The Guardian (USA)

Man who died in Alabama prison was reportedly returned to family without organs

- Maya Yang

A man who died in the custody of Alabama’s correction­s department was reportedly returned to his family without his organs, including his brain.

The news, which broke earlier this week, is the second recent case involving allegation­s of missing body parts from people in Alabama prisons. The US prison system has been widely criticized for its poor treatment of inmates.

Charles Edward Singleton, 74, who was housed at the state’s Hamilton Aged and Infirmed custody facility, died in November 2021, ABC 33/40 TV in Birmingham reported. Following Singleton’s death, the pathology department at the University of Alabama performed an autopsy on his body, according to a family member who spoke to the news station.

Singleton’s family requested his body be sent to a funeral home in Pell City, about two hours away. However, ABC 33/40 reported the funeral home’s director informed Singleton’s family that “it would be difficult to prepare his body for viewing” due to its “noticeable state of decomposit­ion,” adding that there was “advanced skin slippage”.

Singleton’s family was informed that there were no organs in his body and that his brain had been removed, according to court filings reviewed by ABC 33/40. His family was also informed that organs are usually placed in a bag and put back inside bodies following autopsies.

Singleton’s family requested the

University of Alabama return his organs but said they never received them, per the court filings.

In a statement to ABC 33/40, the University of Alabama said: “We do not comment on pending litigation. We only conduct autopsies with consent or authorizat­ion and follow standard procedures equitably for anyone consented to or authorized for an autopsy. The autopsy practice is accredited by the College of American Pathologis­ts and staffed by credential­ed physicians who are certified by the American Board of Pathology.

“In an autopsy, organs and tissues are removed to best determine the cause of death. Autopsy consent includes consent for final dispositio­n of the organs and tissues; unless specifical­ly requested, organs are not returned to the body.”

It added: “UAB is among providers that – consistent with Alabama law – conduct autopsies of incarcerat­ed persons at the direction of the state of Alabama. A panel of medical ethicists reviewed and endorsed our protocols regarding autopsies conducted for incarcerat­ed persons.”

In a statement to the Guardian, Alabama’s correction­s department said: “The ADOC does not comment on pending litigation. Further, the ADOC does not authorize or perform autopsies. Once an inmate dies, the body is transporte­d to the Alabama Department of Forensic Sciences or UAB for autopsy, depending on several factors, including but not limited to region and whether the death is unlawful, suspicious, or natural.”

In another similar case, the family of 43-year-old Brandon Clay Dotson, who was incarcerat­ed and died in prison last November, have been struggling to determine the whereabout­s of his heart.

Dotson’s mother and sister spent five days trying to claim his body after his death. When he was finally returned to them, they reported “bruising on the back of [his] neck and excessive swelling across his head”, according to Fox

News.

A lawsuit filed by Dotson’s family and reviewed by Fox News said they hired their own pathologis­t to conduct an autopsy, as they were unsure of how Dotson died and never received a death certificat­e.

The lawsuit alleges Dotson’s heart was missing from his chest cavity. It added that it is “reasonable for plaintiff to believe that Dotson’s heart was removed for an improper purpose – namely, to be sent to UAB for the purpose of providing UABSOM [University of Alabama Heersink School of Medicine] students with a laboratory specimen to experiment on or study”.

A university spokespers­on told Fox News that “UAB did not perform this autopsy and has not been involved in this matter”.

Neverthele­ss, Dotson’s family have asked for a list of all organs that have been removed or retained from people who were incarcerat­ed and died in the state’s correction­s facilities since 2013.

“This document is critical to fulfill the third measure sought in the motion for TRO [temporary restrainin­g order]: freezing the practice of improperly and potentiall­y illegally retaining organs from autopsies without providing notice or seeking consent from the family members of the deceased,” the lawsuit said.

In a statement on the Dotson case, Alabama’s correction­s department told the Guardian; “There was an evidentiar­y hearing in the Dotson case last week. The ADOC is currently awaiting the court’s decision following that presentati­on of evidence.”

 ?? A prison in Alabama. Photograph: Brynn Anderson/AP ??
A prison in Alabama. Photograph: Brynn Anderson/AP

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