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Baltimore jail's appalling conditions may explain seven deaths, lawsuit says | Baltimore jail's appalling conditions may explain seven deaths, lawsuit says |
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Appalling sanitation, vermin, dirt and mold combined with a lack of basic medical care in Baltimore’s only jail possibly caused at least seven deaths in the last two years and continues to put thousands of detainees, mostly African American, at risk of serious danger, a class action alleges. | Appalling sanitation, vermin, dirt and mold combined with a lack of basic medical care in Baltimore’s only jail possibly caused at least seven deaths in the last two years and continues to put thousands of detainees, mostly African American, at risk of serious danger, a class action alleges. |
Lawyers acting for the 2,500 people held by the State of Maryland in Baltimore City Detention Center (BCDC) say they have uncovered a shocking litany of problems with the jail that subjects detainees and prisoners to “serious harm, including death”. They describe the jail, one of the oldest custodial institutions in the country that was built in its current form before the civil war, as a “dank and dangerous place, where detainees are confined in dirty cells infested with vermin. The showers are full of drain flies, black mold, and filth”. | Lawyers acting for the 2,500 people held by the State of Maryland in Baltimore City Detention Center (BCDC) say they have uncovered a shocking litany of problems with the jail that subjects detainees and prisoners to “serious harm, including death”. They describe the jail, one of the oldest custodial institutions in the country that was built in its current form before the civil war, as a “dank and dangerous place, where detainees are confined in dirty cells infested with vermin. The showers are full of drain flies, black mold, and filth”. |
A motion filed on behalf of the detainees with the US district court for the district of Maryland on Tuesday accuses the state officials who run the jail of violating the eighth amendment’s protections against cruel and unusual punishment. It calls for the federal courts to impose a binding order that would force the institution to bring both its physical infrastructure and medical care services up to basic humane standards. | A motion filed on behalf of the detainees with the US district court for the district of Maryland on Tuesday accuses the state officials who run the jail of violating the eighth amendment’s protections against cruel and unusual punishment. It calls for the federal courts to impose a binding order that would force the institution to bring both its physical infrastructure and medical care services up to basic humane standards. |
Baltimore was the location of recent unrest over the death while under arrest by local police of African American 25-year-old Freddie Gray. Though the new legal challenge against BCDC is not connected to any of those events, and the timing of it is coincidental, its findings do point to a serious problem in the way that African Americans are treated in the next stage of their exposure to the criminal justice system after being arrested – their detention awaiting trial. | Baltimore was the location of recent unrest over the death while under arrest by local police of African American 25-year-old Freddie Gray. Though the new legal challenge against BCDC is not connected to any of those events, and the timing of it is coincidental, its findings do point to a serious problem in the way that African Americans are treated in the next stage of their exposure to the criminal justice system after being arrested – their detention awaiting trial. |
Some 90% of all those locked up at BCDC are awaiting trial. While African Americans make up 62% of the city’s population, they form about 80% of the BCDC population and a staggering 95% of all juveniles who are held there. | Some 90% of all those locked up at BCDC are awaiting trial. While African Americans make up 62% of the city’s population, they form about 80% of the BCDC population and a staggering 95% of all juveniles who are held there. |
The most shocking allegations contained in the motion relate to allegedly preventable deaths. A footnote chronicles seven detainees whose deaths since 2013 may have been preventable, the motion says, amid evidence that they suffered from an absence of the most elementary medical treatment. In a further six deaths, medical treatment, or the lack of it, may have played some part, the action claims. | The most shocking allegations contained in the motion relate to allegedly preventable deaths. A footnote chronicles seven detainees whose deaths since 2013 may have been preventable, the motion says, amid evidence that they suffered from an absence of the most elementary medical treatment. In a further six deaths, medical treatment, or the lack of it, may have played some part, the action claims. |
The possibly preventable deaths include a man with a known history of severe hypertension who died in a hypertensive crisis having gone into drug withdrawal after being brought to the jail. He was offered no monitoring or medication to control his symptoms, the class action says. Another man held in the jail for 10 months died of heart problems – he reported cardiac complications but allegedly had his heart medications stopped without explanation before he died. | The possibly preventable deaths include a man with a known history of severe hypertension who died in a hypertensive crisis having gone into drug withdrawal after being brought to the jail. He was offered no monitoring or medication to control his symptoms, the class action says. Another man held in the jail for 10 months died of heart problems – he reported cardiac complications but allegedly had his heart medications stopped without explanation before he died. |
