Tag Archives: fmc carswell

Court Doubts BOP Medical Care Standards – Update for November 2, 2023

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

‘WE ARE STILL HUMAN’: CARSWELL MEDICAL CARE ON TRIAL IN SOUTH FLORIDA HEARING

healthbareminimum220603A woman whose 18-month federal sentence last April came with a promise by a BOP medical official that he’d personally see that she would receive the care she needed to treat her life-threatening seizure condition was back in court after only eight weeks in FMC Carswell, due to her attorney’s concern that “the BOP has proven unable to manage or prevent these life-threatening episodes.”

Suzanne Kaye suffers from severe, stress-induced seizures. She went into cardiac arrest on the floor of the courtroom last year when she was convicted of threatening to shoot FBI agents in the “f****** ass. When she was sentenced, her lawyer warned that sending her to prison could kill her.

At sentencing, the Court found that there was “no doubt” that Suzanne “does suffer from a serious health condition, in fact perhaps a number of health conditions,” that she was “medically frail,” and that “she will require much medical care.” But despite her undisputed seizure disorder and other medical ailments, the Court relied on testimony from the FMC Carswell Medical Director that the BOP could “provide Ms. Kaye with whatever medical care she needs.”

Suzanne self-surrendered in mid-July. Only two months later, her attorney told the court that Suzanne “has required emergency outside hospitalization on at least two separate occasions. Specifically, counsel has been advised that Mrs. Kaye has suffered ongoing, repeated seizures—including two major episodes—with the latest episode involving cardiac arrest. (It has also resulted in blood clots that are now not being monitored)…” The BOP’s “repeated failure is contrary to the picture painted by the government at sentencing. Counsel has also been advised fellow inmates have been forced to attempt to [provide] life-saving care during these seizures because prison officials failed to do so.”

BOPMedical221208BOP medical official Mark Holbrook told the judge in April that some inmates have medical needs beyond what the Bureau of Prisons can treat. Suzanne, he said, was not one of them. But five months later, her heart and lungs briefly stopped working on the floor of a friend’s cell. Inmates screamed at the guards to call for help. “Granny’s eyes were wide open, but you could see that the light was no longer there,” wrote Katherine Moore, one of two incarcerated women who performed CPR on Kaye until medics arrived. “She was gone.”

“That was my mistake,” Dr. Holbrook admitted to the judge last month.

The Palm Beach Post reported, “Letters from half a dozen inmates and the testimony of Carswell’s own medical director depict a standard of care unlike the one Holbrook promised. One where Kaye must depend on her fellow inmates to keep her heart beating, and doubts over the legitimacy of her seizures dampen what care she does receive.”

When vouching for Carswell, the doctor said Suzanne would have access to a neurologist to treat her seizures and a psychologist to treat the anxiety that triggers them. He also promised a combination of anti-seizure medications that would take the place of her medical marijuana. “He made several promises and several assurances. It appears none of which occurred,” Suzanne’s attorney told the judge last month. “I’m not saying he lied — maybe he meant to and he forgot — but it is inexcusable in my opinion.”

Dr. Holbrook told the judge he left a voicemail with someone he believed was Carswell’s clinical director and never heard back. Maitee Serrano-Mercado, Carswell’s clinical director, testified that she was never contacted by Holbrook, and prison staff only belatedly learned that Kaye had a history of seizures.

Still, Dr. Holbrook said he was thankful Suzanne was at Carswell because it is “the best location” for her to be provided care. “Second best” undoubtedly would be an abattoir.

DrNoBOPHealth230925The Post noted that Carswell, once dubbed by the Fort Worth Weekly as a “hospital of horrors,” is “the only federal medical facility for incarcerated women in the country. It lost its accreditation during the pandemic and has not gotten it back. Indeed, the BOP seems to have no interest in doing so.

Carswell clinical director Serrano-Mercado argued at the hearing that Suzanne’s seizures might not be real. Serrano-Mercado admitted that the staff treating Suzanne are the same who treated a woman named Gwen Rider, a Carswell inmate who committed suicide in August. Like Suzanne, Rider was sent to Carswell because she needed medical treatment for epileptic seizures. Staff accused her of faking her seizures, too.

