Texarkana Gazette

Mental issues add to case’s difficulty

Inmate charged in jailer’s death has been ruled incompeten­t, reportedly isn’t receiving treatment

- By Lynn LaRowe

The case of an Arkansas prison inmate accused of killing a Miller County correction­al officer nearly two years ago continues to present unique challenges.

Tramell Mackenzie Hunter,

28, is charged with capital murder in the Dec. 18, 2016, death of Correction­al Officer

Lisa Mauldin, who died after allegedly being attacked by Hunter in the kitchen of the Miller County jail. Hunter is also charged with battery of a peace officer for alleged- ly causing serious injury to Correction­al Officer Damaris Allen shortly after inflicting the injuries to Mauldin that ended her life.

Hunter has been found incompeten­t because of issues concerning his mental health. When a defendant accused of a seri-

ous crime is deemed unfit to proceed, he or she is typically sent to the state hospital for treatment in hopes that competency can be restored and the case against them move toward a dispositio­n.

But Hunter’s case is different because of his simultaneo­us status as a Miller County capital murder defendant and as an inmate with the Arkansas Department of Correction serving time for 2011 Pulaski County conviction­s for aggravated robbery and domestic battery.

At the time of the attacks on Mauldin and Allen, Hunter was assigned to the Miller County jail as part of the Arkansas Department of Correction 309 program, which allows certain offenders to serve their sentences in county jails in need of cheap labor. He was serving a 15-year term at the time of the attacks on Mauldin and Allen. Hunter shot his uncle and his mother and stole his mother’s car in 2010.

In February, a hearing was conducted before Circuit Judge Kirk Johnson to address the unusual issues Hunter’s case presents. Arkansas State Hospital Program Coordinato­r for Forensic Services Billy Burris testified at the hearing that he was in contact with the mental health program coordinato­r at Arkansas Department of Correction and had arranged for state hospital staff to visit Hunter monthly to assess his need for medication­s and other treatments. Burris said that because the state hospital is not a jail or prison, housing Hunter there could create a danger to staff.

Burris said that if hurdles to treatment were identified as the state hospital attempted to treat Hunter in prison, the court would be quickly informed so any problems could be addressed. Johnson specifical­ly asked Burris to immediatel­y notify the court if barriers to treating Hunter at ADC’s Varner Unit arose. In February, Johnson scheduled Hunter’s case for an Oct. 23 status hearing in hopes that roughly eight months of mental health treatment might bring resolution to the issue of Hunter’s competency. An Oct. 10 letter sent to the judge from a state hospital psychiatri­st appears to indicate that Hunter hasn’t received any treatment since the February hearing and that his mental state has declined as a result.

“It appears that Mr. Hunter’s period of isolation, in the absence of psychiatri­c treatment, has resulted in a worsening of symptoms,” the letter states. “He has since solidified his delusional beliefs and discusses them seamlessly.”

The letter further implies that Hunter has not been receiving any type of medical therapy for his psychiatri­c problems.

“Mr. Hunter mentioned he would be willing to try medication; although, he did not believe medication would help because he believed these experience­s to be real,” the letter states. “His thought process is substantia­lly impaired by a delusional belief system, which is becoming more prominent in the absence of treatment.”

The psychiatri­st who penned the letter to Johnson,

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HUNTER

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