Pubdate: Thu, 08 Mar 2001 Source: New York Post (NY) Copyright: 2001 NYP Holdings, Inc Contact: 1211 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10036-8790 Feedback: http://nypostonline.com/postopinion/letters/editor.htm Website: http://nypostonline.com/ Author: Murray Weiss THUGS SET FREE TO STRIKE AGAIN Thousands of ex-cons are allowed to roam the city's streets after committing parole violations, many of them ending up back behind bars only after going on violent new crime sprees, a Post probe has found. In the past few months alone, dozens of paroled thugs, including killers, sex offenders and armed robbers, have terrorized people in their homes, on subways and on the street, when they should have been sent back to prison for violating parole. If these repeat offenders had been routinely jailed for their parole violations, countless New Yorkers would not have ended up crime victims. A Post examination of court and police records unearthed chilling examples of criminals, many with long rap sheets, who broke parole by using drugs, fare-jumping or committing other so-called low-level crimes, but who remained free until they finally were re-arrested for vicious felonies. For example: * Frederick Monroe, a hulking parolee with a two-decade-long arrest record, was charged last Nov. 24 with committing a rash of elevator and apartment attacks on women, raping or torturing several of them. His alleged victims included a 13-year-old Queens girl who was sodomized, and a Manhattan schoolteacher who was knocked unconscious and who suffered a broken jaw and a busted nose, and nearly had her ears torn off. Police believe Monroe dragged the schoolteacher around her apartment by her ears as he ransacked her apartment looking for money and jewelry. The alleged crime spree could have been avoided if he had been sent back to jail earlier when he was caught breaking parole by using drugs and violating orders of protection. * Darnell Gripper, a career criminal with two stints in state prison under his belt, was arrested and convicted of pulling a robbery while on parole. He was back on the street after spending only 60 days in a drug-treatment program. That gave him a chance to strike again, police said. Gripper was arrested last Sept. 29 for a string of subway robberies in which he is accused of wielding a razor blade and threatening to "kill" or "slice" up female straphangers. * Lerun Nightingale, an ex-convict in a special "high risk" parole program designed to immediately return "the bad of the bad" to prison for any violation, was given a "free pass" after a disorderly conduct arrest. Left on the street, the 6-foot-1, 220-pounder allegedly invaded a Manhattan furniture store brandishing a large kitchen knife and terrorized and robbed several women. Minutes later, he used a cellular phone he stole from one of his victims to call his parole officer to break an appointment, police said. Detectives said Nightingale couldn't make it because he was busy taking his victims' bank card to ATMs to empty their accounts. "It's inconceivable [Nightingale] was allowed to remain out," said an outraged parole official. "He was in our 'fail safe' system . . . and our system failed." A spokesman for the state Division of Parole attributed the disturbing problem to "judgment calls made in good faith" that are clearly questionable in hindsight. "Parole [officers] may be mandated to let them out," said one NYPD official, "but they are not mandated to let them stay out." Another police official added: "It is one thing to let someone out of jail early and say, 'We are doing you a favor, and, if you are a good boy, you can stay out,' but when they don't behave, why the hell shouldn't they be sent back to prison?" A spokesman for Gov. Pataki said "these outrageous acts" committed by parole-violating ex-cons "are further proof that the governor's proposal to end parole for all felons should become law now." The Post contacted the victims of several of these marauding parolees. Only one was willing to discuss the attacks. The others explained that they were too frightened, or didn't want to relive the horror. The schoolteacher, who is still recovering from her injuries, was so traumatized that she has moved. The only victim willing to speak out described briefly and angrily how she felt about being threatened on the subway by a razor-wielding holdup man identified by police as Gripper. "All I can say is, I was never so frightened in my life," she said, her voice choked with tears. "How does anyone like this get on the street? How does anyone justify leaving him there once he shows he's incapable of behaving?" she asked. "Maybe the parole people or their families should become victims. Then they'd think differently." According to state officials, the state prison population recently dropped for the first time in 27 years. The Pataki administration attributes the drop to new policies granting early release to larger numbers of nonviolent felons, which has left about 2,000 prison slots open. These empty cells could easily be filled by parolees who violate the terms of their release, cops and prosecutors told The Post. State figures show that, last year alone, about 1,200 parole violators never spent a single night off the streets. Another 3,600 received no more than 90 days in a state detox facility before being freed again. Law-enforcement officials see a clear connection between parole violators and those who commit new crimes. And the statistics prove the point. In 1994, for example, 10,289 parolees were returned to prison: 4,439 after committing new felonies, and 5,849 for serious technical violations of their parole. Last year, as parole officials got tougher on violators, 11,897 were returned to prison: 9,243 for violations and only 2,634 for new crimes. But officials could not say what percentage of the returnees had one or more parole offenses on their records before committing the violation that landed them back in prison. Many law-enforcement officials believe an even tougher crackdown on parole violators would further reduce crime. Police Commissioner Bernard Kerik recently expanded the NYPD's warrants squad and has set up a new task force with the state Division of Parole to hunt down the thousands of parolees wanted for crimes and parole violations. But law-enforcement officials say that isn't enough. They say the state should adopt the federal government's no-nonsense policy when it comes to parolees. Several pointed to the recent case of convicted Mafia boss Sonny Franzese, who had been paroled from federal prison. He was spotted in an Italian restaurant on Long Island, having pasta with an old friend who is a reputed member of organized crime. Franzese was sent back to prison, no questions asked, for hanging out with an "unsavory character," a parole violation. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth