Author Topic: Lawsuit filed in Taycheedah inmate's death  (Read 2661 times)

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Offline Eliscu2

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Lawsuit filed in Taycheedah inmate's death
« on: April 17, 2010, 09:47:15 PM »
Lawsuit filed in Taycheedah inmate's death
http://http://www.postcrescent.com/article/99999999/APC0101/704250628/Lawsuit-filed-in-Taycheedah-inmate-s-death

Treatment used alleged to worsen mental state
Poor mental health care as well as a slow response from guards and medical staff contributed to the suicide of a mentally ill prison inmate, a lawsuit alleges.


James Gende, a Waukesha attorney, filed the suit Monday in U.S. District Court in Milwaukee on behalf of Angela Enoch's estate and surviving family members.

Enoch, a mentally ill teen who had been in and out of institutions and foster care, died in June 2005 when she was 18. She used a ripped seam from a pillow to strangle herself in an observation cell of the segregated unit at Taycheedah Correctional Institution, the state's largest prison for women near Fond du Lac.

"I think the system turned her into a throwaway child," Gende said Tuesday. "The treatment she received while incarcerated by the Department of Corrections was a substantial cause of the deterioration of her mental health status, which resulted in her successful suicide."

The suit, which names Gov. Jim Doyle, Corrections Secretary Matt Frank, and 20 corrections employees as defendants, seeks a jury trial and damages of $10 million. Enoch's mother, Roxanne Enoch of Hayward, is named along with Enoch's two minor sisters as plaintiffs.

"We are in the process of reviewing the lawsuit and conferring with our legal counsel and it would be premature to comment on the matter at this time," John Dipko, a Department of Corrections spokesman, said Tuesday. "However, we take any suicide that occurs in our prison system very seriously and we re-evaluate our practices and policies in each instance to see if there are any actions that could have prevented the death and if there are any changes that need to be made."

ACLU, Justice Department also cite Enoch case
The lawsuit comes on the heels of a pending class-action lawsuit by the American Civil Liberties Union and a separate U.S. Department of Justice investigation, both of which allege grossly deficient medical and mental health care at Taycheedah.

The prison, which has about 730 inmates, has the highest ratio of mentally ill offenders of Wisconsin's 19 correctional institutions, state Department of Corrections officials say. About two-thirds of its inmates have mental health needs.

The ACLU suit notes that the suicide rate among inmates in segregated units is 10 times the rate of those in the general-population units in Wisconsin prisons. In segregation, inmates typically spend 23 hours of each day alone in a cell, and are given about one hour outside of it to exercise.

Corrections officials say they have been working to improve mental health care at the prison and now give a closer review of inmates considered for segregation.

Enoch's death is recounted in both the ACLU and Justice Department complaints. But the latest 20-page lawsuit offers new details alleging how Taycheedah's response to Enoch's mental illness ultimately led to her death.

"That because of her severe mental illnesses, Enoch was placed in solitary confinement in (Taycheedah's) Segregation Unit," the suit alleges. "… Solitary confinement results in exacerbation of previously existing mental illnesses. It is also likely that individuals, like Enoch, will suffer permanent harm due to their solitary confinement."

Suit alleges prison failures
Enoch entered Wisconsin's juvenile court system at age 12 and was charged with her first adult crime at 14. She had a history of assaults, as well as self-destructive and suicidal behavior.

She had been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, personality disorder, mood disorder and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder. Despite a court order to give Enoch her prescription medications, Taycheedah staff "failed to take the necessary action in administering (her) prescribed medications in the days immediately preceding her death of June 19, 2005," the lawsuit alleges.

The suit also alleges it took staff six to eight minutes to enter Enoch's cell after observing her strangling herself.

"(Taycheedah) staff's reaction to Enoch's self-strangulation was unreasonably delayed and in violation of their standard operating procedures for response to an emergency situation, which was a substantial cause of Enoch's death," the suit reads.

Among the violations of law, the suit alleges wrongful death, cruel and unusual punishment, violation of equal protection, and violations of the federal Rehabilitation Act and the American with Disabilities Act.

The suit also alleges gender-based disparities. Female prisoners are not afforded the same level of psychiatric care available to male offenders at the Wisconsin Resource Center, a specialized mental health facility administered by the state Department of Health and Family Services through a partnership with the Department of Corrections.

"If Angela had been a man, she never would have been in that segregation unit," Gende said. "She'd have been in a mental health facility."

The Department of Corrections' Committee on Inmate/Youth Deaths reviewed Enoch's suicide, Dipko said. However, the committee's findings are confidential under state law, he added.

In Doyle's proposed two-year budget, the state Building Commission has approved an $11 million proposal for a 45-bed female inmate treatment facility at the Wisconsin Resource Center. His budget also includes a request for 33 additional permanent positions for medical and mental health care at the prison, at a cost of $2.7 million.

