AL - Man dies of hypothermia while in jail

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"welfare check" ... :rolleyes:

SERVED. AND. PROTECTED

NOT INTENTIONALLY MALEVOLENT


Man dies from hypothermia after Alabama cops lock him in naked freezer, had been arrested after welfare check: lawsuit
Anthony "Tony" Mitchell, 33, passed away on January 26 with a body temperature of just 72 degrees.
https://thepostmillennial.com/man-d...had-been-arrested-after-welfare-check-lawsuit
Jarryd Jaeger (17 February 2023)

The mother of an Alabama man who died of hypothermia after allegedly being put in a freezer by jail officials as "punishment" has filed a federal lawsuit against the correctional facility.

Anthony "Tony" Mitchell, 33, passed away on January 26 with a body temperature of just 72 degrees.

According to the lawsuit, which was filed by Mitchell's mother Margaret against Walker County Sheriff Nick Smith, ten correctional officers, two nurses, and one investigator, Mitchell was put "in a restraint chair in the jail kitchen's walk-in freezer or similar frigid enforcement," where he allegedly sat "for hours," possibly "as punishment for deputies who had 'had a time'" with him.

As Fox News reports, Mitchell had been arrested by the Walker County Sheriff's Office on January 12 after a concerned family member called them over to check on him after he suggested he could "harm himself or others."

During the arrest, Mitchell "brandished a handgun, and fired at least one shot at Deputies before retreating into a wooded area behind his home," where he was finally detained with the help of a SWAT team.

The lawsuit claimed that "while Tony languished naked and dying of hypothermia in the early morning hours of January 26 ... numerous corrections officers and medical staff wandered over to his open cell door to spectate and be entertained by his condition."

Mitchell was eventually taken to the hospital, however, jail officials opted to drive him there themselves instead of calling an ambulance. At the time, his body temperature had dropped to 72 degrees, 22 degrees less than what it should have been.

"I am not sure what circumstances the patient was held in incarceration but it is difficult to understand a rectal temperature of 72 degrees ... while someone is incarcerated in jail," Mitchell's physician wrote.

"The cause of his hypothermia is not clear," the doctor continued. "It is possible he had a underlying medical condition resulting in hypothermia. I do not know if he could have been exposed to a cold environment. I do believe that hypothermia was the ultimate cause of his death."

The lawsuit nonetheless stated that Mitchell's death was "wrongful," and "the result of horrific, malicious abuse and mountains of deliberate indifference."

The jail has not publicly commented on the situation.


An Alabama Man Was Taken to Jail. Two Weeks Later, He Was Dead From Hypothermia.
Tony Mitchell's death was a "direct and proximate result" of jail officers' "deliberate indifference or malice, and of their ongoing denial of Tony's constitutional rights under a scheme that continued to operate after his death," his family's suit states.
https://reason.com/2023/02/14/an-al...two-weeks-later-he-was-dead-from-hypothermia/
Emma Camp (14 February 2023)

An Alabama man was taken into custody last month following a violent altercation with police. Two weeks later, he died from hypothermia, having seemingly been placed into the jail's freezer.

A lawsuit filed by the family of Anthony "Tony" Mitchell on Monday alleges that officers at a Walker County, Alabama, jail engaged in horrific abuse against the 33-year-old, eventually leading to his death.

"Tony's death of hypothermia was the direct and proximate result of these defendants' deliberate indifference or malice, and of their ongoing denial of Tony's constitutional rights under a scheme that continued to operate after his death through the issuance of false statements to family members and the media," the complaint alleges.

According to the complaint, on January 12, Mitchell's cousin called local police to request a welfare check after Mitchell, who had a history of mental health problems and drug addiction, began experiencing severe delusions. According to a social media post from police, Mitchell became violent, firing at least one shot at the officers before fleeing into a wooded area behind his home.

Mitchell was arrested and later charged with attempted murder. According to a local news station, officials noted that at a court appearance on the day of his arrest, Mitchell was "unable to sign" paperwork.

