Dayton Daily News

Inmate arguing innocence among Ohio prison deaths

- By Andrew Welsh-Huggins

Ohio prison inmate Carlos Ridley, four decades into a life sentence for a triple slaying, was await- ing a court ruling this month he hoped would help him prove innocence through DNA testing.

On Monday, an Ohio appeals court rejected Ridley’s request. The next day, he was rushed to a hospital where he died of COVID-19, according to his two daughters.

His last message to them, a few days earlier: “This has been very hard two weeks I feel as if I’ve aged at lease (cq) 10 years.”

Ohio has the country’s highest per-prisoner COVID- 19 case rate and the fifth-high- est prisoner death rate, according to an analysis of state prison cases by The Marshall Project,a nonprofit investigat­ive newsroom dedicated to the U.S. criminal jus- tice system.

At least 45 Ohio prison inmates have died of COVID- 19, 27 of them housed — like Ridley — in central Ohio’s Pickaway Correction­al Insti- tution, which includes a med- ical center. More than 4,300 inmates and nearly 500 staff members have tested posi- tive statewide.

The family only learned Ridley had been hospitaliz­ed when someone from Ohio State University’s hospital called Tuesday afternoon, his daughters said. Six hours later, a doctor called to say Ridley had died and that the cause was COVID-19.

“He kept telling us he was sick, for almost two weeks,” his daughter Kenosha Hines, of Columbus, said Thursday. Their 69-year-old father was so ill on April 30 that he had a hard time keeping his head up on a prison video call, she said.

Ridley’s daughters said their father received a negative coronaviru­s test result in late April and was placed with other inmates who had also tested negative but seemed sick. He had struggled with health problems, including cancer, and used a wheelchair. The familywas told he went quickly as blood clots formed in his lungs.

Across the U.S., more than 14,000 inmates have tested positive for COVID-19, the Marshall Project analysis found. Thousands of correction­al officers across the country have also tested positive.

Gov. Mike DeWine has said coronaviru­s in prisons is “of grave concern” because so many people are crowded together, and has pledged to provide more personal protective equipment and testing.

Ridley always maintained his innocence in the 1981 killing in Lima, according to court records, his family and Donald Caster, a University of Cincinnati law professor who represente­d him in efforts to test several pieces of evidence from the crime.

That included pill vials, a watch, two lead slugs, a butcher knife, a piece of linoleum with a bloody footprint and a hammer.

Ridley was convicted of killing Sarah Thirkill, 47, her husband, Pelham Thirkill, 51, and 4-year-old Latrina Jones, a foster child in their care. Their severely beaten bodies were found on the evening of March 15, 1981.

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