

State Senator Zellnor Myrie and Assembly Member Micah Laser cosponsored a new bill targeting discovery laws that would grant district attorneys access to the NYPD’s database, making it easier for them to share crucial evidence – a proposal the coalition supports because it would streamline the discovery process without limiting its requirements.

But the law makers suggested in an opinion piece published by the New York Daily News that streamlining discovery was only the beginning.

“We expect that New York’s district attorneys will seek additional changes to the discovery law this year,” Myrie and Lasher said in the article. “In light of the data, the Legislature should give their proposals serious consideration, while keeping in mind how the old system often trampled on the due process rights of defendants.”

Gov. Kathy Hochul took aim at the current discovery laws in her State of the State speech Thursday night.

“I will fight to finally close those loopholes that were created in our discovery laws that delay trials and lead to cases being thrown out on minor technicalities,” Hochul said.

But Eli Northrup, Policy Director in the Bronx Defender’s Criminal Defense Practice, said the assertion that dismissals, especially for felonies, have skyrocketed is based on arrest data, rather than indictment data.

”We have a police department under this mayor that is more frequently characterizing arrests as felonies when they are not felonies,” Northrup said. “And when they make their way in front of a district attorney, they realize that.”

Members of the Alliance to Protect Kalief’s Law worry that rolling back discovery requirements will drag the state back to a time when prosecutors frequently sat on evidence until shortly before a trial, preventing defense attorneys from helping clients clear their name.

The Bronx Defenders said this could reignite issues in the Bronx, like when courts were so badly backlogged that the Bronx Defenders sued in 2016 over defendants’ court proceedings in low-level cases being delayed months, or even years in violation of their right to a speedy trial.

Northrup said that rollbacks would undermine “Kalief’s Law.”

“ It’s [the Bronx] kind of ground zero for discovery reform in many ways,” Northrup said. It has definitely positively impacted justice in the borough because individuals can see the evidence against them. They’re not blindfolded, and to roll these back, it will impact people in the Bronx in the way that it impacted Kalief Browder.”

About the Author

Related Articles

  • Opinion | Congestion pricing is here to stay. Let’s fix what it has broken in the South Bronx
  • New York Botanical Garden’s newest exhibition ‘Flower Power’ fuses political history with psychedelic art
  • Richard Swygert was sentenced to 75 years to life in prison for shooting a 20-year-old Rosedale man to death and wounding two others in front of the notorious and now-closed Umbrella Hotel in Kew Gardens during the early morning hours of New Year’s Day 2021.Bronx man gets 75 years to life in prison for Umbrella Hotel shooting in Kew Gardens that killed one, injured two others: DA
  • Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, Bronx orgs rally against ICE activity in Norwood

Jobs in New York

Add your job

  • MDG Design & ConstructionM/WBE Work Opportunity
  • Clearsound HearingMedical- Front desk Administrator
  • Sims MetalCOMPRAMOS METAL DE DESECHO

View all jobs…

Crime

  • Richard Swygert was sentenced to 75 years to life in prison for shooting a 20-year-old Rosedale man to death and wounding two others in front of the notorious and now-closed Umbrella Hotel in Kew Gardens during the early morning hours of New Year’s Day 2021.Bronx man gets 75 years to life in prison for Umbrella Hotel shooting in Kew Gardens that killed one, injured two others: DA
  • police officers in the BronxBronx split takes effect: NYPD creates two major commands in borough to bring in more resources, combat gun violence
  • family members of murdered Bronx girl weep at vigilFamily of murdered 16-year-old Bronx school girl calls for street to be renamed for her one year after deadly shooting
  • 28-year-old woman arrested after allegedly posing as a teen student at Westchester Square Academy
  • scene of Bronx shooting where teen was shot by unknown suspect, in insetBronx shooting suspect sought for targeting teen inside parked car waiting for ride to school: cops

Things to do in the Bronx

Post an Event

Derfner Judaica Museum + Art Collection
Tomorrow, 10:30 am

Envisioning the Sacred: Modern Art from the Collection
Derfner Judaica Museum

Lily’s last year of high school is
Tomorrow, 2 pm

Forest High and the Glitch In The System
The Players Theatre

ON TUESDAY’S HARLEM SWINGS and HOP
Tomorrow, 7 pm

Harlem Tuesdays: FREE Swinging Lindy Hop Class!
Lt. Joseph P. Kennedy

Death of a Salesman Pulitzer Prize® Winn
May 26, 12:30 pm

Books on Broadway: Death of a Salesman
Bryan Park

Get ready to move and groove with the Si
May 27, 1 pm

Silver Shoes Dance Club
Sister Annunciata Bethell Senior Center

PSS Davidson Older Adult Center at 955 U
May 28, 11 am

Free Barbeque, Dancing and Open House
PSS Davidson Older Adult Center

Parade May 30 2026 11am 164 street and G
May 30, 11 am

The Bronx puerto rican day parade
Grand Concourse and 164 street

Red Monkey Theater Group (RMTG) continue
May 30, all day

Much Ado About Nothing by Red Monkey Theater Group
Bartow-Pell Mansion Museum

View All Events…

News

  • Richard Swygert was sentenced to 75 years to life in prison for shooting a 20-year-old Rosedale man to death and wounding two others in front of the notorious and now-closed Umbrella Hotel in Kew Gardens during the early morning hours of New Year’s Day 2021.Bronx man gets 75 years to life in prison for Umbrella Hotel shooting in Kew Gardens that killed one, injured two others: DA
  • Public Advocate Jumaane Williams, Bronx orgs rally against ICE activity in Norwood
  • Riders of MTA cannonball train walk on platform at Penn StationMTA cannonballs into summer season with launch of LIRR Hamptons express, additional subway/bus beach service
  • DSC_6411Fare evasion: Top MTA official says agency is testing ‘European’ enforcement on moving buses
  • The Orchard Beach Pavilion re-opens this summer after being closed since 2009 for repairs. Orchard Beach Pavilion restored to former glory after $114M renovation, set to reopen this summer

Things to do in the Bronx

Home Pros

More from Around NYC

NYC's Woof Fest Returns for Pride Month With a Free Dog Costume Contest, Drag Shows, and More
New York Family

NYC’s Woof Fest Returns for Pride Month With a Free Dog Costume Contest, Drag Shows, and More

the outside of a Brookyn building charred by a fire
amNY

Two killed, others injured, as massive fire rips through Brooklyn apartment building: FDNY

LaToya Williams-Belfort Headshot – SchnepsConnects
Schneps Podcasts

Building Opportunity in the Bronx with LaToya Williams-Belfort, Executive Director of The Bronx Community Foundation

“Matador Bolero," directed by Jonathan Rosado.
Gay City News

‘Matador Bolero’: Queer rocker Yves Tumor makes their acting debut in oddball sci-fi experiment

  • Newsletter
  • About Bronx Times
  • Contact Us
  • Networking Events
  • Home Pros
  • Advertise
  • © 2026 Schneps Media
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Sitemap
  • Sections
  • Jobs
  • Home Pros
  • Events