For the next two weeks, Mitchell would allegedly face an array of abuse while incarcerated in the Walker County Jail. According to the complaint, Mitchell was left completely naked during his two weeks in jail—apparently as part of the jail's "'suicide watch' protocol." Further, Mitchell was housed in an isolation cell in the jail's booking area. The lawsuit describes this as "the equivalent of a dog kennel": a concrete cell with no bedding and only a drain in the floor to be used as a toilet.

Further, the lawsuit states that Mitchell—who needed a set of false teeth to eat after losing all his teeth due to neglect and drug use—had his false teeth taken from him following a January 15 tasing incident, meaning the already malnourished Mitchell was unable to properly eat food.

"Tony continued to suffer from serious medical and psychiatric needs while incarcerated as a pretrial detainee at the jail," the lawsuit states. "These needs were obvious to every corrections officer and all jail personnel who came into contact with him."

On January 27, Mitchell's mistreatment seemed to take a turn for the worse. While it's difficult to know for sure what happened, the lawsuit states Mitchell was taken to a local hospital, where he registered an internal body temperature of 72 degrees Fahrenheit. The complaint notes that "the only way for Tony's body temperature to have 'started dropping' to 72 degrees in such a short period of time was for him to have been placed in a restraint chair in the jail kitchen's walk-in freezer or similar frigid environment and left there for hours."

While no videos have been released proving that Mitchell was placed in a freezer, Walker Country police have made multiple false statements about the incident. Soon after Mitchell's hospitalization, police claimed in a press release that "the inmate was alert and conscious when he left the facility and arrived at the hospital." However, surveillance video from inside the jail shows an unconscious and limp Mitchell being carried into the loading area of the jail. The lawsuit also alleges that one officer told Mitchell's cousin "that when deputies got Tony to the hospital, the doctor had asked Tony to sit up, and Tony had sat up, and that at this point, he had a massive heart attack." However, the doctor's notes indicate that Mitchell arrived unresponsive and that "there was never any purposeful movement or response to pain."

While it isn't precisely clear how Mitchell became hypothermic—though the lawsuit's assumption that he was subjected to a cold environment, like a freezer, is plausible—considerable abuse at the hands of Walker County police is obvious from the available surveillance footage. Instead of getting help to a man with severe mental health problems and substance addiction, police stripped him naked and left him in a bare concrete cell. And in their custody, he sustained the injury or illness that would later cause his death from hypothermia.

"Each of these corrections officers knows exactly what happened to Tony during that horrific night," the complaint writes. "Each of them was deliberately indifferent to his obvious serious medical needs. Each of them, at a minimum, failed to intervene in an act of horrific abuse committed by one or more of their fellow corrections officers."
 
Any social order that is founded on punishment is murderous at its core.

Although punishment has a place, you can't build a peaceful, prosperous society on the sandy foundation of punishment. If the police-worshiping Right refuses to listen, it will eventually be forced to make the choice between giving the kiss of betrayal in the Garden, versus obedience to God's order, which is not based on punishment, but on love. God is not a BDSM fetishist and he's not winking at your weird punishment fetish. Repent or perish.
 
White people finally protest police brutality

I thought [MENTION=3169]Anti Federalist[/MENTION] might appreciate this story. This happened in Walker County Alabama. (Not too far from me). A 33 year old meth addict froze to death in the Walker County jail. How that happened? I have no idea. His core body temperature was 72 degrees when he arrived at the hospital. Anyway one of the jail supervisors video taped him being carried out to a squad car before being transported to the hospital. Why they didn't call an ambulance? I have no idea. She leaked that to the press and the sheriff promptly fired her so she's filed a retaliation lawsuit. The victim's family has also filed a lawsuit.

But here's the beautiful part of this tragic story. An all white anti police brutality protest! At least from what I can see in this picture.

