This article extensively
references a 2013-14 Grand Jury report.
Since August of 2012, six
people have died while in custody at the Santa Cruz County Jail. On January 24,
community members came together for a 'Cages Kill' rally and march to raise
awareness about poor medical conditions inside of the jail, as well as to
discuss the broader issue of the negative effects of mass incarceration, both
locally and on the State of California. The rally was organized in response to
the death of 65-year-old Sharyon Gibbs, who was found dead in the jail on
November 5, 2014.
On November 5, commercial
news outlets reported that the Santa Cruz County Sheriff's Department alerted
the press to the death of Sharyon Gibbs, and sent out a notice that stated it
was due to "probable natural causes." The full Sheriff's press
release was never published publicly on the department's website. Follow up
reports in commercial news outlets appeared in mid-December, reporting that
Santa Cruz County coroners had determined her death to be caused by "heart
problems" that were "naturally caused" by "cardiac
arrhythmia related to heart disease." The Sheriff's department did not
release this information to the general public on their website either.
According to her obituary,
Gibbs worked in the health care profession and she attended Cabrillo College,
where she studied Nursing. She was a 30-year resident of Santa Cruz County and
a Mother of four, a Grandmother of six, and a Great-Grandmother of two.
The lack of details released
to the public concerning the death of Sharyon Gibbs is in contrast to the
greater breadth of information made available through an investigation into the
previous five deaths at the jail, which was published by the Santa Cruz County
Grand Jury in May of 2014.
Titled, "Five Deaths in
Santa Cruz: An Investigation of In-Custody Deaths," the Grand Jury's
report detailed the results of their investigation into the deaths, which
occurred between August 2012 and July 2013. It found that all of five of the
in-custody death cases involved failures by jail staff at critical points in
the process of administering health and mental care.
The report found that the
death rate in the jail during this time period was four times the national
average, and that while heart disease and suicide were listed as the leading
causes of jail deaths nationally during this period and accounted for half of
all jail deaths, 60% of the Santa Cruz jail deaths were due to heart attacks or
suicides.
"In some instances,
individuals were incorrectly classified or not properly monitored. In others,
inadequate treatments were applied," the Grand Jury Report stated. The
report criticized both the Sheriff's Department's staff, which operates the
county jail system, as well as California Forensics Medical Group (CFMG), a
privately owned business which took over medical operations in 2012. The
decision to privatize medical care in the jail was made by the Board of
Supervisors.
"The Sheriff's
Department and CFMG have publicly disagreed with almost all the findings of the
report, and since then, another person [Sharyon Gibbs] has died," the
organization Sin Barras stated in a press release for the January 24 Cages Kill
rally. Sin Barras is a Santa Cruz based group that supports measures to reform
jail and prison conditions, while also working on the broader long-term goal of
prison abolition.
The march began at the Santa
Cruz Town Clock and traveled down Pacific Avenue, eventually making its way to
the county's main jail on Water Street. A wide range of speakers addressed the
issue of mass incarceration along different points of the march. At the jail,
individuals spoke in front of the main entrance as families entered and exited
during visiting hours. Some visiting relatives stopped to listen.
The rally concluded at the
rear of the main jail complex, where the group held an energetic and emotional
noise/solidarity demonstration to let inmates know that people on the outside
care about them. In response, inmates pounded on the windows of their cells,
and some loud whistles could also be heard. At one point an inmate could be
heard shouting out loudly from the inside, "I love you!!!"
Two of the speakers at the
Cages Kill rally were local residents who feel that the poor medical conditions
inside of the Santa Cruz County Jail were responsible for the deaths of their
loved ones.
At the Town Clock, Jessica
Espinoza spoke about the death of her uncle, local surfer Arthur Anthony Deans.
Photos of Deans were featured in multiple issues of Surfer magazine in the
1980s, but the wave-rider's public acclaim soon became overshadowed by his
personal struggles with addiction. Deans began using drugs while in his 20s,
and as a result he found himself in and out of the Santa Cruz jail.
In November of 2008, Deans
experienced a three-minute seizure while incarcerated in the Santa Cruz County
Jail. His family believes he should have been taken immediately to hospital,
but it took a month, after many complaints from them, for Deans to see a doctor
at Dominican. After a cat-scan discovered a tumor, Deans received emergency
surgery to have it removed. His doctor informed the family that a majority of
the tumor was removed, but that they could have gotten it all out if Deans had
been taken to hospital two weeks earlier. Arthur Deans eventually died in 2011,
and his family believes he would still be alive today if he had received the
proper medical attention after he experienced the seizure in jail.
"His voice needs to be
heard," Espinoza said. "We need to honor him as well as all of those
who have been neglected because they're incarcerated."
When the march was on Pacific
Avenue, demonstrators blocked traffic at Cooper Street for a period of time.
Fox Sloan stood in the middle of the street and spoke about her daughter Amanda
Sloan, the 30-year-old mother of three who was found dead in the Santa Cruz
County Jail on July 17, 2013. Amanda's was one of the "five deaths"
investigated by the Grand Jury.
"My daughter Amanda Fox
Sloan was allowed to commit suicide in the Santa Cruz County Jail in July of 2013,"
her mother said to demonstrators who were also standing in the street and
listening.
"Amanda had suffered a
loss of many very important, pivotal people in her life," Fox Sloan said.
Sloan stated that between
2010 and 2012, Amanda lost her father, her favorite uncle, an aunt, a couple of
friends, and then finally her husband Jeff Smith, who was murdered in the
driveway of their home and died in Amanda's arms on August 16, 2012.
In the wake of her husband's
murder, Amanda became suicidal. In November she was pulled over by police and
reportedly became irate, eventually leading them on a chase. She was in
possession of a firearm and allegedly shot at officers during the chase.
