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Justice Department finds 'abhorrent, unconstitutional' conditions at Fulton County jail

From useapen <yourdime@outlook.com>
Newsgroups alt.prisons, ga.general, law.court.federal, sac.politics, talk.politics.guns, talk.politics.misc
Subject Justice Department finds 'abhorrent, unconstitutional' conditions at Fulton County jail
Date 2024-11-17 09:56 +0000
Organization A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID <XnsB22D13CECBE3ABX@135.181.20.170> (permalink)

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Fulton County is violating the civil rights of the people housed at the 
county jail by allowing “abhorrent, unconstitutional” conditions, 
particularly at the troubled Rice Street facility in Atlanta, according 
to a U.S. Department of Justice investigation.

Federal officials who spent the last 16 months studying the conditions 
at Rice Street and three annex facilities said authorities frequently 
failed to protect inmates’ safety, presiding over an environment that 
has led to homicides, stabbings and sexual abuse. Guards too often 
resorted to violence against detainees following small infractions and 
used solitary confinement in unconstitutional and discriminatory ways, 
DOJ said in a scathing 97-page report.

Jail leaders permitted dilapidated, unsanitary living conditions, 
including broken toilets, standing water and exposed wire, pest 
infestations and malnourishment, the report concluded. They also failed 
to provide adequate medical and mental health services, DOJ concluded, 
as well as special education services to 17-year-olds incarcerated 
there, in violation of federal law.

“At the end of the day, people do not abandon their civil and 
constitutional rights at the jailhouse door,” said Assistant Attorney 
General Kristen Clarke during a news conference Thursday. “Jails and 
prisons across the country must protect people from the kind of gross 
violations and unconstitutional conditions that we have uncovered 
here.”

Explore
AJC Editorial Board: There are far too many jail deaths in Fulton 
County
Clark and Ryan Buchanan, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of 
Georgia, blamed understaffing, poor policies and lack of training for 
the grim conditions at the facility, which has been plagued by inmate 
deaths, violence and other issues for years.

Opened in 1989, the Fulton County jail was under federal supervision 
between 2006 and 2015. It currently houses roughly 2,000 people, down 
from the more than 3,200 who were there 18 months ago.

More than 60 people who were being held in Fulton’s jail died between 
2009 and October 2022, the highest total for any jail in Georgia during 
that time, according to an Atlanta Journal-Constitution investigation. 
10 more inmates died in county custody in 2023.

In its report, the DOJ cites several sets of data, all painting an 
equally bleak picture.

In 2023, the rate of stabbings in the Fulton jail was 1.5 times that in 
New York City jails and more than 27 times the rate of all incidents 
involving “edged weapons” in Miami-Dade County lockups, according to 
the DOJ. In fact, the Fulton jail at one point had as many stabbings in 
a single month as the Miami-Dade County jails, which house 1.5 times 
more people, had in a single year.

A cell filled with garbage
DOJ launched its civil probe in July 2023, shortly after the death of 
Lashawn Thompson in the jail’s psychiatric wing. An autopsy found that 
Thompson’s death was due to severe neglect, and photos showed him 
covered in insects in a cell filled with garbage.

Explore
‘Continuously victimized’: How a Fulton inmate’s death reflects a 
county’s criminal justice crisis
Supporters of Lashawn Thompson rally outside the Fulton County Jail, 
Thursday, April 20, 2023, in Atlanta. Lashawn Thompson, 35, was 
discovered unresponsive in the jail's psychiatric wing covered in bed 
bugs in September, according to a Fulton County Medical Examiner 
report. (Hyosub Shin / Hyosub.Shin@ajc.com)
Credit: HYOSUB SHIN / AJC

Supporters of Lashawn Thompson rally outside the Fulton County Jail, 
Thursday, April 20, 2023, in Atlanta. Lashawn Thompson, 35, was 
discovered unresponsive in the jail's psychiatric wing covered in bed 
bugs in September, according to a Fulton County Medical Examiner 
report. (Hyosub Shin / Hyosub.Shin@ajc.com)
The DOJ’s report is replete with examples of how Thompson and others 
have been harmed by the horrific conditions, rampant violence, 
indifferent supervision and poor medical care.

According to the report, medical personnel failed to respond when 
Thompson repeatedly missed medications. In the month before his death, 
he didn’t receive any of his prescribed medications, including those 
for psychosis, the report says.

