The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Inmate’s suicide shows need for reforms, advocates say

- By Ryan Tarinelli

ALBANY, N.Y. >> The final two months of Cachin Anderson’s life in New York’s prison system were filled with warnings he was a man in crisis.

He climbed on a sink and dove headfirst at the floor, saying he “wanted to end it and go home.” He urinated on guards. He hurled a can at one correction­s officer and punched another in the face, knocking him out.

That behavior landed himin solitary confinemen­t, a setting experts say is often unsuitable for people who are mentally ill or trying to hurt themselves. And there, Anderson killed himself on June 28, 2017, a death a state oversight board later said could have been prevented.

Prisoner advocates say Anderson’s death and others illustrate how New York’s prison system fails to ensure the safety of inmates who might

hurt themselves if left alone in a cell.

New York state prison inmates in solitary confinemen­t or long-term “keeplock” units, in which inmates are isolated, were over five times more likely to kill themselves than prisoners in general confinemen­t, according to a report from the Department of Correction­s and Community Supervisio­n.

The report said that of the 130 inmate suicides from 2004 to 2013 in New York prisons, 30 were by prisoners in solitary or isolated housing, or a special treatment program.

New York has tried to curtail the use of solitary confinemen­t. Earlier this year, Gov. Andrew Cuomo and legislativ­e leaders announced a plan to restrict the isolation practice further by capping solitary confinemen­t time to 30 days.

The state prison system has set out procedures designed to prevent suicides, too.

Correction officers watching over solitary confinemen­t are required to make rounds every 30 minutes on an irregular basis.

Prisoners are also supposed to undergo a suicide prevention screening and a mental health assessment when they enter solitary confinemen­t. During the screening process, prisoners found to be at an imminent suicide risk are put in the Residentia­l Crisis Treatment Program, a separate unit inside the prison where correction officers make their rounds every 15 minutes, and each inmate is monitored under video, according to the Office of Mental Health.

Inmates in the program also have a private daily session with a mental health clinician. The program is used to find out which inmates need to be moved to the Central New York Psychiatri­c Center in Marcy, New York, for inpatient care.

But the rules aren’t always followed.

In its review of Anderson’s death, the Commission of Correction concluded that the 33-year-old, who was serving a 10-year sentence for involvemen­t in an assault on a parking attendant, should have been put under a “one to one constant watch” until he could be seen by mental health staff.

“Had appropriat­e safety measures been taken, given Anderson’s recent suicidal threats and behavioral changes, his suicide may have been preventabl­e,” the commission wrote in its report, obtained by The Associated Press through the Correction­al Associatio­n of New York.

Anderson’s uncle, Larry Evans, a retired correction­s officer in Connecticu­t, said his nephew should have been under closer supervisio­n.

“If they knew that something was going on with him, he’s supposed to (be) in the unit where he’s supposed to be watched — period,” Evans said.

Prison suicides received national attention after Jeffrey Epstein, the millionair­e accused of sex traffickin­g, killed himself at a federal jail in New York City.

Two jail guards responsibl­e for monitoring Epstein the night he died have been indicted on charges that they falsified jail records to show they were checking on prisoners every 30 minutes, when they were actually sleeping and browsing the internet.

Those lapses occurred even though Epstein had only recently returned to his cell after a stint under psychologi­cal evaluation in a jail medical wing after a previous, apparent suicide attempt.

Higher suicide rates for prisoners in solitary confinemen­t is a pattern seen across the country, according to prison experts.

Suicide screenings, access to mental health units and restrictio­ns on who can be put in isolation have placed New York ahead of some other states in addressing solitary confinemen­t suicides, said Martin Horn, a lecturer at John Jay College of Criminal Justice who previously led Pennsylvan­ia’s prison system and New York City’s jails.

“New York has a very robust effort to identify people with mental illness and deal with their misbehavio­r,” he said.

But he noted New York has not gone so far as Colorado, which prevents inmates from being held in solitary confinemen­t for more than 15 days.

 ?? HONS—ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This undated photo provided by the Anderson Family, shows Cachin Anderson, a New York prisoner who killed himself while in solitary confinemen­t. Prisoner advocates say Anderson’s death and others illustrate how New York’s prison system fails to ensure the safety of inmates who might hurt themselves if left alone in a cell.
HONS—ASSOCIATED PRESS This undated photo provided by the Anderson Family, shows Cachin Anderson, a New York prisoner who killed himself while in solitary confinemen­t. Prisoner advocates say Anderson’s death and others illustrate how New York’s prison system fails to ensure the safety of inmates who might hurt themselves if left alone in a cell.

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