Suzanne was hospitalized again two weeks ago. Her mother, Brenda Kaye, told The Palm Beach Post that BOP medical personnel accidentally fractured her sternum while checking to see if she exhibited a pain response.

In an email to The Post, Suzanne called the treatment of herself and other women at the prison “nothing short of torture.” “People come in here walking and leave in wheelchairs. People die here,” she wrote. “I don’t want to be one of them.”

medical told you I was sick221017After publishing this report in my newsletter last weekend, I received an email from a prisoner at Carswell. She had been present when Suzanne and two other prisoners suffered seizures:

I had run to get an officer for the first one (which was Suzanne) and she wouldn’t call it on the radio, a medical emergency so I had to run to inside [the Recreation area] and get the officers there. They came running, Once they made it over there another girl went down in a bad grand mal seizure, then another one went down, also a really bad one that seemed like it was never-ending. The rec officers did their best, then other officers showed up but medical never showed up. The officers on the scene had to put the ladies on the back of their easy-go car and drive them up to the hospital area one at a time.

The time they had broken Suzanne’s collar bone I believe [they were] trying to get her heart to beat again. Just thought I would share an experience I had firsthand to put more information out there! Medical here does not care about us. They are desensitized and should all for the most part be replaced. We are still human and do not deserve to be treated like this. 

Palm Beach Post, ‘Inexcusable’: Attorney blasts federal prison officials over Boca woman’s medical care (October 27, 2023)

Motion for Hearing (ECF 200), United States v. Kaye, Case No 9:21-cr-80039 (SD Fla., September 12, 2023)

– Thomas L. Root

Friday Couldn’t Come Soon Enough – Update for February 24, 2023

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

TOUGH WEEK FOR THE BOP

Bad news came in threes for the Federal Bureau of Prisons last week.

badweekA230224First, the BOP announced it is closing the USP Thomson Special Management Unit – described by The Marshall Project as sort of a “double solitary” detention unit for violent inmates – after adverse reports have circulated for months about inmate deaths, suicides and reported sexual harassment by staff and against staff..

The 350 SMU prisoners will be transferred to other prisons. They had come to the Thomson SMU (USP Thomson sits on the Illinois side of the Mississippi River about 125 miles due west of Chicago) after committing disciplinary infractions in facilities around the country, the New York Times reported.

Bureau officials “recently identified significant concerns with respect to institutional culture and compliance with BOP policies” at the high-security facility, which houses about 800 inmates, Randilee Giamusso, a bureau spokeswoman, wrote in an email.

“We believe these issues are having a detrimental impact on facility operations, and the BOP has determined that there is a need for immediate corrective measures,” she added.

badweekB230224Second, on February 14, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ruled that BOP employees cannot sue over the government’s denial of hazard pay benefits in connection with their work during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The en banc decision held that under existing Office of Personnel Management regulations governing hazard pay, only federal workers enlisted to work in a laboratory setting with “virulent biologicals” are entitled to enhanced pay for dangerous work not included in their job description.

FCI Danbury workers sued in 2020, claiming they were entitled to hazard pay because they worked in close proximity to inmates infected with COVID-19 and were not provided sufficient personal protective equipment.

badweekC230224Third, the Reason Foundation, which skewered the BOP for reported medical neglect at FCI Aliceville, sued the Bureau under the Freedom of Information Act last week for records about whether women who died at Aliceville and FMC Carswell received adequate medical care.

Reason Foundation, a nonprofit that publishes Reason magazine, is seeking medical reviews of in-custody deaths in two federal women’s

Reason filed a FOIA request with the BOP in May 2020 for inmate mortality reviews at Aliceville and Carswell.

