By Alberto O. Cappas
Buffalo, NY — The death of 38‑year‑old Antonio Pizarro, a member of a long and distinguished Puerto Rican family, has been officially ruled a homicide by the Erie County Medical Examiner, intensifying scrutiny of the Erie County Holding Center and renewing calls for accountability from families, advocates, and community organizations.
Pizarro died on July 4, 2026 while in custody. Although the Medical Examiner has confirmed the manner of death, officials have not released additional details regarding the circumstances leading to the fatal incident. Local outlet WIVB‑TV (Channel 4) verified the homicide ruling and reported that the Erie County Sheriff’s Office continues to conduct interviews and gather evidence.
His name has not yet appeared in the New York State Commission of Correction (SCOC) mortality database, a delay consistent with state procedure. Cases are listed only after the county completes its internal investigation and submits full documentation — a process that can take weeks or months.
A Facility Under Intensifying Scrutiny
Pizarro’s death adds to a troubling pattern at the Holding Center. Based on SCOC reports and confirmed media coverage, seven individuals have died at the facility in recent years:
Tinamarie Cordovano – April 25, 2024
James Ellis – November 30, 2021
Michael Frears – March 13, 2021
William Henley – November 27, 2022
Sean Riordan – June 14, 2022
Donald McCoy – December 21, 2023
Antonio Pizarro – July 4, 2026
Of these, only Henley’s SCOC report includes demographic information. The nationality or ethnic background of the others — including Pizarro — has not been publicly disclosed.
Advocates have long raised concerns about medical care, mental‑health response, understaffing, and transparency at the Holding Center. The homicide ruling has intensified demands for reform.
Community Voices Call for Transparency and Accountability
Buffalo’s Black and Puerto Rican/Latino communities — historically impacted by unequal treatment in the criminal justice system — are expressing deep concern. For many, Pizarro’s death reflects systemic failures rather than an isolated tragedy.
Families and community organizations, including Buffalo Latino Village, point to recurring issues: delayed information, incomplete public statements, and investigations that stretch on for months. Each new death reinforces fears that the Holding Center is failing in its responsibility to keep people safe.
A Critical Missing Piece: Who Works Inside the Holding Center?
A major concern is the lack of demographic transparency regarding correctional staff and administrators. Neither the Erie County Sheriff’s Office nor the County Personnel Department publicly releases racial or ethnic breakdowns of employees — including how many are Black or Puerto Rican/Latino.
This absence is striking given that many detainees come from Buffalo’s East Side, West Side, and Latino neighborhoods. Advocates argue that staff diversity is essential for cultural competency, bias training, and building trust.
Buffalo Latino Village raises key questions:
Does the staff reflect Buffalo’s demographic diversity?
How many correctional officers are Black or Puerto Rican/Latino?
Are there Latino administrators who understand cultural and linguistic needs?
Why is demographic transparency standard in schools and public agencies, but not in a jail entrusted with human lives?
Community leaders say underrepresentation contributes to mistrust, miscommunication, and a lack of cultural understanding inside the facility. Increasing diversity — especially hiring more Black and Puerto Rican/Latino officers from Buffalo — could improve communication, reduce tensions, and strengthen accountability.
A Community United for Change
Buffalo Latino Village urges Erie County officials to take immediate action:
Release demographic data on Holding Center staff
Increase recruitment of Black and Puerto Rican/Latino employees
Strengthen oversight and accountability within the facility
Ensure independent review of incidents involving violence or neglect
Engage directly with affected communities in shaping reforms
The death of Antonio Pizarro must not become another statistic. It must be a turning point — a moment when Erie County recognizes that public safety includes the safety of those in custody, and that justice requires transparency, honesty, and meaningful change.
Buffalo Latino Village will continue monitoring developments and amplifying the voices of families demanding answers. The community deserves nothing less.
Note: Some information in this release is based on local media coverage, social media, past and present news reports, community complaints, and AI‑assisted research. Please confirm details with trusted sources.

