Two Inmates Die in Agony As Prison Staff Stands By

In the past few weeks we’ve seen two separate stories of prisoners who died alone in their cells, while their moans of pain and cries for help were ignored by prison staff. If this isn’t cruel and unusual punishment, it’s hard to see what would be.

At the Onondaga County Justice Center in Upstate New York, 21-year-old Chuniece Patterson died last year from a ruptured ectopic pregnancy. What is described by the local news station as “a blistering report” on the death has just been issued by the New York State Commission of Correction; it states: “Had Patterson received adequate and competent medical care, her death would have been prevented.”

Reporting in the Syracuse Post-Standard, John O’Brien described the young woman’s final hours.

Chuniece Patterson was pregnant and complaining of abdominal pain in her cell at the Justice Center jail in Syracuse. Fourteen hours later, she was dead.

The jail’s records of Patterson’s medical care give no indication that anyone examined her abdomen. No pelvic exam. No ultrasound. Any of them would’ve shown she had an ectopic pregnancy in her fallopian tube and would’ve probably indicated that it had ruptured, according to a doctor. Surgery could’ve saved her life, he said.

The records of Patterson’s two-day stay at the Justice Center in November describe a night of torment, with Patterson screaming and rolling on the cement floor of her cell for most of those 14 hours. Patterson leaned against her cell toilet, scooping water out with a cup and splashing it onto her face, a deputy reported.

On the night before she died, Patterson had severe abdominal pain and vomiting; a nurse checked her three times but took no action. Early the next morning, the paper reports, a guard was told that Patterson “had been moaning overnight and complaining that she was having trouble breathing.” Making her rounds, the guard “”saw Patterson on the floor four times between 7 a.m. and 7:45 a.m.,” but again took no action. The Post-Standard story describes the report made by the guard, Deputy Diane Stech, of her repeated visits to the dying woman’s cell:

The first time, Patterson obeyed Stech’s order to get up, the report said. Fifteen minutes later, Patterson was on the floor again, leaning on the toilet and splashing water in her face, Stech wrote. The deputy told her to stop and Patterson rolled onto the floor, the report said.

At 7:30 a.m., Stech found Patterson on the floor again. The deputy went into the cell, saw the plastic cup in the toilet and removed it, the report said. “I looked down at inmate Patterson, again told inmate to get off the floor,” Stech wrote. “It looked as if the inmate looked at me. I continued with my tour.”

Inmate Rhonda Dunn said she saw Patterson through her cell window. Patterson was lying on the floor, Dunn said. She’d heard Patterson moaning all night, and watched her writhing in pain, Dunn said. “I was like, ‘Miss Diane, get over there!’” Dunn said she told Stech.

On her last visit to Patterson’s cell, Stech found her unresponsive, the report said. Stech called in other deputies and medical workers, who tried to revive her, the records show.

At 8:30, Chuniece Patterson was pronounced dead at a local hospital. Patterson had been arrested on a bench warrant after missing a court appearance, on charges that involved stealing beeer and smashing the counter in a convenience store. She had not been convicted of the crime. The jail where she died had been cited by the U.S. Justice Department in the 1990s for “grossly inadequate” medical care. And 14 years ago, another inmate died of a ruptured ectopic pregnancy there, after three nurses and a doctor “repeatedly failed to monitor [her] worsening condition,” according to the Commission of Correction

Just a week after the state of New York issued its report on the death of Chuniece Patterson, the Associated Press put out a story on the death of an inmate last fall at Pekin Federal Prison in Illinois. The case was recently investigated by the FBI, and the U.S. Justice Department is now deciding whether the prisoner’s civil rights were violated.

For days before he died from internal bleeding in a federal prison, Adam Montoya pleaded with guards to be taken to a doctor, pressing a panic button in his cell over and over to summon help that never came.

An autopsy concluded that the 36-year-old inmate suffered from no fewer than three serious illnesses — cancer, hepatitis and HIV. The cancer ultimately killed him, causing his spleen to burst. Montoya bled to death internally.

But the coroner and a pathologist were more stunned by another finding: The only medication in his system was a trace of over-the-counter pain reliever.

That means Montoya, imprisoned for a passing counterfeit checks, had been given nothing to ease the excruciating pain that no doubt wracked his body for days or weeks before death…

The coroner said guards should have been aware that something was seriously wrong with the inmate. And outside experts agree that the symptoms of cancer and hepatitis would have been hard to miss: dramatic weight loss, a swollen abdomen, yellow eyes.

During Montoya’s final days, he “consistently made requests to the prison for medical attention, and they wouldn’t give it to him,” said his father, Juan Montoya, who described how his son repeatedly punched the panic button. Three inmates corroborated that account in interviews with The Associated Press.