New York Times, Bureau of Prisons Is Closing Troubled, Violent Detention Unit in Illinois (February 14, 2023)

Government Executive, Federal Prisons Employees Aren’t Entitled to COVID Hazard Pay, Appeals Judges Rule (February 16, 2023)

Reason, Reason Files FOIA Lawsuit Against Bureau of Prisons for Inmate Death Records (February 17, 2023)

– Thomas L. Root

Trick or Treat: The Sequel – Update for October 31, 2022

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

TRICK-OR-TREAT – PART 2 (IN WHICH BOP DIRECTOR IS HOPING FOR ‘CHOCOLATE HEARTS’ INSTEAD OF A THUG HUG)

What we kids used to call “Halloweening” (I know, it’s not really a verb, but a lot of non-verb words are being used as verbs these days) continues today.

hugathug221031BOP Director Colette Peters sat for her first national media interview last week, telling Associated Press reporters Michael Balsamo and Michael Sisak – who have covered BOP crises, scandals and miscues in detail for the past three years – that skeptics who denounce her approach to running a prison system “hug a thug” are simply wrong.

Peters didn’t mind that, but she offers a different term: “chocolate hearts.” Her ideal BOP employee, she said, is as interested in preparing inmates for returning to society after their sentences as they are in keeping order while those inmates are still locked within the prison walls. She said she wants to reorient the agency’s hiring practices to find candidates who want to “change hearts and minds” and end systemic abuse and corruption. She told the AP she would not rule out closing problematic prisons, though there are no current plans to do so.

chocolatehearts221031Chocolate hearts or the ‘Thug Squeeze’, Peters nevertheless is still dealing with problems she inherited when she took the director’s job last August, and those problems are many.

Trick: Ruben Montanez-Mirabal (Montanez), a nurse at FDC Miami, was indicted last week on charges of bribery, smuggling contraband into prison and possession with intent to distribute K2.

According to the indictment, Montanez posted Instagram photos of him in a Lamborghini, a Rolls Royce and a McLaren. When one person wrote back to Montanez about how much he was paying for these cars Montanez responded, “Absolutely nothing. It’s all about having the right contact.” The cars were owned by the inmate at FDC Miami who was cooperating with authorities.

Treat: Peters won praise from Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA) for her decision to join him in inspecting USP Atlanta last Wednesday.

“I want to be really clear, I’m not here to tell you the problems are solved,” Ossoff told reporters. “We saw encouraging signs of improved management and I heard a firm commitment from the new leadership to continue improving this facility and safeguarding public safety in the community.”

The BOP emptied USP Atlanta of prisoners a year ago amid reports of rampant staff corruption, decrepit facilities and drug use and contraband possession among inmates. “We saw encouraging signs of improved management and I heard a firm commitment from the new leadership to continue improving this facility and safeguarding public safety in the community,” Ossoff said. However, he warned, “I’m a long way from being prepared to declare that the problem has been solved.”

callback221031Trick: While Peters was getting lauded by Sen Ossoff, she was taking it on the chin in Fort Worth. The Fort Worth Star-Telegram, which has been covering staff abuse and miserable conditions experienced by the female inmates and conditions at FMC Carswell, the BOP women’s medical center in Fort Worth, asked Peters for an interview on September 7. A BOP spokesman declined on her behalf, saying Peters’ “schedule is very full her first few months, but we can re-visit this request in the future.”

To determine when Peters may be available, the Star-Telegram requested her appointment calendar through a Freedom of Information Act request. Last week, the newspaper reported that the BOP told it the FOIA request would take a while because it “must be searched for and collected from a field office.” One month later,” the Star-Telegram said, it “had not received Peters’ calendar.”

On October 11, the Star-Telegram again requested to speak with Peters regarding abuse at FMC Carswell. A BOP spokesperson once again said “the director’s schedule does not permit an interview at this time.”

Treat: The FCI Dublin sex abuse scandal is working its way toward resolution. Last Thursday, a former BOP corrections officer accused of sexually abusing inmates there pleaded guilty.

Enrique Chavez entered a plea to one count of abusive sexual contact with a prisoner. Chavez was a food service foreman there two years ago when he locked the door to the pantry and fondled an inmate.

Chavez was the fifth Dublin employee to be charged with sexual abuse of inmates since June 2021. Others include the prison’s former warden and a chaplain. He is the third to have pleaded guilty.

computerhaywire221031Trick: Auto-calc, the new BOP computer app created to automatically calculate inmates’ earned-time credits” suffered a technical glitch as it was launched earlier this month (only 60 days late).