AA17Fgc6.img


Notice the "no justice no peace" and "say their names" posters ripped right from the BLM playbook. My biggest criticism of BLM is that it only concentrated on deaths of black citizens at the hands of white law enforcement. (There was a very weak sauce attempt by Al Sharpton to make the 5 black police officers beating a black man to death about race.)

Anyhow, yeah the man shouldn't have tried meth. But there's no excuse that I can think of why he wasn't kept in humane conditions. He got arrested after police did a "welfare check" on him. (Making sure he's alright). Maybe an addict should be taken to a drug treatment facility instead of a county jail?
 
I was very proud of a local chapter of the NAACP a few months ago in, I believe, Tennessee.

The kops were called to a disturbed white guy who was sitting on the side of a freeway.

When the guy didn't do the Simon Sez with the kops, they just set up a firing squad and sent him to see St. Peter.

The NAACP rallied for this guy and his family.

If it had been local to me, I would have joined in.

We are achieving equality through equal suffering.
 
I thought @Anti Federalist might appreciate this story. This happened in Walker County Alabama. (Not too far from me). A 33 year old meth addict froze to death in the Walker County jail. How that happened? I have no idea. His core body temperature was 72 degrees when he arrived at the hospital. Anyway one of the jail supervisors video taped him being carried out to a squad car before being transported to the hospital. Why they didn't call an ambulance? I have no idea. She leaked that to the press and the sheriff promptly fired her so she's filed a retaliation lawsuit. The victim's family has also filed a lawsuit.

But here's the beautiful part of this tragic story. An all white anti police brutality protest! At least from what I can see in this picture.

AA17Fgc6.img


Notice the "no justice no peace" and "say their names" posters ripped right from the BLM playbook. My biggest criticism of BLM is that it only concentrated on deaths of black citizens at the hands of white law enforcement. (There was a very weak sauce attempt by Al Sharpton to make the 5 black police officers beating a black man to death about race.)

Anyhow, yeah the man shouldn't have tried meth. But there's no excuse that I can think of why he wasn't kept in humane conditions. He got arrested after police did a "welfare check" on him. (Making sure he's alright). Maybe an addict should be taken to a drug treatment facility instead of a county jail?

There are so many undesirable habits that affect our physical and mental health. A new appointee in the Biden Administration states that obesity is an illness of the brain and has nothing to do with will power. Obesity is no different than a drug habit or alcoholism. Imagine if being more than 10% above ideal weight was illegal and rendered the person a criminal. What if sugar substances were declared illegal rendering every overweight person a criminal. Drug addiction would be as harmless as obesity if it were not illegal. My guess is that more money is spent treating obesity and the detrimental health consequences associated with it than paying for everything associated with the addict.

The fail here is that if police encounters are never beneficial, people should not be initiating contact with the police.
 
There are so many undesirable habits that affect our physical and mental health. A new appointee in the Biden Administration states that obesity is an illness of the brain and has nothing to do with will power. Obesity is no different than a drug habit or alcoholism. Imagine if being more than 10% above ideal weight was illegal and rendered the person a criminal. What if sugar substances were declared illegal rendering every overweight person a criminal. Drug addiction would be as harmless as obesity if it were not illegal. My guess is that more money is spent treating obesity and the detrimental health consequences associated with it than paying for everything associated with the addict.

The fail here is that if police encounters are never beneficial, people should not be initiating contact with the police.

It would be nice if every police officer was more like Andy Griffith and less like Barney Fife. Andy would talk down an angry Raife Hollister who was trying to shoot at him and Barney rather than going in guns blazing. (I wish I could find that clip but all I can find on YouTube are clips of Andy convincing Raife to take a vaccine by telling him he's going to die if he doesn't take it. I wonder why that video is getting promoted?) Otis, the town drunk, would check himself into the jail to sleep off his alcohol. Alas our police have been militarized. Urban warfare is the norm. Not sure how we roll that back. What do we put in place of what we have now?
 
If you have inmates dying of hypothermia in alabama in a county jail that jail should have been shut down immediately and the possible neglect investigated.
 
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