The younger Montoya was taken to the prison clinic one day for “maybe five, 10 minutes,” his father said. “And they gave him Tylenol, and that was it. He suffered a lot.”…

The last time a staff member visited Montoya, about 10 p.m. on Nov. 12, he reported having trouble breathing and complained that he could no longer feel his fingers, Rader said in the e-mail interview. The staff member told Montoya that he would try to get help the next day.

Around 6:30 a.m., prison officials found Montoya’s body in his cell.

Montoya, who was serving a two-year sentence for counterfeiting checks and credit cards, was at Pekin for only a few weeks before he died. “The inmates around him say he spent much of that time pleading for help from his cell,” according to the AP. The prisoner in the next cell said prison staff told Montoya he had the flu. “That man begged these people for nine days locked behind these doors,” he wrote in a letter to his mother following Montoya’s death.

Apparently, the conventional wisdom among prison staff is that a certain percentage of inmates who claim to be physically or mentally ill are actually faking it, or “malingering,” in order to get some kind of special treatment. It’s still hard to believe that guards would ignore such persistent cries of agony–except in a society like ours, where prisoners are no longer viewed as human beings.

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Jean Casella and James Ridgeway

James Ridgeway (1936-2021) was the founder and co-director of Solitary Watch. An investigative journalist for over 60 years, he served as Washington Correspondent for the Village Voice and Mother Jones, reporting domestically on subjects ranging from electoral politics to corporate malfeasance to the rise of the racist far-right, and abroad from Central America, Northern Ireland, Eastern Europe, Haiti, and the former Yugoslavia. Earlier, he wrote for The New Republic and Ramparts, and his work appeared in dozens of other publications. He was the co-director of two films and author of 20 books, including a forthcoming posthumous edition of his groundbreaking 1991 work on the far right, Blood in the Face. Jean Casella is the director of Solitary Watch. She has also published work in The Guardian, The Nation, and Mother Jones, and is co-editor of the book Hell Is a Very Small Place: Voices from Solitary Confinement. She has received a Soros Justice Media Fellowship and an Alicia Patterson Fellowship. She tweets @solitarywatch.

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8 comments

  • Why arent these individuals employed as officers and paid by the state held accountable? I am sure if the INDIVIDUALS had to start answering for their neglect, there would be a lot less (apparent to me and to anyone who would be so inclined to have a shread of humanity for the imprisoned)”hate crime”mentality by those DOC employees.

  • Thanks for this timely intervention. We had a similar response to the two deaths: http://www.womeninandbeyond.org/?p=672

  • Phoebe Vanderhorst

    It is NOT hard to believe that the guards did nothing. This is a common practice, from county jails where Chuniece Patterson died, to state and federal prisons. Many prisoners die every year. You can be laying on the floor dying and a guard will come in the cell, kick you, call you a bitch, and leave you to die. What happened to Patterson and Montoya was egregious, heinous, and all too common.

  • Alan

    Ironically one of the six men in the documentary film Irish Escape bears my mother’s maiden name. My own great grandfather whose given name I am unsure of also arrived around the same time as this vessel. How weird is that.
    I also love the fact that the prison they were held in was called the establishment. LOL
    Needless to say I loved this short documentary film.

  • As a guest of FDC Seatac in 2008, I too witnessed the death of a fellow inmate. She came in with diabetes and some complications and a few months later, left dead on an EMS gurney. Less than adequate medical care brought unnecessary pain and suffering on this poor woman. Serving time can be a death sentence.

  • Amanda

    What happens now in New York? Will anyone be held responsible for the death and gross medical neglect?

  • Alan

    To get an idea of how long we have known about the poor state of health care in prison check this quote out:

    “Remember this is a voice from the tomb. For is this not a living tomb? In the tomb it is only a man’s body that is good for worms, but in this living tomb the canker worm of care enters the very soul..” — James Wilson writing to journalist John Devoy from Fremantle Prison in Western Australia, 1873, the most remote and notorious jail in the British Empire.

    The PBS documentary film “Irish Escape” revisits the story of what has been called the most outrageous escape story in the history of the high seas. In 1876, after 8 years of incarceration in Western Australia, 6 Irish political prisoners escaped on board the American whaler Catalpa.

    http://www.pbs.org/wnet/secrets/episodes/irish-escape/128/

  • Alan

    The last line says it all, “It’s still hard to believe that guards would ignore such persistent cries of agony–except in a society like ours, where prisoners are no longer viewed as human beings.”

    Maybe we should keep a running total on these deaths and line up their empty shoes on the mall in DC to draw attention to their numbers. A news cast could flash pictures of the inmates who have died. But then again as Oscar Wilde wrote;

    “Society takes upon itself the right to inflict appalling punishment on the individual, but it also has the supreme vice of shallowness, and fails to realize what it has done….It is really ashamed of its own actions, and shuns those whom it has punished, as people shun a creditor whose debt they cannot pay, or one on whom they have inflicted an irreparable, an irremediable wrong.”

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