News12 New York
Where to Watch
Download the App
Local
Crime
Weather
beWell
The East End
Crime Files

Federal lawsuit alleges solitary confinement, denial of services at Goshen youth detention center

According to the complaint, children are routinely locked alone in their cells for up to 23 hours a day. While in isolation, the lawsuit alleges youth are denied access to required education, programming and timely bathroom use.

Blaise Gomez

Jan 13, 2026, 3:44 PM

Updated

Share:

More Stories

A new federal lawsuit is accusing New York state of unlawfully placing children in solitary confinement and denying them basic services inside juvenile detention facilities, including Goshen youth detention center in Orange County.

The lawsuit was filed by The Legal Aid Society in U.S. District Court against the New York State Office of Children and Family Services, which operates secure placement facilities that house troubled youth, including youth accused of serious crimes.

As part of the lawsuit, Legal Aid released a photo that it says shows the conditions inside a cell at one of the state’s upstate youth facilities. The image shows a small, bare room with two thin mattresses placed directly on the floor. The space appears only wide enough to fit the mattresses side by side. There are no visible comfort items. Hand-drawn pictures and pencil sketches appear taped to the wall, which attorneys say were made by youth confined inside the cell.

According to the complaint, children are routinely locked alone in their cells for up to 23 hours a day. While in isolation, the lawsuit alleges youth are denied access to required education, programming and timely bathroom use.

The complaint includes allegations from two youth housed at Goshen Secure Center. Attorneys say the youth described being confined for long stretches of time with limited human interaction and without access to school or basic services.

“Solitary confinement is causing serious harm to the children in the care of the Office of Children and Family Services, especially youth of color,” said Emma-Lee Clinger, a staff attorney with The Legal Aid Society’s Juvenile Rights Practice.

Clinger said the lawsuit challenges what she described as a dangerous practice that interferes with healthy development.

“This case is about protecting kids from a practice that is dangerous,” she said. “Young people’s brains are still under construction, and solitary confinement interrupts healthy development and increases anxiety, depression, and in some young people, suicidal ideation.”

Clinger added that isolation is being used regularly inside the system.

“Young people are being locked into their cells for both administrative purposes and punitive purposes every single day,” she said. “To think that it’s happening to young people is just barbaric,” Clinger said. “No child should be punished, regardless of why they are there, in a way that causes long-term psychological harm. And that’s what’s happening at the hands of the state.”

The Public Employees Federation, which represents OCFS employees, said in a statement that its members “are committed to caring for youth in OCFS facilities but need additional support and resources to do the job right.”

PEF President Wayne Spence said “a lot of the agency’s problems can be addressed with additional staffing,” adding that recruiting and retaining professionals requires fair pay, workplace safety, and “a secure and dignified retirement,” PEF President Wayne Spence said in the statement. Spence said PEF is advocating for enhanced overtime rates when mandated, geographic pay, referral bonuses, pension reforms, and body scanners at facilities. He noted that similar measures are already being used by the Department of Corrections and Community Supervision to address staffing shortages and urged OCFS to do the same.

In a statement, OCFS said it does not condone the use of isolation for punishment and that it has protocols designed to ensure the safety of youth and staff while incorporating trauma-informed and mental health-responsive practices. The agency said it will respond to the lawsuit through the legal process.

More Stories

Top Stories

00:57
LI12PMBIKEARREST_2026-04-19-12-03-55

Police: Valley Stream man head-butted officer during arrest tied to park bike incidents

01:45
today

Showers this morning; Freezing cold expected on Long Island Monday night

Grillo

Mother, daughter arrested in attempted robbery at Manhasset Macy’s

dwi arrest

Two women arrested under Leandra's Law in Suffolk County this weekend

developing copy

8 children between the ages of 1 and 14 are dead after a mass shooting in Louisiana, police say

00:46
LI12PMBRENTWOODFIRE_2026-04-18-12-26-16

Brentwood house fire leaves one person displaced

01:03
RTLIDrunkDrivingAwarenessVOSOTVO10pm_2026-04-18-22-28-06

Roslyn students hold 2nd annual Drunk Driving Community Awareness Walk

01:40
LI5PMJEREMYPROM_2026-04-18-17-12-52

Suffolk police help students find the right prom look without the cost

02:09
LI5PMDUCKSKEVIN_2026-04-18-17-13-35

New Duck's pitcher hopes to revive his baseball career on Long Island

02:03
Daycare Abuse MS 041726_2026-04-17-22-10-31

Exclusive: Northport day care owner responds to abuse allegations; former employees speak out

00:13
DCWhaleUpdate12p_2026-04-18-17-35-45

Necropsy confirms dead whale found in Newark Bay was a 44-foot endangered sei whale

00:20
55e50874-3fbc-4e34-a213-f483dfdd2781

Man charged with DWI, fleeing scene of Water Mill crash

01:29
LI12PMLINEWORKERS_2026-04-18-12-20-24

Long Island celebrates National Lineworker Appreciation Day

Serious crash in New Haven critically injures 2 people

Man seriously injured in 2-vehicle Medford crash

CREDIT: AP/HASSAN AMMAR

Iran closes Strait of Hormuz again over US blockade and fires on ships

00:14
Kid Window MS 041726_2026-04-17-22-17-01

4-year-old boy injured after falling out of second-floor window in Huntington Station

00:32
418GOTTISENTENCING_2026-04-18-13-15-30

Federal prosecutors say mob boss John Gotti's grandson's sentencing should not be impacted by kidney donation

00:51
Fire Return MS 041726_2026-04-17-22-15-39

Deer Park residents move back home after apartment fire

01:51
li5pmbolkevinbridge_2026-04-17-17-43-59

Emergency repairs underway on Smith Point Bridge ahead of beach season

02:51
LIEISHENHOW41726_2026-04-17-06-03-36_05-02-09,28

Police: Shooter in custody, teen victim believed to be second shooter at Eisenhower Park

App StoreGoogle Play Store

info

Newsletter

Send Photos/Videos

Contact

About Us

News Team

News 12 New York

follow us

Twitter

Facebook

Instagram

more resources

Optimum Corporate

Optimum Service

Advertise on News 12

Careers

Content Removal Policy

© 2026 N12N, LLC

Privacy Policy

Terms of Service

Ad Choices