ACLU Investigation Reveals Grossly Inadequate Conditions On Federal Death Row (10/15/2008)
Letter To Bureau Of Prisons Director Demands Substantial Improvements
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: (212) 549-2666; media@aclu.org
TERRE HAUTE, IN – Existing conditions on federal death row are grossly
inadequate, fail to meet constitutional standards and jeopardize the health and
safety of the men who live there, according to an American Civil Liberties Union
investigation.
A letter sent today by the ACLU to Harley Lappin, director of the Federal
Bureau of Prisons, reveals that prisoners living in the Special Confinement Unit
(SCU) of the United States Penitentiary in Terre Haute – home to the more than
50 men living on federal death row – are denied access to basic medical care,
basic mental health care services, timely and adequate dental care and are
subjected to incessant noise that causes sleep deprivation and psychological and
physiological stress.
"Our findings should be a clear wake up call for federal prison officials and
should prompt them to do whatever is necessary to ensure that they are
fulfilling their constitutional obligations to provide adequate levels of care,"
said Gabriel B. Eber, attorney with the ACLU's National Prison Project, who
wrote the letter to Lappin after spending the past year investigating the SCU by
interviewing prisoners and reviewing hundreds of pages of prison records. "The
Constitution prohibits deliberate indifference to the serious medical needs of
prisoners, including those sentenced to die."
According to the ACLU's letter, prison officials do not promptly respond to
medical emergencies, access to acute health care is woefully deficient,
prisoners who need medicine face substantial obstacles getting prescriptions
filled and signs of potentially serious medical conditions are consistently
ignored.
Earlier this year, for example, a prisoner suffering from a cardiac emergency
spent more than 45 minutes pressing the emergency call button in his cell before
receiving any kind of a response. It took three additional hours for a physician
to arrive and only then was the prisoner transported to the emergency room where
he received the medical care he needed. Upon return from the hospital, however,
it was five days before the prisoner received his first dose of the medication
prescribed by the hospital cardiologist.
"The failure of prison officials to adequately respond to the medical
emergencies of prisoners, and to ensure proper access to critical medications,
is inexplicable and could well result in prisoner deaths," said Eber.
Prisoners are also not adequately evaluated for mental illnesses, according
to the ACLU's letter, and those who are diagnosed with mental illnesses are not
sufficiently treated. In fact, prisoners housed in the SCU say their regimens of
psychotropic medications were discontinued by prison officials upon their
arrival in the SCU. One prisoner went so far as to volunteer for execution last
year, citing the denial by prison officials of any mental health treatment as a
significant factor in his doing so.
Dental care for prisoners in the SCU is grossly and dangerously deficient as
well. Prisoners are regularly forced to wait for months on end in considerable
pain while their requests for care are routinely ignored. Care is so poor that
some prisoners have chosen to have all of their teeth extracted rather than
suffer any further.
Prisoners are also forced to endure a constant bombardment of incessant noise
at all hours of the day and night. According to the ACLU's letter, prisoners are
subjected to constant banging and screaming from other parts of the institution.
They are also subjected to the sounding of several deafening fire alarms each
week that last as long as 90 minutes, include flashing strobe lights, and cause
significant psychological distress.
"The fact that prisoners are asking to be executed as a means of escaping the
horrendous conditions they are forced to contend with on a daily basis is a
testament to just how urgently changes are needed," said Eber. "That kind of
reality is unworthy of a society that cherishes justice and fairness."
A copy of the ACLU's letter to Lappin can be found online at: www.aclu.org/prison/conditions/37148lgl20081015.html
Additional information about the ACLU's National Prison Project can be found
online at: www.aclu.org/prison/index.html
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