The Denver Post

Two mental health patients drown inside flooded van

- By Meg Kinnard

COLUMBIA, S.C.» As South Carolina rivers overflowed from Florence’s torrential rain, deputies taking two women to a mental health facility drove into floodwater­s that swamped their van and trapped the women inside, officials said Wednesday.

The two deputies worked to free the women, who were being transporte­d Tuesday night as part of a court order, but were not able to save them from the back of the van, Horry County Sheriff Phillip Thompson told reporters.

“I’m not sure if it was the way the van was positioned, against a guardrail, or if it was pressure from the water, but unfortunat­ely they were not able to get the van doors open and get the la dies out,” Thompson said.

Rescue crews needed about 45 minutes to find the van, which was under water at that point, and plucked the Horry County deputies from the roof, the sheriff said. Officials said the van was in Marion County near the Little Pee Dee River, one of the bodies of water state officials are watching closely after Florence.

Because of darkness, responders decided that trying to retrieve the women’s bodies from the van Tuesday night wasn’t safe. That effort resumed Wednesday morning, and Thompson said a specialize­d crew was being flown in from Charleston to assist. At nearly 7 p.m. Wednesday, State Law Enforcemen­t Division spokesman Thom Berry confirmed that the bodies had been recovered.

Thompson identified the women as Windy Newton, 45, and Nicolette Green, 43. Earlier on Wednesday, Marion County Coroner Jerry Richardson had identified Newton with a different last name.

Thompson told reporters that deputies appeared to have driven around a barrier blocking the road, but the investigat­ion is ongoing.

“It hasn’t been confirmed to me that they did, but here’s my question: There’s barriers there. It could be assumed that he did,” Thompson said Wednesday.

Justin Bamberg, a state lawmaker and lawyer who has represente­d the families of several people injured or killed by law enforcemen­t officers, said he is perplexed by the decision to transport anyone in such uncertain weather conditions.

“If that road is in an area where it is a flood risk, and waters were rising, why were they driving on that road anyway?” Bamberg said. “People need to know exactly how it happened. It makes it seem like someone took a very unnecessar­y risk in creating the problem in the first place.”

The incident has spawned investigat­ions by the State Law Enforcemen­t Division and Highway Patrol. Thompson said he has also begun an internal investigat­ion and put the deputies involved — Joshua Bishop and Stephen Flood — on administra­tive leave.

A woman who answered the phone at a number listed for Flood told a reporter that he didn’t want to talk to anyone. There was no an swer at a number listed for Bishop.

Thompson said he did not think the women were in restraints in the back of the van, noting that restraints are used for combative patients “and I understand they were not.”

The women had been involuntar­ily committed by a physician, authoritie­s said.

Under South Carolina state law, people who have been certified by a physician as posing an imminent risk of harm to themselves by virtue of mental illness and are the subject of an involuntar­y emergency admission must be transporte­d by law enforcemen­t to whichever designated hospital has agreed to admit them, according to officials with the state’s Department of Mental Health.

According to statute, the documents authorizin­g the admission require “a law enforcemen­t officer, preferably in civilian clothes and preferably with crisis interventi­on training, to take into custody and transport the person to the hospital designated by the certificat­ion.”

The sheriff said his agency acts as a courier in such situations, to follow a judge’s wishes.

Neither woman had an arrest record in South Carolina, according to documents obtained from state police. Their names also yielded no records in the Horry County jail and court index systems.

Newton posted on her Facebook page that she previously had been hospitaliz­ed for mental illness. She posted multiple times about her struggles.

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