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MDC Brooklyn CO accused of using prison van to pursue civilian car from staff parking lot

About two minutes into the pursuit, the CO fired three rounds, wounding a passenger in the BMW, federal prosecutors said

Diddy Federal Jail

The Metropolitan Detention Center is seen through barb wire in the Sunset Park neighborhood of the Brooklyn borough of New York, Thursday, Sept. 19, 2024. (AP Photo/Yuki Iwamura)

Yuki Iwamura/AP

By John Annese
New York Daily News

NEW YORK — An out-of-control correction officer at MDC Brooklyn — the troubled federal lockup that currently houses Sean “Diddy” Combs — chased a car for miles out of the jail’s staff parking lot last year and shot one of its occupants, federal prosecutors allege.

Correction Officer Leon Wilson , 49, had no authority to pursue the fleeing BMW once it left the jail’s property line, but that didn’t stop him, federal prosecutors allege.

The rules of the road didn’t stop him either — he chased the BMW for 5 miles at dangerous speeds in a federal Bureau of Prisons minivan, running at least one red light, the feds allege.

About two minutes into the chase, he fired off three rounds, one of which wounded a passenger in the BMW, according to a criminal complaint. Wilson, who was on-duty, never reported the shooting to the NYPD or to officials at the jail or the BOP.

Court filings don’t indicate whether Wilson had any connection to the BMW or its occupants, though his defense lawyer said he was trying to prevent them from smuggling contraband into the jail.

He was arrested Sunday and is expected to be arraigned in Brooklyn Federal Court Monday afternoon. A Bronx resident, Wilson has worked for the BOP since 2000.

The bizarre chase happened in the early morning hours of Sept. 4, 2023, when Wilson was assigned to monitor the Sunset Park jail’s perimeter, according to the complaint. As part of his job, he’s authorized to carry a gun.

He abandoned his post briefly at about 4:30 a.m., getting into the BOP-issued minivan and driving to a nearby subway station to buy a MetroCard, the complaint alleges. When he got back at about 4:42 a.m., a gray BMW with tinted windows pulled into the staff lot, the feds said.

He parked the van across the street and idled for about three minutes as he watched the BMW, then drove into the lot and pulled in front of the offending vehicles, according to the complaint.

The Beemer’s driver peeled off, and Wilson gave chase, tailing the BMW to a spot near the Brooklyn Bridge about 5 miles away, the feds said. He went 55 mph in a 25 mph zone, blew past an e-bike rider and ran a red light, the feds said.

He squeezed off three bullets on Hamilton Ave. near the Gowanus Expressway, striking the rear of the BMW with each shot and wounding a male passenger, the feds allege. By 5 a.m., Wilson had returned to the MDC.


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“The victim suffered near-fatal, serious bodily injury,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Eric Silverberg said at Wilson’s arraignment Monday. The man was shot in the back, “about a millimeter away from his lungs,” the prosecutor said.

Wilson is charged with willfully depriving an individual of his constitutional rights while acting under color of law, which carries a 10-year maximum sentence. Silverberg said he could face additional charges.

Both the prosecutor and Wilson’s defense lawyer, Steven Lynch , agreed to his release on $150,000 bond, though they clashed over whether he should be held on home detention.

“This case, in our view, is about rule-breaking, and the defendant’s inability to follow a number of rules,” Silverberg said, adding that Wilson has a history of threatening inmates, and at times, his co-workers at the jail.

Though authorities found evidence suggesting possible contraband smuggling, “that does not excuse any of the actions in this case,” he said.

He added that the government gave “serious consideration” to asking Wilson be locked up pretrial, but weighed his military service in his favor, as well as his lack of a criminal record.

Lynch portrayed Wilson as a diligent law enforcer and a family man, and said that he was involved in “multiple interventions” to keep contraband out of MDC Brooklyn.

“Mr. Wilson has really gone above and beyond his duties to intercept narcotics going into the building,” he said.

Magistrate Judge Marcia Henry agreed to release Wilson on $150,000 bond, secured by his wife and a second, to-be-determined person.

“Correctional officers are sworn to uphold the law but, as alleged, this defendant violated his oath and position by starting a dangerous car chase through the streets of Brooklyn ending with him shooting wildly at the passengers in the other car without justification, and wounding one,” U.S. Attorney Breon Peace said Monday.

Lynch declined comment Monday, as did the vice president of Wilson’s union, who was present in the courtroom to support him.

MDC Brooklyn has been plagued by violence, horrific conditions and severe staffing shortages for years, drawing scrutiny from judges in Brooklyn , Manhattan and Long Island .

Back in July, former Correction Officer Quandelle Joseph was sentenced to 2½ years behind bars for taking bribes to smuggle contraband into the federal jail.

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