Instead of recognizing inmates’ ETC credits, NBC News reported Friday, “some said the opposite occurred, which suddenly shifted their release dates to a later time than they had anticipated. In extreme cases, some prisoners already released to halfway homes were erroneously told that the new calculations indicated they were deficient in the necessary credits and they would have to return to prison.”

Director Peters told NBC News on Thursday that prisoners’ time credit calculations are now accurately reflected and it was “unfortunate we had some IT glitches as it rolled out.”

“When you move from a human calculation to an automation, you always hope that the error rate drops, and so that’s our hope as well going forward,” she said.

AP, US Bureau of Prisons chief pledges hiring reforms amid staffing crisis (October 25, 2022)

Forbes, Federal Prison FDC Miami Nurse Indicted On Contraband Charges (October 24, 2022)

WSB-TV, Atlanta’s federal penitentiary being inspected after inmates could come and go through holes (October 26, 2022)

Ft Worth Star-Telegram, Bureau of Prisons continues to evade questions about sexual abuse at Fort Worth prison (October  27, 2022)

Corrections1, Federal prison worker pleads guilty to inmate sex abuse (October 28, 2022)

NBC News, Tech glitch botches federal prisons’ rollout of update to Trump-era First Step Act (October 28, 2022)

– Thomas L. Root

You’ve Got Mail, Director – Update for September 15, 2022

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

‘WE’VE GOT SOME CONCERNS, DIRECTOR’

The Sentencing Project, which recently reported on the large number of people serving sentences of longer than 10 years (52% of BOP inmates have such sentences, about average for the nation’s prison systems), sponsored a letter last Tuesday to BOP Director Colette Peters.

dungeon180627The letter asked her “to bring the Bureau into compliance with federal law and to lead the Bureau toward a more humane future grounded in transparency and accountability.” It cited “inadequate medical care, overcrowding, staff shortages, unsanitary conditions, violence, and abuse” in facilities across the BOP system. It noted that when “COVID-19 first threatened federal prisons, the Bureau could have embraced compassionate release as a tool to reduce the prison population and protect the most vulnerable people in federal prisons. Instead, the Bureau chose to attempt to use solitary confinement and lockdowns to reduce the spread of COVID-19, a practice internationally condemned as torture. Today, COVID-19 restrictions still define life within federal prisons, including 78 level three facilities which remain under intense modifications with minimal access to rehabilitative programming.”

At the end of last week, the BOP reported 477 inmates and 716 staff sick with COVID, spread over 110 facilities.

The letter called on the BOP to “use its power to file motions for compassionate release in extraordinary or compelling circumstances.” As well, it asked the BOP to step up calculating and applying time credits, complaining that agency foot-dragging was “keeping people from their loved ones months after they should have qualified for release to community corrections.” Ironically, this demand came only two days before the BOP issued its memo (see preceding story).

prisoncorruption2310825Finally, the letter cited FCI Dublin, USP Atlanta and USP Thomson as emblematic of BOP “of corruption and abuse and inaction.” The letter said, “We urge you to set a new standard and lead the Bureau towards transparency and accountability. The men and women incarcerated in federal prisons deserve safety, health, compliance with federal law, and to be treated with dignity.”

Not mentioned was FCI Carswell. Last week, Rep. Marc Veasey (D-TX) urged the House Committee on the Judiciary to hold a hearing in North Texas to investigate sexual assaults in federal prisons, in response to a Fort Worth Star-Telegram investigation into systemic sexual abuse and cover-ups at a federal prison in Fort Worth.

The paper reported that its request to interview Director Peters about Carswell had been denied because her schedule “is very full her first few months, but we can re-visit this request in the future.”

busy220915No doubt she’s quite busy, but with all due respect, the issues being complained about are serious and may be system-wide. Being unable to find a few hours to prepare and sit for an interview with a newspaper that is laser-focused on the issue (one which is attracting some Congressional concern) seems somewhat short-sighted, even if only from a public relations angle.

