Saturday 24 November 2012

Families of inmates who died at the Orleans Parish jail advocate for ...

They come clutching framed photographs of their loved ones in their best moments: wearing a broad smile at a wedding or posing in full military garb. But the stories they tell don't have happy endings.

Each ends at Orleans Parish Prison. Michael Hitzman and William Goetzee committed suicide, both while they were supposedly under observation by deputies. Cayne Miceli collapsed while trying to get out of 5-point restraints, later dying at the hospital. The exact causes of Tracy Barquet Jr.'s death are unknown, but, like Miceli and Goetzee, he died while in the care of the jail's psychiatric unit.

Their family members have unfurled the grim details of these deaths in sit-down meetings with five of the seven New Orleans City Council members and Mayor Mitch Landrieu. All unlikely advocates, several members of the group have become regular attendees at City Council meetings on the jail and its budget.

Their aim is to put a human face on the jail's most troubling statistic: the 38 inmate deaths that have occurred since Hurricane Katrina. But they also are trying to push the city to get on board with a massive overhaul of the jail, a reform that will likely be outlined in a federal consent decree mandating scores of changes in how Orleans Parish Sheriff Marlin Gusman runs his facilities.

"I'll be tormented and tortured every day of my life," said Donna Gauthier, who was engaged to Goetzee before he killed himself in the jail last year. "We thought it was a safe haven. He was getting whatever help he needed."

Sophia Becker, Miceli's sister, said the fact that others lost relatives after her sister's death in January 2009 makes her skeptical about the the prospects of reform under the current leadership. "It is very angering that more families are being affected," she said.

Fixing the mental health care provided by the jail -- which the U.S. Department of Justice has called profoundly inadequate in investigations from 2009 and earlier this year -- is expected to be a key component of a consent decree. In federal court filings, the Justice Department has characterized the settlement as near completion. But negotiations last month hit an impasse over how to pay for the upgrades.

While Gusman has said he supports a decree, he insists one will be possible only if the city puts more money into his operations. Attorneys for the city have scoffed at that contention in court filings, saying there is no evidence that the problems at the jail stem from insufficient funding.

U.S. District Court Judge Lance Africk in October appointed a retired criminal court judge, Terry Alarcon, to try to get the two sides to come to an agreement. The next status hearing is scheduled for Tuesday.

James Hitzman, whose son Michael hanged himself inside a Central Lock-Up cell, noted that the city has found money for a similarly broad consent decree to remake the New Orleans Police Department.

"They should be able to find that money somewhere. If things are not fixed under supervised conditions, things will not change," he said. "It is evident they can't do it on their own."

Civil rights attorney Mary Howell, who represents the four families that have become advocates of reform, said she understands the city's skepticism about simply forking over more money. For years, mayoral administrations and successive sheriffs tangled over how much money is needed to properly run the jail, but never really came up with a satisfactory answer. Now is the time to look to other cities and figure it out, she said.

"I do think it is correct that the city should not be writing a 'blank check,'" Howell said. "What they need to do is insist on transparency and accountability. The situation needs to be audited and monitored."

Each of the four deaths were "awful," Howell said. Hitzman's wife and children filed a lawsuit against the sheriff's office, which was settled. Lawsuits in the Miceli and Goetzee cases are still pending.

Furthermore, there are other deaths in recent years that are, at minimum, "very questionable" that should be looked at, Howell said.

In a statement, Dr. Samuel Gore, the sheriff's medical director, defended the jail's record, saying the jail's mortality rate is below the national average, while the suicide rate is just slightly above the national average and compares favorably to cities like Baltimore, Oklahoma City and Phoenix. Gore chafed at the suggestion deaths at the jail could be called? "questionable," saying the majority of cases involve inmates whose deaths stemmed from heart disease, AIDS or cancer.

Gore said his staff takes steps to identify medical and psychiatric problems during the booking process, as well as analyzing each inmate death to see what caused it and what shortcomings it points up. He noted that the jail population is a challenging one.

"We encounter individuals daily with untreated or undertreated medical conditions, as well as an increasing number of untreated, undiagnosed or undertreated mental health disorders," Gore said.

But investigators from the Justice Department found that conditions at the jail are unconstitutional, rooted in systemic problems like too few deputies on tiers that leads to inadequate supervision of inmates. The department detailed problems with how inmates are classified, the levels of violence between inmates and by guards, as well as lack of support for inmates who don't speak English. The agency also repeatedly flagged mental health care as deficient, in particular saying the treatment of suicidal inmates is inhumane.

