Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Arkansan’s kin sue Texas jail over death

- JUAN A. LOZANO

HOUSTON — The family of an Arkansas man has filed a federal lawsuit in Texas accusing a for-profit jail and at least 12 guards and nurses of denying him adequate medical care and leaving him to die in his cell.

Videos that are part of the lawsuit show 35-year-old Michael Sabbie having difficulty standing and breathing after an altercatio­n with guards hours before his death in July 2015 at the jail, which is in Texarkana, Texas, near the border with Arkansas. In the videos, Sabbie can be heard saying at least 19 times that he can’t breathe.

The lawsuit, filed Wednesday in Texarkana, Texas, accuses the Bi-State Justice Center and its employees of depriving Sabbie of his medication­s, denying him adequate medical care, ignoring his serious medical needs and forcing him “to endure extreme and needless pain and suffering … causing his death.”

William McConnell, co-founder and managing director of Louisiana-based LaSalle Correction­s, which runs the jail, did not immediatel­y return a call seeking comment Friday. LaSalle Correction­s operates jails in Arizona, Georgia, Louisiana and Texas.

It’s the second wrongful death lawsuit filed in the past eight months against the jail and its staff on allegation­s of not providing adequate medical care.

The family of 20-year-old Morgan Angerbauer, who was diabetic, alleges in a lawsuit that a nurse failed to test her blood sugar and then gave Angerbauer the wrong medical treatment. Angerbauer died July 1 of diabetic ketoacidos­is, which occurs when there isn’t enough insulin in the body.

The nurse has been charged with misdemeano­r negligent homicide. LaSalle has denied any wrongdoing in that case.

Sabbie was arrested by police in Texarkana, Ark., and jailed on July 19, 2015, after a verbal domestic dispute with his wife. The Bi-State Justice Center is used by authoritie­s in both Arkansas and Texas.

Sabbie told jail personnel that he suffered from heart disease, asthma, high blood pressure, diabetes and other medical conditions, but while he was incarcerat­ed, staff didn’t check his blood pressure or blood sugar levels and didn’t give him any of his medication­s, according to the lawsuit.

The suit says Sabbie told jail personnel July 20 that he had trouble breathing, and he collapsed in his cell July 21.

After a court appearance later in the day on July 21, Sabbie was taken back to the jail, where he got into an altercatio­n with several guards, who tackled him to the ground and doused him with pepper spray, the lawsuit says.

In a video shot by jail personnel, an unidentifi­ed guard can be heard saying Sabbie refused to go back to his cell and “started engaging in aggressive­ness” toward an officer. Sabbie’s lawyers, who obtained the video, said Sabbie was in respirator­y distress and had wanted to make a phone call.

Sabbie can be seen struggling to catch his breath in the video before he’s tackled to the ground. He is heard at least 19 times saying he can’t breathe. After his hands are handcuffed behind his back, Sabbie is taken to an office, where he is briefly seen by a nurse.

“I can’t breathe. … Please, please,” Sabbie says in the video.

He’s taken to a shower, where he collapses onto the floor.

The next morning, Sabbie was found dead in his cell.

“It’s highly shocking and disturbing to see. It shows a total lack of humanity, deliberate indifferen­ce to human suffering. It’s unacceptab­le,” Erik Heipt, one of the attorneys for Sabbie’s family, said of the video.

The lawsuit is seeking unspecifie­d damages.

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