Milwaukee jail death shines harsh light on divisive sheriff
MILWAUKEE — A lengthy inquest into the dehydration death of a Milwaukee inmate has raised troubling questions about how Sheriff David Clarke manages the county jail, just as the White House is said to be considering the tough-talking lawman for a job.
Seven jail staffers could face criminal charges after the Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office outlined a case for a jury that suggested disobedient inmates were routinely deprived of water as punishment and pleas for help were ignored.
Clarke wasn’t among the seven staffers, including two supervisors, whom the jury recommended should be charged. Prosecutors say he wasn’t directly involved in the events that led to the death last year of 38-yearold Terrill Thomas, who was deprived of water for seven days. But the death happened under the leadership of the brash, cowboy hat-wearing sheriff, which his critics say is sufficient cause for his removal from office.
“I think there is a counterproductive and negative culture that has been established at that jail,” said Supreme Moore Omokunde, a Milwaukee county supervisor who called on Clarke to resign in December. “The creation of that culture starts at the top with Sheriff Clarke.”
Wisconsin’s Republican governor, Scott Walker, issued a less than wholehearted defense of Clarke last week, saying that although he could remove him from office, he would leave it to voters to decide.
A spokesman said Clarke declined to comment. The sheriff has said little about Thomas’ death, other than to highlight what landed him in jail: Allegedly shooting a man in front of his parents’ house and later firing a gun inside a casino.
Clarke said in a statement posted to the sheriff ’s office Facebook page Monday that he respects the legal process but would say nothing else.
Although the jury recommended charges, it will be up to prosecutors to decide who gets charged and for what.
The unwanted attention comes as Clarke is reported to be in line for a position with the Department of Homeland Security. Politico, relying on unnamed sources it said were familiar with President Donald Trump’s administration’s planning, reported Friday that Clarke was up for the job of assistant secretary in the Office of Partnership and Engagement, which coordinates outreach to state, local and tribal law enforcement.
Clarke has made himself a darling of the political right through his provocative social media presence, his staunch support for Trump’s crackdown on illegal immigration and his support for patrolling of Muslim neighborhoods.
The Council on American-Islamic Relations and the Milwaukee-based immigrant-advocacy group Voces de la Frontera both were quick to decry Clarke’s rumored appointment to a federal leadership post.