Sentencing Project, How Many People Are Spending Over a Decade in Prison? (September 8, 2022)

Sentencing Project, Formerly Incarcerated People and Advocacy Organizations Urge Reform of US Bureau of Prisons (September 6, 2022)

Ft. Worth Star-Telegram, Congressman calls for federal investigation into ‘horrors’ at Fort Worth women’s prison (September 7, 2022)

– Thomas L. Root

Scrutiny is ‘Difficult’… But Aplenty – Update for August 30, 2022

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

BOP DIRECTOR DOESN’T LACK FOR MATERIAL

criticize220830In her first video message to Bureau of Prisons staff, reported on last week in Government Executive, new Bureau of Prisons Director Colette Peters acknowledged the bumpy ride the BOP has experienced over the past few years: “We have had a great deal of scrutiny from auditing and oversight entities both internal to and external of our agency. While these findings are difficult to hear, we must work diligently to address these deficiencies in order to improve our environment for everyone who works and lives at the bureau.”

Last week suggests that Peters has no shortage of current ‘scrutiny’ to work with.

CARES Act Management: On Monday, NPR reported that only 17 of the 442 inmates returned to prison from CARES Act home confinement had committed new crimes. The number of new offenders represented less than two-tenths of a percent of the 11,000 sent home. Most of the 17 offenses were drug-related.

NPR criticized the BOP for a lack of due process and being too quick to revoke CARES Act status for insignificant infractions. With suits against the BOP over CARES Act revocation proliferating, NPR said, the agency is “considering a new federal rule to make the process more clear.”

The Hot Mess at Carswell: On Friday, the Ft. Worth Star-Telegram dropped another ticking bomb on the Director’s desk. The paper’s investigation found that FMC Carswell – the only federal medical facility for women inmates in the country – “has been plagued with systemic sexual abuse for years. The Star-Telegram spoke to 12 former and current inmates at the facility, as well as prison staff and experts familiar with the investigative process at the Bureau of Prisons, which has oversight of federal prisons. Hundreds of pages of incident reports, federal records and court documents reveal a pattern of sexual misconduct and cover-ups.”

sexualassault211014What’s more, the paper reported, Carswell inmates “say they are not always able to report sexual assaults due to fear of retaliation. Even when staff members report sexual assaults, Carswell upper management has at times failed to investigate misconduct, the union president at the prison said.” One Carswell staff member described the facility as “the perfect place for sexual misconduct.”

Finally, the newspaper reported, the BOP failed to provide victims with any mental health care to deal with trauma from the assaults. The BOP denied the claims, asserting that “every inmate and pretrial detainee in a BOP facility has daily and regular access to Health Services and Psychology Services staff.”

Lying Warden, Freezing Inmates: Meanwhile, the New York Post reported a week ago that the warden of a federal prison in California – identified by the paper as FCI Terminal Island – failed to fix a broken camera system in the lockup and kept prisoners in the cold after a heating malfunction during an unusually cold winter.”

The unidentified warden “risked the safety and security of inmates and staff” with the 2019 heating and surveillance failures at the prison near Los Angeles, according to a heavily redacted Dept of Justice Inspector General report of the probe obtained by the paper through a Freedom of Information Act request.

liar151213Investigators also found that the warden “lacked candor” in sworn interviews with agents. The DOJ’s Public Integrity Section declined to prosecute after the investigation, according to the documents.

Making Fun of Women and Blacks: A California TV station reported last week that a BOP whistleblower told the BOP Internal Affairs division earlier this month that the author of a “racist and misogynistic Instagram page” entitled “Good Verbal,” works at FCC Victorville, based on the private jokes and inside knowledge of the posts.

The page, that mocks women prisoners getting sexually assaulted at FCI Dublin, female officers sleeping their way to the top and black prisoners getting thrown into the SHU, among other posts,” included details suggesting the author was assigned to work at Victorville.

The whigoodverbal220830stleblower asked that IA investigators identify the author, discipline that person, and shut down the page. “I refuse to work in a dangerous environment and be subjected to this type of treatment by alleged fellow staff members,” the letter to Internal Affairs read. “I am one of many people that are the targets of these nasty and highly offensive posts. It should also be noted that other institutions in various regions across the county are affected by this disgusting page. This page has the potential to turn into a national law enforcement issue.”