Miceli's case was highlighted in the first Justice report as an example of how the sheriff staff "fails to protect inmates from harm while in restraints." Miceli was put in five-point restraints - a sort of harness that pins a person down -- after she allegedly attempted suicide in an isolation cell. An asthmatic, Miceli complained about not being able to breathe and eventually tried to get out of her restraints. She collapsed as deputies tried to put her back in them. Miceli had no pulse for about 35 minutes, according to a federal lawsuit, but was revived by CPR. She later died at the LSU hospital when taken off life support.

More recently, an April 2012 report noted that "deficient monitoring" contributed to both Hitzman and Goetzee's deaths. Their suicides were also used as examples of the jail's allegedly inadequate mental health screening.

During his screening, Hitzman admitted to recently swallowing drugs. After acting erratically, he was placed in an isolation cell equipped with a video camera. However, it appears nobody watched the camera's video stream, as no sheriff employee intervened when Hitzman hanged himself with his shirt.

Goetzee, a longtime U.S. Coast Guard employee and commander in the reserves, had been arrested in August 2011 after he tried to grab a gun from a federal security officer outside court. During the struggle, Goetzee said, "I want to kill myself. Give me your gun," to the officer, according to a complaint filed at federal court.

Goetzee had been seeking treatment for his mental troubles, which grew out of work exhaustion and a serious car accident.

Despite this history -- and though he told jail screeners about his suicidal thoughts -- the Justice Department found that Goetzee was initially kept in the general population before being sent to the Interim LSU Public Hospital. After he was returned to OPP, Goetzee was placed on suicide watch.

Goetzee committed suicide while in the jail's suicide tank. He was supposed to be under direct observation, but deputy William Thompson left his post, giving Goetzee time to swallow enough toilet paper to suffocate himself.

Gore pointed to this case as an example of the sheriff's office holding itself accountable, noting that Thompson this year pleaded guilty to criminal charges of malfeasance in office. But Gauthier said the result was unsatisfying, as it appears no supervisors were disciplined for the obvious lapse in protocol.

Most recently, in a federal court filing, the Justice Department noted that Tracy Barquet Jr. died in 2010 days after he was beaten and pepper-sprayed by guards. Barquet's death remains classified as "undetermined" by the Orleans Parish coroner.

Gore said in his statement that the coroner did not find any "indications of any physical confrontations that would be fatal, nor did the coroner find any signs of suicide" in Barquet's death. According to jail records, a deputy was disciplined for spraying pepper spray at Barquet through the cell bars. While inmates said Barquet was beaten, deputies denied it.

For Tracy Barquet Sr., his 25-year-old son's death continues to raise unresolved questions more than two years later. Barquet said his son had a drug problem, but said he'd never had a previous history of seizures, one potential cause of death posited by the coroner's office. The events leading up to his son's death - including the alleged beating and pepper-spraying days before it - are troubling, he said.

"I just want some answers," Barquet said. "We did know he was ingesting drugs. He had a problem with that. I thought by him being in there he would be able to detox. That he was safe."

The sheriff office's post-mortem report about Barquet's death describes him behaving erratically and speaking strangely. A psychiatrist had prescribed Haldol to him several days before he died. But the report doesn't evaluate how much supervision he received from either deputies or medical personnel.

Howell said the deaths point to the need for outside investigations. She has asked Orleans Parish District Attorney Leon Cannizzaro to consider investigating all deaths at the jail. She also noted that Gusman, before he was elected, had pledged to hire an independent monitor, but never followed through.

In cases where the coroner doesn't find evidence of a homicide, outside probes could determine whether there was negligence or malfeasance on the part of jail staff that contributed to a death, she said.

Cannizzaro said he doesn't have the resources to look into deaths at the jail and must rely on the sheriff's office to investigate itself. When a case is brought to the office, whether by Gusman or a victim's advocate like Howell, his staff reviews it, he said.

Gusman has been cooperative when the district attorney asks for files, he noted.

In a statement, Gusman reaffirmed his support for a monitor, saying such a position could "play a productive part of the future of the sheriff's office." The statement did not say why he has never moved to hire one.

Source: http://www.nola.com/crime/index.ssf/2012/11/families_advocate_for_change_a.html

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