Wendy Harris can be reached at 920-993-1000, ext. 526, or [email protected]. Gannett Wisconsin Newspapers contributed to this report.

I just want to bring an important issue to everyones attention....................
Angela was my good friend for about a year.
She killed herself at 18. (honestly I do not blame her)
This girl was funny and beautiful and talented.
The State of Wisconsin TORTURED her for years. :suicide:
http://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YjGgy1iibio
The Good news is I have a presentation to do for D.H.S. and D.O.C. on Monday.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
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Offline Inculcated

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Re: Lawsuit filed in Taycheedah inmate's death
« Reply #1 on: April 18, 2010, 12:43:06 AM »
Quote from: "Eliscu2"
I just want to bring an important issue to everyones attention....................
Angela was my good friend for about a year.
She killed herself at 18. (honestly I do not blame her)
This girl was funny and beautiful and talented.
The State of Wisconsin TORTURED her for years. :suicide:
http://http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YjGgy1iibio
The Good news is I have a presentation to do for D.H.S. and D.O.C. on Monday.
It was six years from the time this girl entered the system that she was destroyed.
Six to eight minutes to decide how to intervene while she died? There’s just no reason for that.
I’m so sorry, Eliscu.
She was silenced, but you aren’t. Tell them, remind them, and challenge them to change. Whether or when it happens is not just up to them, but also to those who would incite it. I’m glad you’re going to speak to them. You will undoubtedly be heard.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
“A person needs a little madness, or else they never dare cut the rope and be free”  Nikos Kazantzakis

Offline SharonMcCarthy

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Re: Lawsuit filed in Taycheedah inmate's death
« Reply #2 on: April 18, 2010, 11:46:43 AM »
o
« Last Edit: May 10, 2010, 07:37:04 PM by SharonMcCarthy »
"A little knowledge that acts is worth infinitely more than much knowledge that is idle."
Kahlil Gibran

Offline SharonMcCarthy

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Re: Lawsuit filed in Taycheedah inmate's death
« Reply #3 on: April 18, 2010, 11:53:08 AM »
=
« Last Edit: May 10, 2010, 07:36:21 PM by SharonMcCarthy »
"A little knowledge that acts is worth infinitely more than much knowledge that is idle."
Kahlil Gibran

Offline SharonMcCarthy

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Re: Lawsuit filed in Taycheedah inmate's death
« Reply #4 on: April 18, 2010, 11:54:01 AM »
o
« Last Edit: May 10, 2010, 07:35:48 PM by SharonMcCarthy »
"A little knowledge that acts is worth infinitely more than much knowledge that is idle."
Kahlil Gibran

Offline Ursus

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Torture in U.S. Prisons: Common, Lethal, Unreported
« Reply #5 on: April 18, 2010, 01:07:47 PM »
Quote from: "SharonMcCarthy"
They had another death of Michelle Grear in I believe early 2000's,(2001) she was having a asthma attack and the gaurd refused to give her mouth to mouth because they claimed she was an unclean person. They only house offenders like cattle, the true needs to stop the pattern of criminality does not exsist. So, the non caring correctional officers will never lift a finger to actually meet the needs of the female offender what so ever. Until the state does right thing and demand better treatment and care for offenders the revolvong doors will continue. I will look for Michelle Grear's new article and post if I can find it.
Quote from: "SharonMcCarthy"
http://www.counterpunch.org/lomax06162005.html

found it....
June 16, 2005

The Real American Gulag
Torture in U.S. Prisons: Common, Lethal, Unreported

By ADRIAN LOMAX

With American military personnel being sentenced to prison for abusing Iraqi prisoners of war and Amnesty International calling the military detention facility at Guantánamo Bay a "gulag," the world's attention is being drawn to this nation's treatment of the prisoners it takes on foreign battlefields.

That's an encouraging development, but as someone who's spent more than his share of time in prisons right here in the U.S., I'm waiting for the other shoe to drop. More than 2 million people languish in prisons and jails here, frequently enduring conditions of confinement that rise to the level of torture.

Torture in American prisons takes many forms, but one ever-present manifestation is the denial of adequate medical care. In Wisconsin prisons, death by refusal of medical treatment in the case of asthma attack has become a frighteningly common spectacle in the past several years.

In 2000, Michelle Greer, a 29-year-old inmate at Wisconsin's Taycheedah Correctional Institution (TCI), suffered severe asthma attacks. As a result, she had a regular appointment at the prison's Health Services Unit (HSU). Every morning at 8 a.m., Greer reported to the HSU to have prison nurses check her condition.

    At 6:30 a.m. on February 2, the inmates in Greer's housing unit were released from their cells for breakfast. During the meal, Greer approached a guard captain in the dining hall and reported that she was suffering an asthma attack. She said her inhaler was not functioning properly and she needed medical attention.