As of August 30, “Good Verbal” remained posted on Instagram and appeared to be unrepentant, saying: “Our humor is not for everyone. This is how we deal with the horrible things we must see to earn money. We are the modern day sin eaters. We try to manage those that are unfit for society.”

Who’s the Rat?  Finally, at a detention hearing last week for one of the three defendants charged with the murder four years ago of James “Whitey” Bulger, the government revealed that inmates at USP Hazelton knew in advance that Bulger was arriving on October 29, 2018. He died 12 hours later.

snitch160802NBC News called Bulger’s death “a stunning security failure for the federal prison system. The previously undisclosed revelation that USP Hazelton inmates were tipped off to Bulger’s arrival raises additional questions about the federal Bureau of Prisons’ handling of his transfer to one of the country’s most violent prisons.”

“It’s just absurd that this happened,” a former BOP gang investigator told NBC.

A Bit of Support from a Critic: One piece of criticism the new Director received within about a day of her swearing-in four weeks ago was her decision to keep outgoing BOP Director Michael Carvajal on for a month as an advisor.  Last week, Shane Fausey – national president of the National Council of Prison Locals union and a strident critic of BOP management – defended keeping Carvajal on. With an agency the size of the BOP, “you don’t just turn off the lights and say have a nice day. It requires a transitional period to understand, and I hate to use the word, ‘bureaucracy’ of the federal government,” Fausey said.  “Whatever your personal feelings are with Director Carvajal, I think it’s essential for the success of Director Peters that he stay on board to kind of guide her at the beginning of her tenure.”

Government Executive, A New Director Is Bringing Hope to the Federal Prisons Agency (August 22, 2022)

NPR, Released during COVID, some people are sent back to prison with little or no warning (August 22, 2022)

Ft Worth Star-Telegram, They were sexually assaulted in prison. An overwhelmed mental health system failed to help (August 26, 2022)

Ft. Worth Star-Telegram, ‘I’m nobody to them.’ Survivors report sexual abuse by staff at Fort Worth Carswell prison (August 26, 2022)

New York Post, Warden failed to fix camera system, heat at California federal lockup: watchdog (August 22, 2022)

KTVU-TV, Whistleblower outs racist, misogynistic Instagram page at California federal prison (August 24, 2022)

NBC, Twist in Whitey Bulger murder case: Inmates at West Virginia prison knew in advance he was coming (August 23, 2022)

– Thomas L. Root

The Clock Chimes 13 Times for BOP COVID Response – Update for June 25, 2021

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

REMEMBER COVID? IT’S STILL AROUND IN THE BOP… AND PEOPLE ARE STILL DYING

The Bureau of Prisons reported 61 sick inmates and 136 sick staff in 65 facilities as of last night.

COVIDdeath201001

What is curious is that the BOP reported two more inmate COVID deaths last week.

One was from last December. With its usual opacity, the BOP reported last week that on “Friday, December 4, 2020, inmate Carlous Lindell Daily tested positive for COVID-19 at the United States Penitentiary (USP) Victorville in Victorville, California, and was immediately placed in medical isolation. On Wednesday, December 23, 2020, in accordance with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines, Mr. Daily was considered recovered after completing isolation and presenting with no symptoms.”

[Editorial note here: The BOP always trots out the justification in notices like these that ‘we only said he was recovered because the CDC guidelines said he was recovered’. I have heard from too many inmates that ‘recovery’ consists of taking a temperature. The inmates are listed as presenting no symptoms because staff is careful not to ask the inmates about any symptoms].

To be sure, poor Mr. Daily must have been experiencing some continuing symptoms that the crack BOP medical professionals overlooked. Only five days after he was declared fit as a fiddle, “[o]n Monday, December 28, 2020, Mr. Daily experienced vomiting and an altered mental status, and while being treated, became unresponsive. Responding staff immediately initiated life-saving measures. Staff requested emergency medical services (EMS) and life-saving efforts continued. Mr. Daily was subsequently pronounced deceased by EMS personnel.”

