ACLU Calls on Nevada Governor to Address Grossly Inadequate Prison Health Care (12/6/2007)
Report by Medical Expert Details a
Pattern of "Shocking Disregard for Human Life"
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
media@aclu.org
ELY, NV –The American Civil Liberties Union today called on
Nevada Governor Jim Gibbons to investigate deficient medical care at Ely State
Prison (ESP), home of Nevada’s death row where, according to a
report by a medical expert commissioned by the ACLU, gravely ill prisoners are
denied treatment for excruciatingly painful and potentially fatal medical
conditions. The ACLU sent the report – along with a letter demanding that the
state commit the resources necessary to carry out needed systemic reforms – to
Gibbons today after conferring about the problem for several months with Nevada
Department of Corrections Director, Howard Skolnik.
"We are
deeply concerned that there doesn’t seem to have been any improvement in the
delivery of medical care to the prisoners at Ely in the months since we brought
these problems to the Department’s attentions and made recommendations for
fixing the system," said Amy Fettig, staff counsel for the ACLU National Prison
Project. "In fact, from the reports we are receiving from prisoners, we fear
that medical care may have gotten worse."
ACLU
attorneys sent Skolnik a letter yesterday requesting a meeting with him and
Gibbons.
In the
report the ACLU sent to Gibbons, Dr. William Noel, who reviewed the medical
records of thirty-five prisoners, wrote that he found "a pattern of gross
medical abuse at ESP," and said the treatment was "the most shocking and callous
disregard for human life and human suffering, that I have ever encountered in
the medical profession in my thirty-five years of practice." Noel describes the
condition of David Riker, a prisoner whose protopathic nerve pain is going
untreated, as "a living hell," and said he finds it "simply unimaginable" that a
medical professional would refuse to treat such severe chronic pain.
The ACLU’s
National Prison Project retained Noel to review the medical records because the
ACLU of Nevada has been receiving an extraordinarily large number of complaints
about grossly inadequate medical treatment at ESP.
"Prisoners
at ESP write to us desperately seeking help," said Lee Rowland, a staff attorney
with the ACLU of Nevada. "It’s clear that these aren’t isolated problems."
Among the
cases cited in Noel’s report was that of Patrick Cavanaugh, a diabetic prisoner,
who died a slow and agonizing death. Medical staff denied him insulin for three
years, which caused him to develop gangrene that prison officials refused to
treat, allowing him to rot to death. In the report, Noel called the death "
almost too horrible to believe."
Another
prisoner, Charles Randolph, asked medical staff why they had taken him off of
the heart medicine he had been taking for 10 years, according to documents
obtained by the ACLU. The physician’s assistant at the facility – there is no
full-time physician on site – responded in writing that a recent study found
that this medicine had "resulted in increased cardiac deaths," according to
medical complaint form filed by Randolph. The physician’s assistant
continued his response on the complaint form, "But you are still alive and I’ll
be happy to put you back on the medicine so that your chances of expiring sooner
are increased… In fact, I am putting you back on [the original
medicine]."
"The ACLU
tracks medical care in prison systems throughout the country, and what is
happening at Ely may well be the most horrific example of the denial of basic
medical treatment we have ever seen anywhere," said Margaret Winter, Associate
Director of the ACLU National Prison Project. "The level of callousness and
human suffering revealed in the medical records is stunning, well-documented and
almost unbelievable. Nevertheless, we hope to resolve the issues in Noel’s
report through collaborative efforts with the Nevada Department of Corrections
and the governor’s office, rather than prolonged
litigation."
Anti-death
penalty advocates are concerned that untreated severe chronic pain and illness
may be contributing to the staggering number of volunteer executions of death
row prisoners in Nevada. Ten out of the last twelve prisoners
to be executed in Nevada volunteered to be executed, including
William Castillo, 35, who volunteered for execution just last month. His
execution is currently stayed by the Nevada Supreme Court in light of questions
about the constitutionality of lethal injection
protocols.
"This
troubling rate of volunteerism is many times greater than anywhere else in the
country," said Brian Stull, staff attorney with the ACLU Capital Punishment
Project. "For Nevada to execute seriously ill prisoners who give up their
appeals and volunteer for execution after being worn down by untreated and
unendurable pain is unconscionable and perverts the critically important appeal
process."
The ACLU’s
letter to Governor Gibbons is available online at: h www.aclu.org/prison/medical/32994lgl20071206.html
Dr. Noel’s
report on medical care at ESP is available online at: www.aclu.org/prison/medical/33009lgl20071206.html
The ACLU’s
letter to Nevada Department of Corrections Director Skolnik: www.aclu.org/prison/medical/32995lgl20071206.html
Today’s Los Angeles
Times story about medical care at Ely State Prison can be found
online at: www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-ely6dec06,0,2957466.story?coll=la-home-center
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