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State Rips Security Firm: Says it Hired Felons as Guards - One

Charged in Woman's Slay

August 17, 2001

John Marzulli

State officials have moved to revoke the license of a Bronx security firm that they

say illegally hired ex-cons as guards, including one who is charged with

murdering a woman in the development where he worked, the Daily News has

learned.

The security firm, Baitul Nasr, is a nonprofit corporation that says its mission is

to help the unemployed become productive workers. The company's name

means House of Help in Arabic.

But according to charges filed against Baitul Nasr and its founder, Mikial

Abdur-Rahim, by the Department of State's Division of Licensing Services, the

company knowingly hired at least 13 convicted felons between October 1999 and

February 2000.

Under state law, convicted felons are barred from working as private guards.

Authorities said they also found that in January, Baitul Nasr placed at least 58

unregistered or improperly registered guards at housing developments

throughout city.

But Inez Nelson, a former Baitul Nasr employee, told The News that when

applicants acknowledged felony convictions on their applications, they were

simply hired at a cheaper hourly rate and were not fingerprinted.

She said the ex-cons were called community facilitators instead of guards to

evade scrutiny, but they patrolled nonetheless.

"They hired them as soon as they came out of the prison system," said Nelson,

who worked there from late 1997 to October 1999.  She is suing Baitul Nasr,

charging she was sexually harassed by a top company official.

When Nelson was in charge of screening prospective employees, she said, she

was criticized by her supervisors for questioning the ex-cons' backgrounds.

"They used to call me 'Miss Policy and Procedure' because I went by the books,"

she said.

One felon hired by the firm was Rene Lisojo, 33, who had five felony convictions

when Baitul Nasr hired him soon after his release from prison in July 2000.

Police said Lisojo was listed in company records as a dispatcher, but he

admittedly patrolled Richman Plaza, a housing development near the Harlem

River in the South Bronx.

On Jan. 9, while on duty in the lobby of 44 Richman Plaza, Lisojo accompanied

22-year-old Giselle Figueroa to her apartment. There, police say, he sexually

abused and stabbed the young mother.

In an interview yesterday, Abdur-Rahim acknowledged that some of the checks

on Baitul Nasr guards slipped through the cracks.  But he said: "I wouldn't

knowingly hire a convicted felon."

Giselle Figueroa, pictured with her son, John, was allegedly killed by Rene

Lisojo, a guard working for Baitul Nasr.

He said Lisojo lied about his background on the job application and that some

of his paperwork was lost when a clerk handling the application went on

maternity leave.

Abdur-Rahim said Baitul Nasr is out of the security business, most of its

contracts lost in the wake of Lisojo's arrest.

But he said a second security firm operated by him called Al-Quyamat has

picked up what's left of Baitul Nasr's security business and operates out of the

same location on Third Ave.

A spokeswoman for the Division of Licensing Services said Abdur-Rahim could

lose his license if the charges are substantiated in a hearing next month.

The company also faces up to a $1,000 fine on each of the 77 violations cited by

the state. Last year, Baitul Nasr pleaded guilty to employing unregistered

guards and paid a $3,500 fine.

 

"It's like the movie 'A Clockwork Orange,' where the thugs are hired to be the

police," said Nelson's lawyer Jack Tuckner.