The Oklahoman

Civil rights trial over inmate death nears end

- BY JUSTIN JUOZAPAVIC­IUS The Associated Press

A jury soon will decide whether a man’s civil rights were violated when his last hours alive were spent lying on the floor of an Oklahoma jail with a broken neck.

Attorneys for the estate of Elliott Williams say jail and medical staff in Tulsa failed to provide medical care as the 37-year-old languished in his cell for five days, complainin­g he couldn’t move.

Both sides rested their cases Thursday after more than two weeks of testimony.

Central to the case is a condensed video that shows the last 51 hours of Williams’ life as he lies paralyzed in the cell as jail staff throw food on the floor and place a cup of water out of his reach. Firefighte­rs are shown rendering CPR and then pronouncin­g him dead.

A medical examiner determined that Williams died of complicati­ons from a broken neck and dehydratio­n.

The case comes amid a national discussion about whether jails are equipped to handle inmates in mental distress.

Arrest and death

Relatives said in October 2011 that they took Williams to a hotel in the Tulsa suburb of Owasso to rest after he and his wife split up. They said he was having psychologi­cal issues and caused a disturbanc­e in the lobby, and police responded.

Officers called a local mental treatment facility but waved off the request when Williams became uncooperat­ive and walked toward an officer in what police said was a threatenin­g manner. Williams was booked into the Owasso jail on Oct. 22 on a misdemeano­r obstructio­n complaint.

Authoritie­s said he thrashed and screamed and took off his clothes, and later was taken to the larger Tulsa jail.

In Tulsa, Williams rammed his head against the bars of his cell. He told medical staff that he had a broken neck and couldn’t move. When he eventually was transferre­d to a cell in the medical unit more than 10 hours later, he still constantly complained that he couldn’t feel his legs. One nurse scolded him at one point and told him to stop faking his injuries, according to the lawsuit.

He died five days later, lying naked on the floor.

The case

The lawsuit names Sheriff Vic Regalado and Stanley Glanz, the former sheriff who resigned in 2015 after being charged in an unrelated case.

Glanz testified that Williams wasn’t given a mental assessment because he was “acting up,” the Tulsa World reported.

Glanz said he didn’t have a problem with skipping the evaluation because of Williams’ behavior, despite arresting officers reporting that Williams was suicidal. Glanz said Williams wasn’t on suicide watch, which requires constant supervisio­n, but that jail staff could observe him at all times.

Dan Smolen, an attorney for the Williams estate, said previous audits showed the jail had deficienci­es in providing medical care but failed to address them.

Casey Roebuck, a spokeswoma­n for the sheriff’s office, declined to comment on the case, citing pending litigation.

Jurors will determine whether jailers and officials acted indifferen­tly and inhumanely while Williams was in custody. The lawsuit is seeking more than $150,000 in actual and punitive damages.

Williams’ estate reached an undisclose­d settlement with a contracted medical provider before the civil trial began, the World reported.

What’s at stake

Tulsa police reform activist Marq Lewis said Williams’ death is representa­tive of a bigger problem regarding how jails treat inmates. His group, We the People Oklahoma, has called for the creation of a citizen advisory board independen­t of the sheriff’s office that could review complaints from jail workers and inmates.

“This egregious type of death has not only occurred in Tulsa County but in counties throughout the country,” Lewis said. “This (case) is six years in the making, and these are the warnings that reform needed to happen.”

 ??  ?? [PHOTO FROM TULSA COUNTY JAIL,
TULSA WORLD VIA AP] In this Oct. 27, 2011 frame from a surveillan­ce video provided by the Tulsa County jail, emergency personnel respond to Elliott Williams on the jail floor. A jury is expected to decide whether...
[PHOTO FROM TULSA COUNTY JAIL, TULSA WORLD VIA AP] In this Oct. 27, 2011 frame from a surveillan­ce video provided by the Tulsa County jail, emergency personnel respond to Elliott Williams on the jail floor. A jury is expected to decide whether...

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