Apparently, the Health Services staff was so crushed by losing their ‘recovered’ patient that no one got around to reporting his death for over five months.

clock210625I remember from years ago a judge patiently explaining to a greenhorn lawyer (me) about the 13th chime. The ’13th chime’ comes from the mythical case of Rex v. Haddock, recounted in book Uncommon Law by A.P. Herbert.  Some have attributed it to an earlier utterance by Mark Twain. Regardless of its origin, the ’13th Chime” doctrine holds that when a clock strikes 13 times, not only is the 13th strike itself discredited, but the very fact that there was a 13th chime raises doubts about the accuracy of the preceding 12. Twain allegedly said: “The thirteenth stroke of the clock is not only false of itself, but casts grave doubt on the credibility of the preceding twelve”.

The point is this: I have heard for months from inmate correspondents that people were dying at FCI XYZ of COVID, but FCI XYZ’s reported deaths never seemed to reflect inmate folklore. Mr. Daily’s demise is the second time in three weeks that the BOP issued a way-after-the-fact admission about a death that went unreported during the height of the epidemic. How many more of these unreported deaths – which, had they been reported in a timely manner, would have made BOP conditions during the pandemic look even direr – are lurking out there? What’s more, the under-reporting is consistent with the BOP practice many prisoners have reported of medical staff doing the ostrich thing, not inquiring about symptoms other than to take a temperature?

ostrich170228Certainly, under-reporting would not surprise The Marshall Project, which has been criticizing  BOP sleight-of-hand on case numbers for months:

The Federal Bureau of Prisons also had a policy of removing cases and deaths from its reports. As a result, by the spring of 2021, we could no longer accurately determine new cases in federal prisons, which had more people infected than any other system.

Now for the other death last week, Sherri Hillman, a pretrial detainee who died at the abattoir known as FMC Carswell, the BOP’s only women’s medical center at Fort Worth.

die210625The circumstances around the Carswell death were painfully similar to the April death of Martha Evanoff at that facility. According to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram, Sherri had been sent to Carswell while awaiting sentencing in Kentucky, after being hospitalized with COVID since January. “She was transferred to (Carswell) in Fort Worth because most people thought she would be getting better care there than in Kentucky,” her attorney told the newspaper.

Her mother said, however, “from what she was telling me, I just don’t think she was treated right.” Two other Carswell inmates told the paper said they heard Sherri crying out for help for several days from her cell on the medical floor. One woman, who is also staying on the medical floor, said she heard the shouting.

“Everyone on the floor heard her screaming for help for several days,” a witness, who did not want her name to be used out of fear of retaliation, told the Star-Telegram, “For days, they said she’s faking it and there’s nothing wrong with her, and they ignored her cries for help. She would say, ‘Please, somebody help me.’”

Another inmate reported to me, “The poor woman begged for 4-5 days for help and was told to ‘shut up’.”

Sherri died alone in her cell on June 14.

BOP, Inmate Death at Victorville (June 17, 2021)

BOP, Inmate Death at FMC Carswell (June 17, 2021)

Fort Worth TX Star-Telegram, Woman told mother, ‘I can’t do this anymore,’ before death at prison in Fort Worth (June 17, 2021)

– Thomas L. Root

BOP Whistles a Happy Tune – Update for August 11, 2020

We post news and comment on federal criminal justice issues, focused primarily on trial and post-conviction matters, legislative initiatives, and sentencing issues.

DEATH DOESN’T TAKE A HOLIDAY, BUT BOP SEEKS NORMALCY

Six more inmates died of COVID-19 last week, bringing the BOP’s death total to 116. Twenty-two have died since July 1. Even while the BOP heralded a drop in the number of sick inmates from 2,476 to 1,395, a reduction of 44%, the number of sick staffers hit 580, an increase of 14% from last week (and all-time high). COVID-9 has now reached a record 114 institutions (93% of all BOP facilities).

whistle200811Still, the BOP bravely whistles a happy tune, seeking a return to normalcy as though it has the virus on the run. The agency announced Phase 9 of its rickety COVID-19 “Action Plan.” Phase 9 relaunches a number of EBRR-sanctioned programming (the programs that earn First Step Act credit), some – like the Residential Drug Treatment Program – to 100% and others to half capacity. UNICOR, the federal prison industry, is to spool up to 80% by September 1 and 100% a month later. Recreation time outside will resume, with limitations on group size and length of rec sessions. Inmate transportation begins again.