    At 7 a.m., the captain called the HSU and spoke to nurse Todd Graff, who instructed the captain to tell Greer to return to her cell, relax, use her inhaler and report for her regular appointment at 8 a.m. The captain relayed these instructions to Greer--who by that time was screaming, demanding that she required immediate medical attention.

    At 7:10 a.m., Greer left the dining hall and entered her housing unit. According to a guard sergeant on duty there, Greer was crying and screaming, saying she couldn't breathe and that she needed medical attention. But the guard also told Greer to calm down and return to her cell, which she did.

    At 7:25 a.m., the sergeant called the HSU and spoke to nurse Deborah Federer and told her that Greer said she was unable to breathe and appeared to be in bad shape. Federer told the sergeant that she would see Greer at 8 a.m.

    At 7:50 a.m., a guard released Greer from her cell so that she could report to the HSU. The prison dining hall is 325 feet from the housing unit where Greer lived, and the HSU is an additional 575 feet away.

Greer entered the dining hall at 8 a.m., and inmate janitors were cleaning the area. Greer approached one of the janitors, stumbling and clutching at her chest. "Please help me," she said and then collapsed. She died there on the floor of the dining hall.

On the outside, a person suffering an asthma attack can call an ambulance or go to an emergency room. In prison, however, an inmate suffering a medical emergency can only report their problem to a guard--and hope that prison employees react properly.

It is particularly disturbing that, in Greer's case, it wasn't prison guards who neglected her needs, but the medical professionals who lethally ignored their duties.

* * *

More commonly, guards refuse to report inmates' emergency medical concerns to medical staff.

David Urban was serving a 30-day sentence in the Winnebago County Jail in Oshkosh, Wis., in early 1995. At 1 p.m. on January 13, the 35-year-old Urban began complaining to guards that he felt ill and needed medical attention. The guards thought Urban was faking, and they refused to summon help. Urban died of a heart attack 20 hours later.

Urban was able to use a dayroom telephone, and he called his girlfriend, Vanessa Miller, several times during that afternoon and evening. At 11:00 p.m., Urban told Miller that he felt like his chest was caving in. In another call, Urban was screaming, saying, "I feel like I'm dying. All they've done is take my blood pressure and pulse."

Patty Strassen, a clerk at the jail, testified at the inquest proceeding that on his last afternoon alive, Urban was vomiting, grabbing his stomach and chest, and talking to himself, saying, "My God, I'm sick. Someone help me."

No one was prosecuted for Urban's death, and there is nothing unusual in that. Wisconsin authorities routinely refuse to hold prison employees accountable in the deaths of inmates. In fact, Kristine Krenke, who was the TCI warden at the time of Michelle Greer's death, was promoted six months after Greer died.

In 1990, guards at Wisconsin's maximum-security Waupun Correctional Institution (WCI) completely immobilized inmate Donald Woods by using several restraining belts to strap Woods' body to the steel-frame bed in his cell. In the process of this strap-down, a 250-pound guard knelt on Woods' chest while cinching a restraining belt.

Restraining an inmate in that extreme fashion can lead to health problems, and Wisconsin law requires that a nurse check on immobilized inmates every 30 minutes. WCI nurse Beth Dittman was working the day guards strapped Donald Woods down, and she did check on Woods every half hour. Woods failed to respond every time she checked.

Dittman did not give Woods any medical attention, summon a doctor or instruct the guards to release Woods from the strap down. Instead, she faithfully wrote "nonresponsive" in the logbook every time she checked him. And that was all she did.

Donald Woods died of asphyxiation that day. The Wisconsin Medical Examiners Board suspended Dittman's license for 30 days for "conduct below the standards of the profession." But again, the Wisconsin Department of Corrections did not fire Dittman, but promoted her. After Woods' death, Dittman became the director of the HSU at Wisconsin's Dodge Correctional Institution.

Beth Dittman is no less a criminal than Lynndie England, the Army private who earlier this year pled guilty to abusing detainees at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. Yet because Dittman works in a prison inside the U.S. rather than in an American military prison in Iraq, her abuse of the human rights of inmates is treated in a manner strikingly different than the fate meted out to England.



ADRIAN LOMAX spent 24 years in prison in Wisconsin until he was paroled last August. Behind bars, he became a jailhouse lawyer, prisoner-rights activist and prolific writer. His articles have appeared in the book The Celling of America: An Inside Look at the U.S. Prison Industry, the Isthmus newspaper of Madison, Wis., and other publications. Since his release, he has continued his involvement in the fight against the criminal injustice system.

This essay originally appeared in the Socialist Worker.
« Last Edit: December 31, 1969, 07:00:00 PM by Guest »
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