A third man died two days after he was admitted to BCDC after an urgent appeal for heart and blood pressure drugs allegedly went unanswered. A fourth died after the nurse in the jail’s infirmary was said to have failed to notify the doctor that the female detainee was displaying symptoms that required immediate hospital attention. And a fifth killed herself after showing signs of severe mental distress – she was allegedly only referred to a psychiatrist and prescribed psychotropic drugs shortly before her suicide. | A third man died two days after he was admitted to BCDC after an urgent appeal for heart and blood pressure drugs allegedly went unanswered. A fourth died after the nurse in the jail’s infirmary was said to have failed to notify the doctor that the female detainee was displaying symptoms that required immediate hospital attention. And a fifth killed herself after showing signs of severe mental distress – she was allegedly only referred to a psychiatrist and prescribed psychotropic drugs shortly before her suicide. |
The legal motion, which has been filed by the American Civil Liberties Union, the Public Justice Center and the law offices of Elizabeth Alexander, chronicles numerous other cases where detainees have either died or been severely affected by allegedly inept or non-existent health care. Studying the jail’s medical records, they said they found cases of people with HIV who had their antiretroviral drugs discontinued, leading to a rapid deterioration in their condition; similar interruptions of insulin drugs for diabetics and psychotropic drugs for mentally ill detainees; a total lack of health planning or proper medication record-keeping; and inadequate cells and equipment for disabled people. | The legal motion, which has been filed by the American Civil Liberties Union, the Public Justice Center and the law offices of Elizabeth Alexander, chronicles numerous other cases where detainees have either died or been severely affected by allegedly inept or non-existent health care. Studying the jail’s medical records, they said they found cases of people with HIV who had their antiretroviral drugs discontinued, leading to a rapid deterioration in their condition; similar interruptions of insulin drugs for diabetics and psychotropic drugs for mentally ill detainees; a total lack of health planning or proper medication record-keeping; and inadequate cells and equipment for disabled people. |
In addition to being one of the oldest correctional facilities in the country, BCDC is also among the largest and most decrepit. | In addition to being one of the oldest correctional facilities in the country, BCDC is also among the largest and most decrepit. |
As the majority of those held at BCDC are awaiting trial, they are therefore innocent until proven guilty. Yet according to the court filing, they are exposed to the most gut-wrenching of environments. A unit that housed those with medical or mental health problems was said to be overrun with mice, cockroaches, gnats, and spiders. Investigators acting for the plaintiffs found that about half of all the mattresses in the jail’s cells were in such disrepair that they could not be sanitized between occupants. | As the majority of those held at BCDC are awaiting trial, they are therefore innocent until proven guilty. Yet according to the court filing, they are exposed to the most gut-wrenching of environments. A unit that housed those with medical or mental health problems was said to be overrun with mice, cockroaches, gnats, and spiders. Investigators acting for the plaintiffs found that about half of all the mattresses in the jail’s cells were in such disrepair that they could not be sanitized between occupants. |
Detainees were regularly exposed to sweltering heat and humidity, leading to widespread respiratory and other critical health problems. Meanwhile, about a quarter of the rooftop fans needed to circulate the inside air were not working. | Detainees were regularly exposed to sweltering heat and humidity, leading to widespread respiratory and other critical health problems. Meanwhile, about a quarter of the rooftop fans needed to circulate the inside air were not working. |
Many of the toilets were found to be broken, and the motion notes that investigators found “an entire tier of detainees who were left for several days in cells with toilets that did not flush and sinks that did not work … The atmosphere was fetid and unhealthy because the detainees had no way to dispose of their bodily wastes except by using the non-functional toilets.” | |
Elizabeth Alexander, the lead counsel in the case, said that when she inspected the jail most recently, “I was struck by the huge number of cells that couldn’t be occupied because they were not habitable. This is a facility that has outlived its physical life.” | Elizabeth Alexander, the lead counsel in the case, said that when she inspected the jail most recently, “I was struck by the huge number of cells that couldn’t be occupied because they were not habitable. This is a facility that has outlived its physical life.” |