The Oklahoman

Oklahoma County jail reports year’s 1st inmate death

- Nolan Clay

Isiah Mitchell ended up in the Oklahoma County jail Friday afternoon after an Oklahoma City police officer spotted him riding a bicycle the wrong way on a street.

By Monday, he was dead.

The jail's interim administra­tor told jail trustees Monday that the detainee was pronounced deat at a hospital at 1:21 a.m.

Mitchell, 26, of Oklahoma City, was found hanging in his cell at 12:02 a.m. during a sight check, Maj. Brandi Garner wrote in her email notification. He had been in the cell alone.

The inmate death was the first at the Oklahoma County jail in 2023 and the second since Garner was named interim administra­tor last month.

The jail has had close to 40 inmate deaths since a trust took over operations on July 1, 2020. Sixteen of those deaths came last year.

The last jail administra­tor, Greg Williams, resigned in December amid criticism over the high death toll. His final day was Jan. 19.

Garner has pledged to make reducing jail deaths her main focus.

"Please understand this isn't just a job for me — it's a calling," she wrote in a Jan. 15 guest column for The Oklahoman. "And once I set a goal, I'm going to make sure it happens, whatever it takes."

Mitchell was jailed after his traffic stop Friday because he was wanted in Garfield County. A judge there in 2016 issued a warrant for his arrest on a misdemeano­r charge of driving while impaired.

The jail described his death in a news release as an apparent suicide.

"I reviewed his booking paperwork including the intake questionna­ire required to be completed by the arresting officer," Garner wrote in her email. "The questionna­ire did not indicate Mr.

Mitchell had expressed suicidal ideations, was not under the influence, and exhibited no signs of mental illness or acute medical conditions."

Ironically, Mitchell said on the drive to jail that he "was happy that I kept him from making a very bad decision," the arresting officer wrote in an incident report.

He said he had been on his way to buy fentanyl, according to the report.

The death sparked new outrage on social media about jail conditions. The jail disputed a Facebook post that claimed Mitchell had been complainin­g about needing a nurse for hours and was ignored.

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