The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

$8.5 million settlement reached in death of asthmatic prison inmate

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PHILADELPH­IA >> The Pennsylvan­ia Department of Correction­s has agreed to pay $8.5 million to the family of an asthmatic Philadelph­ia man who died after pepper spray was used on him at a state prison nearly two years ago.

The agreement filed Tuesday in federal court in western Pennsylvan­ia in the lawsuit filed by the family of Tyrone Briggs, 29, also includes a pledge by the department to implement new protocols on the use of pepper spray, The Philadelph­ia Inquirer reported.

Briggs was doused with pepper spray at the State Correction­al Institutio­n at Mahanoy in November 2019 and died after he was reportedly heard telling staff, “I can’t breathe.” His mother, Shaleda Busbee, said she hopes the agreedupon changes will protect others from similar lifethreat­ening situations.

Thirteen staff members were suspended, and while details of subsequent disciplina­ry action by the department has not been released, press secretary Maria Bivens said “involved security and medical staff members received discipline up to and including terminatio­n.”

After the use of pepper spray was authorized in federal prisons in 2016, state lawmakers passed a law requiring that all state correction­s officers be issued pepper spray. Purchase orders indicate the department has pepper balls, projectile­s, fogging devices and crowd-control sprays, the paper said.

Bivens said pepper spray is “typically less harmful than some other applicatio­ns of physical force,” but uses of pepper spray and other types of force “are always viewed as serious matters within a correction­al setting and are constantly reviewed to see if the use was appropriat­e or if a lesser use of force could have been applied.”

Briggs was arrested at age 15 in the rape at gunpoint of a 13-year-old girl and was sentenced to 15 to 30 years. The lawsuit alleged that an officer tried to break up an altercatio­n using prolonged streams of pepper spray rather than one or two quick bursts, and one stream was aimed at Briggs’ face after he was restrained and prone.

After he said he couldn’t breathe, according to the complaint, he struggled on a slow walk to the infirmary and waited a half hour for treatment but was only given an inhaler. Taken to a solitary confinemen­t cell, he soon collapsed and died, the lawsuit said.

Abolitioni­st Law Center lawyer Bret Grotes said prison policy already bars pepper spray use on people with asthma during planned incidents such as cell extraction­s.

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