Meanwhile, fresh breakouts of COVID-19 were reported at USP Lewisburg (51 ill), FCI Loretto (37 ill), the Victorville, California, prison complex (127), USP Marion (70 ill) and FCI Edgefield (60 ill). Those locations join Coleman, Miami, Elkton, Forrest City, Beaumont, Carswell, Oklahoma City, Three Rivers and scores of other BOP institutions with the virus. CNN last week branded FCI Seagoville as “the hardest-hit federal prison in the United States” where “more than 1,300 of the roughly 1,750 prisoners have tested positive for the virus — a stunning three out of every four inmates.”

Since the beginning of May, when there was only a single coronavirus case at Seagoville, the number of inmates testing positive soared to 1,333, according to BOP. Twenty-eight of the roughly 300 prison employees have also tested positive. The outbreak means that the facility has more coronavirus cases than about 85% of the counties in the US.

covidmap200811The virus has reached FCC Florence (Colorado) and FDC Honolulu as well.

At FCI Miami, in Florida, nearly half of the inmates reportedly have tested positive. Kareen Troitino, the FCI Miami corrections officer union president, told ABC News that the virus was spread by one employee to inmates at the facility and, within a day cases at the facility went from one to four. Troitino says the only protective equipment the BOP issued were surgical masks. “One employee walked into work. He did not show a fever. He passed our screening procedures. He was positive. And that one employee spread it to numerous inmates. And then that’s it. Ever since then, it’s been a disaster.”

Troitino’s union local has sued the BOP and several other federal agencies, seeking hazard pay for at-risk essential workers.

In Washington, D.C., Democratic senators and representatives sponsored legislation in both chambers last Thursday to require the array of agencies that administer the nation’s jails and prisons to collect and report publicly detailed information about the spread of COVID-19 in their facilities. Joe Rojas, southeast regional vice president of the federal prison employees, told ABC News, “The Bureau is the largest agency within the DOJ and there’s no oversight. The BOP director doesn’t even get confirmed he just gets appointed.”

Forbes magazine complained last week that the BOP’s “Phase 9 Action Plan… looks a lot like Phase Eight… which looked a lot like Phase Seven. It begs the question as to whether there is a cohesive plan to address the COVID-19 pandemic that has infected over 10,000 federal inmates and over 1,000 correctional staff… killed 110 inmates and one staff member.”

coronadog200323BOP employees at FCI Tallahassee publicly expressed concern over Phase 9’s inmate transportation. “If we’re going to receive inmates that are positive, if we’re going to be assigned to inmates that have already tested positive it’s pretty shaky from day-to-day,” Yalimany Dudley, CO, told WTXL-TV.

Dr. Kristian Morgan, a nurse at the FCI, said inmates are coming in without being tested beforehand, bringing the virus with them. “We received about eight inmates from the Marshal Service last week. Five of those tested positive as soon as they entered inside the institution when we did rapid testing.”

BOP Memorandum, Coronavirus (COVID-19) Phase Nine Action Plan (August 5, 2020)

CNN, Inside the federal prison where three out of every four inmates have tested positive for coronavirus (August 8, 2020)

KTVT, Inside the Federal Prison Where Three Out of Every Four Inmates Have Tested Positive for Coronavirus (August 9, 2020)

Canon City Daily Record, 3 new cases of COVID-19 in Fremont County; Bureau of Prisons reporting 3 cases (August 3, 2020)

Honolulu Civil Beat, First Hawaii Inmate Tests Positive for COVID-19 Along With 4 Corrections Officers (August 7, 2020)

ABC News, As coronavirus spreads through nation’s jails and prisons, lawmakers demand more transparency on toll (August 6, 2020)

WXII-TV News, ‘We’re Risking Our Lives’: Front-Line Federal Workers Sue For Hazard Pay (August 7, 2020)

Forbes, As Bureau of Prisons Enters “Phase 9” Of COVID-19 Plan, BOP Staff Wonder If There Is A Real Plan (August 7, 2020)

WTXL-TV, FCI Tallahassee employees fear the worst as inmate transportation restarts (August 6, 2020)

– Thomas L. Root