City of Denver Settles in Prisoner Death Lawsuit
City of Denver Settles in Prisoner Death Lawsuit
The City of Denver agreed to pay $4.6 million to the relatives of a black inmate who was killed during a psychotic episode in 2015.During a mental health breakdown inside a Denver jail, Michael Marshall was suffocated to death while being restrained by deputies.The complaint and untimely demise of Marshall will lead to Denver revising its rulebook on the treatment of mentally ill inmates, said city attorney Kristin Bronson.“After extensive evaluation of the facts and the possible outcomes of a costly trial, we made the difficult decision to propose a multifaceted settlement,” explained Bronson.Bronson says the settlement was meant to preempt a lawsuit Marshall’s relatives were planning to file.Michael’s brother, Rodney Marshall, said he was satisfied with the case’s outcome.“If Michael could have been treated as a man in medical need, instead of like a criminal who was disobeying orders, he could still be alive today,” said Rodney Marshall.The 50-year old inmate was, as reported by The New York Times, suffering from schizophrenia. After being sent to a Denver jail, he refused to take his medication.Placed in a secure walkway under camera supervision, Marshall started pacing. Holding a blanket and walking from one end of the hall to another, the man knocked over a cart. He refused an order to sit down and stay calm, after which a jail worker physically intervened.When Marshall began to break down and behaved erratically, deputies tried subduing him. During the confrontation, Marshall began choking on his own vomit – a medical emergency that went unnoticed in the struggle.
AP.
Sources
Denver agrees to pay $4.6 million settlement to family of inmate killed in 2015 by sheriff’s deputiesNew York Times
About Ryan J. Farrick
Ryan Farrick is a freelance writer and small business advertising consultant based out of mid-Michigan. Passionate about international politics and world affairs, he’s an avid traveler with a keen interest in the connections between South Asia and the United States. Ryan studied neuroscience and has spent the last several years working as an operations manager in transportation logistics.