Eyal Press, Madness: In Florida prisons, mentally ill inmates have been tortured, driven to suicide, and killed by guards. The New Yorker, 2 May 2016. Eyal Press won the “June [2016] Sidney Award for exposing horrific abuses of mentally ill prisoners in the Transitional Care Unit of the Dade Correctional Institution (DCI) in Florida for the New Yorker. Press’ reporting showed that TCU inmates were routinely subjected to physical and sexual abuse at the hands of prison guards. Several prisoners were scalded with steaming water from a hose. One such treatment proved fatal, burning the inmate so badly that the skin peeled off his corpse at the slightest touch. Psychiatrists and technicians who tried to report the abuses also faced retaliation from the guards. After questioning restrictive policies, one psychiatric technician was repeatedly abandoned by guards to face dangerous patients alone. ‘The result was pervasive, lethal abuse: inmates beaten, tortured and killed, sometimes directly in front of health care professionals, who then pretended they saw nothing,’ said Press in an interview for Hillman’s Backstory feature. ‘Much of what takes place in jails and prisons is veiled from scrutiny, which makes abuse and corruption more likely.'”
May 2, 2016
Madness: In Florida prisons, mentally ill inmates have been tortured, driven to suicide, and killed by guards
May 2, 2016 Filed Under: Civil Rights, Criminal Justice, Ethics, Health Care/Medical, Prisons/Jails, Sexual Abuse/Assault/Harassment Tagged With: american medical association, dade correctional institution's transitional care unit (florida), darren rainey, disability rights (florida), dr. cristina perez, estelle v. gamble (1976 supreme court case), florida department of corrections, george mallinckrodt, glenn morris, glore psychiatric museum (missouri), harold hempstead, harriet krzyhowski, jamie fellner (human rights watch), jerry cummings, julie brown (of the miami herald), kenneth appelbaum (massachusetts department of corrections), michel foucault (madness and civilization), national commission on correctional health care, o'connor v. donaldson (1975 supreme court case), solitary confinement, wexford health services