Lack of proper medical care also was cited in the case of another 
prisoner, identified only as A.A., who died in 2022 from pneumonia 
caused by seizures, and that of a 75-year-old man who, according to the 
report, couldn’t get out of bed, couldn’t get into a wheelchair, was 
incontinent and had ulcers on his back. The man reported to 
investigators that he sometimes waited days for medical staff to change 
his diaper and that, before getting a cellmate, he was alone for eight 
months and lost track of reality and family ties.

Prisoners with mental illnesses have faced particular harm and neglect, 
according to the report. Two people with serious mental illness were 
killed by cellmates in 2022, one of whom, a 32-year-old man, was cold 
to the touch when he was ultimately discovered. He was found with his 
feet bound, a bloody nose and “raccoon eyes,” a sign of head trauma.

The jail also has been a house of horrors, the DOJ found, for 17-year-
olds, who in Georgia can be charged as adults.

According to the report, the DOJ identified a pattern of 17-year-olds 
“initiating” other newly-admitted boys with violent assaults, including 
five instances in which boys were seriously injured within two weeks of 
their admission and required outside medical care for their injuries.

Debate over a new jail
Federal officials are encouraging the Fulton County Board of 
Commissioners and the sheriff’s office to implement a series of 
remedial measures. They include reducing contraband, bolstering medical 
and mental health care and implementing a system that would separate 
gang members and other violent people from the jail’s more vulnerable 
population, including people with mental illnesses, gay and transgender 
detainees and people under 18.

Explore
EXPLORE: Past coverage of Fulton County Jail
In its report, DOJ said that if local officials had not addressed their 
concerns in 49 days they could sue to force changes. It will be left to 
the incoming Trump administration to enforce them, and it is unclear 
whether it will choose to do so.

“We expect Fulton County and the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office to 
share our sense of urgency about the seriousness of the violations 
described in this report and to work cooperatively with our office and 
the Department of Justice to remedy these systemic deficiencies in the 
jail,” Buchanan said.

In a press conference late Thursday, Fulton Sheriff Pat Labat said he 
viewed the DOJ’s findings as a snapshot of conditions in the past and 
that many of the issues predate his tenure. He said his office has been 
working with the county commission over the last several months to 
address many of the issues named in the report, including making 
structural changes to the building and hiring and retaining deputies.

County Chairman Robb Pitts said he was still reviewing the report but 
echoed Labat’s sentiments.

“We’ve come a long ways in really a short period of time,” he said. “We 
have a few steps yet to go, but I’m encouraged about where we are.... 
we look forward to working with the Department of Justice as we move 
forward, but more importantly, working with our sheriff to make sure 
that we abide by what’s in the report and anything that may be 
forthcoming.”

Labat, who was reelected last week, has urged the county to build a 
brand-new jail on the current Rice Street site at an estimated cost of 
$1.7 billion.

But he faced pushback from county commissioners, who recently opted to 
instead green light a renovation to the current building, as well as 
the creation of a special purpose facility, likely for a medical unit 
or inmates with serious mental health issues, to the tune of $300 
million.

Andrea Young, executive director of the ACLU of Georgia, said the 
report shows there are “better alternatives to detaining people for 
nonviolent offenses.”

“We hope this report, calling out the unconstitutional conditions at 
Fulton County Jail, will finally push officials to use practical 
solutions such as speedy bond hearings, setting feasible bond amounts 
and releasing people held for misdemeanor charges,” she said.

The Fulton jail report comes six weeks after the DOJ issued a similarly 
scathing report on the Georgia Department of Corrections, which has 
already this year set a record for homicides.

Thursday’s report noted that many of the people being held at the jail 
have not been convicted of a crime and instead are awaiting hearings or 
trial dates or are serving shorter sentences for misdemeanors. It also 
said that the conditions represent a racial justice issue because some 
91% of detainees are Black, while making up roughly 45% of Fulton’s 
overall population.

The family of Thompson, the detainee who died of severe neglect, said 
they hope the investigation will lead to accountability.

“I hope that these findings not only bring criminal charges (against 
the people responsible) and they get a new jail built and it also sends 
a message that we can’t treat people like this,” said Brad McCrae, 
Thompson’s brother.

The AJC’s Jozsef Papp and The Associated Press contributed to this 
report.

https://www.ajc.com/politics/justice-department-finds-abhorrent-
unconstitutional-conditions-at-fulton-jail/2GVOH6KGGBDFZLRBVV33NGO4PE/

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Justice Department finds 'abhorrent, unconstitutional' conditions at Fulton County jail useapen <yourdime@outlook.com> - 2024-11-17 09:56 +0000

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