Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

County to investigat­e medical care at its 2 jails

Audit to focus on contractor

- JACOB CARPENTER

Milwaukee County auditors have started a wide-ranging investigat­ion into medical care at the county’s two jails, where four people have died in recent months and a court-appointed monitor found numerous problems related to inmate treatment.

Jerry Heer, director of audits for the Milwaukee County Office of the Comptrolle­r, confirmed this week that auditors plan to investigat­e whether Armor Correction­al Health Services is meeting contract requiremen­ts and standards of medical care. Armor, a Miami-based for-profit company, has contracted with the county since 2013 to provide medical care at the Milwaukee County Jail and the House of Correction.

Theodore Lipscomb Sr., chairman of the Milwaukee County Board of Supervisor­s, requested the audit in early November, days after a Milwaukee Journal Sentinel article detailed Armor’s staffing and performanc­e issues amid the rash of deaths at the Milwaukee County Jail. Comptrolle­r Scott Manske agreed one day later to start the audit,

Heer said.

“The supervisor wants to have as much informatio­n as available regarding how Armor has been conducting themselves, to determine if they’ve been doing their job or not,” said Brian Rothgery, a spokesman for the Milwaukee County Board of Supervisor­s.

The Milwaukee County Jail is run by Sheriff David A. Clarke Jr. and houses about 950 inmates per day. The House of Correction is managed by county officials and holds about 1,250 inmates.

All four deaths at Clarke’s jail remain under investigat­ion and as a result, detectives and the medical examiner’s office have released few details about them. But some informatio­n has emerged through public records in three of the cases.

The April death of Terrill Thomas, 38, was determined to be caused by profound dehydratio­n, and the medical examiner’s office deemed the manner of death as “homicide.” The July death of a newborn came after an inmate gave birth in her cell without any jail or medical staff noticing. And the August death of Kristina Fiebrink, 38, came after medical staff failed to put her on preventati­ve detoxifica­tion protocol — she was a known heroin addict with several recent jail stints — or properly assess her following her arrest.

The causes of death for the newborn and Fiebrink have not been released. No informatio­n has been disclosed following the October death of 29-year-old Michael Madden. Investigat­ors haven’t said whether the actions or inaction of jail and medical staff contribute­d to any of the deaths.

At the same time, Armor has failed to staff the two jails with full-time employees — about one-third of all positions are vacant — and medical staff have let some requests for medical care languish for weeks, a courtappoi­nted monitor found.

The monitor, physician Robert Shansky, first documented the problems in May. He then wrote in November that the issues

hadn’t been resolved.

Shansky tours the jails twice a year and authors reports as part of a 2001 legal settlement known as the “Christense­n decree,” which outlines standards of care at Milwaukee’s two jails. In the 15 years since the settlement was reached, Shansky has never found the county and Sheriff’s Office to be in full compliance.

“Given that all these years after Christense­n, that the problems still exist, it’s appropriat­e to have another body like us come in and take a look at things,” said Heer, the audit director.

Clarke, who has been largely silent about the four deaths, declined to comment about the audit through a spokeswoma­n.

But Brian Peterson, Milwaukee County chief medical examiner, told the Journal Sentinel this week that the sheriff called him on Oct. 28 and “verbally pummeled” and “threatened” him over informatio­n that Peterson’s office made public regarding the deaths of two inmates at the jail earlier this year. Peterson said his office followed appropriat­e protocol in the cases cited by the sheriff.

In a Nov. 21 court filing related to the 2001 legal settlement, a lawyer for the Sheriff’s Office wrote that it is “false” to suggest dangerous conditions exist at the Milwaukee County Jail. The lawyer, Charles Bohl, also wrote that any connection­s between the inmate

deaths and jail or medical staff “represent conjecture at this point.”

Armor officials declined to answer a series of written questions regarding the audit and the company’s performanc­e at the jails. In a statement, the company said its “sole focus is consistent delivery of quality patient care. Armor is proud of its dedicated employees and its standard of excellence in its delivery of service to patients.”

County officials intend to fully cooperate with the audit, said Melissa Baldauff, spokeswoma­n for Milwaukee County Executive Chris Abele. Baldauff has said House of Correction staff plan to work on correcting issues raised by Shansky, while noting his report often did not specify whether the problems were found at the House of Correction, the Milwaukee County Jail, or both facilities.

Heer said Armor and jail officials haven’t been notified yet of the impending review because auditors are still crafting an investigat­ion plan. Heer expects to hire a health care consultant to provide expertise on proper medical care and standards. Auditors will not conduct independen­t investigat­ion s into the inmate deaths, but will likely review medical records and other documents related to them, Heer said.

There is no timetable for the completion of the audit. The findings will be presented to Milwaukee County

supervisor­s.

In the meantime, members of a Milwaukee County Board of Supervisor­s safety subcommitt­ee have scheduled a Dec. 15 meeting to question sheriff’s officials about the deaths. The meeting is open to the

public, but the discussion about the deaths will be behind closed doors because at least some of the inmates’ families are expected to sue the Milwaukee County Sheriff’s Office.

“We do have some oversight role, so it just seems to

me appropriat­e that we ought to get a handle on what’s happening,” Supervisor Anthony Staskunas said.

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