Authorities were not able to apprehend Amanda for some time, and she was named
Santa Cruz County law enforcement's "most wanted" woman of the year.
Fearing for her daughter's
safety, it was her mother that eventually gave police the tip that lead to
Amanda's arrest, and she was booked into the main jail on multiple charges,
including "discharging a firearm from a vehicle" and "reckless
driving while evading a peace officer."
An article in the Santa Cruz
Sentinel titled, "Mother of Soquel Hills widow Amanda Sloan grateful her
daughter is safely in custody" shortly followed. In the article, Fox Sloan
is quoted as stating she was glad her daughter was alive, considering the
severity of the situation and the dangerous pursuit by law enforcement
officers.
Amanda wound up being held in
jail for eight months, but the Grand Jury report indicates the jail's staff was
aware of warning signs that Amanda was in a state of intense despair near the
end of her life.
"When Amanda was in jail
she was told by fellow prisoners you will never see your daughter again,"
Fox Sloan said at the Cages Kill rally.
The Grand Jury report noted
that three days before her death, Amanda was visited in jail by a friend who
told her she would be losing custody of her children. According to the report
Amanda, "became very upset and stormed out of the jail visiting area."
The report states that on
July 16, the day before her death, officers in the jail say that Amanda was
“very agitated and uptight," but medical staff had also reported that she
appeared "happy and unusually calm." Some staff members believed that
she was a risk for suicide because of "drastic mood swings." She had
been held in the ‘O’ Unit for "mental health observation," but jail
staff reports indicate she was returned to the general jail population six
weeks before committing suicide. The jail's staff claims they did not have the
authority to keep Amanda in the ‘O’ Unit for "an extended period of
time," and that she had the right to be returned to the general population
if she indicated that "she was feeling better" and "showed an
improved attitude."
According to the Grand Jury
report, the Sheriff-Coroner’s Office determined the cause of death to be
"intentional asphyxiation due to hanging" and they classified
Amanda's death as a suicide.
Immediately following her
death, officers say they found a large hole in the wall of her cell. The hole
exposed an interior pipe, which authorities say was how a "handmade
noose" was attached. They say the hole had been hidden from officers in
the jail by a poster covering it. The authorities also say they found a hidden
a meth pipe and a razor blade behind other posters in Amanda's cell.
The Grand Jury report cited
two Corrections Bureau regulations regarding cell inspections that were not
followed by the Santa Cruz Main Jail's staff while Amanda was incarcerated.
The report summarized the
protocols that were violated as follows:
1. Safety checks should be conducted at least once an hour. Officers
should observe the inmate through the cell window, making sure they see visible
skin, and verify that the inmate is breathing. They should document their check
using the pipe log.
2. Inmates are not allowed to place anything on the doors, windows,
or walls of their cells.
The "pipe log" is
an electronic method used by officers in the jail to keep track of when
officers have performed safety checks.
The Grand Jury report found
that records from the pipe log for the night of Amanda's death, July 16 to July
17, indicate that jail officers say they checked her cell at 10:21pm, 10:58pm,
12:14am, 2:28am, and 3:26am.
However, the video record for
her unit shows that only the 10:21pm safety check had actually occurred. The
Grand Jury report did not name the actual officers involved in these possibly
fatal inconsistencies.
In addition to allowing the
hole in the wall of Amanda's cell to exist, the jail's staff was found to have
violated Correction Bureau protocol in a number of other ways. Authorities have
also admitted Sloan's cell window was covered with a poster and her cell’s
light switch cover, "had been removed and replaced with a poster."
Authorities say they found
out Amanda was dead at 4:15am on July 17 when she did not show up to take her
medication, and when they looked in on her they found her hanging in her cell.
Amanda was pronounced dead at
4:25am on July 17.
At the Cages Kill rally, Fox
Sloan thanked the Grand Jury for the "incredible job they did" with
the investigation.
"If it wasn't for them
we wouldn't have this rally and this information to go on," she said,
"but they only have the power to investigate, and to evaluate, and to
report, but they don't have the power and the authority to stop it."
Sloan told the crowd at the
Cages Kill rally that the jail's staff had tried to "suppress" and
"keep hidden" the information the Grand Jury report had revealed.
"What do we do?"
she asked community members and supporters.
"Oh! I got it," she
said.
"By the grace and power
of God, we the people are going to change it."
Sin Barras released the
following demands in advance of the Cages Kill rally:
1. The Board of Supervisors cancel its contract with California
Forensic Medical Group.
2. The Sheriff's Department and CFMG accept responsibility for the
unnatural deaths and implement the Grand Jury recommendations to expand Crisis
Intervention Team mental health services.
3. Solitary confinement/administrative segregation and other forms of
torture, such as the "restraint chair," be abolished.
4. The County cancel the $24.6 million planned expansion of Rountree
Detention Center and invest in community-based social services.
In addition to Sin Barras,
other organizations participating in the Cages Kill rally included ACLU, All of
Us or None, Cabrillo College Justice League, Food Not Bombs, Freedom Archives,
Global Women’s Strike, Homeless United for Friendship and Freedom (HUFF), Legal
Services for Prisoners with Children, NAACP, Prison Activist Resource Center,
Prisoner Hunger Strike Solidarity Coalition, Project: Pollinate, Queer Strike,
Santa Cruz County Community Coalition to Overcome Racism (SCCCCOR), South Bay/Santa
Cruz Facilitators group of the Pachamama Alliance, US PROStitutes Collective
(US PROS), and Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF).
To read the Grand Jury's
report "Five Deaths in Santa Cruz: An Investigation of In-Custody
Deaths," see: http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2014/05/19/18755964.php
February
8, 2015
Bay
Area Indymedia
By Alex Darocy
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