News
Man Charged with Sending Suboxone Coated Letters to Female Inmate at Jail
February 21, 2023
By: Dwayne Page
A female prisoner at the DeKalb County Jail last month was caught with letters laced with Suboxone. 33-year-old Cassandra Renee Reed of Foster Road, McMinnville, was charged at that time with bringing contraband into a penal institution. Now, the man believed to have sent her the letters coated with the suboxone drug has been charged in the case.
46-year-old Christopher Peter Mulford of Jacobs Pillar Road, Smithville is charged with sending contraband to a penal institution. His bond is $20,000 and he will be in court March 2.
Sheriff Patrick Ray said Mulford, using a different name, sent Reed two letters which arrived at the jail on January 12 & 19. The letters appeared to have been soaked in a substance, believed to be the schedule III drug Suboxone, before being dried and written on. Phone calls were recorded regarding the letters, between Reed and Mulford discussing the need for her to obtain the letters before her being transferred to another facility. A detective from the Sheriff’s Department spoke with Reed, who admitted that the letters laced with Suboxone were sent to her by Mulford with whom she had spoken on the phone. Her plans were to chew on the letters to get the drug into her system. The letters were sent to the TBI Crime Lab for testing.
Jail Committee to Meet Wednesday Night, February 22 at Veterans Building
February 21, 2023
By: Dwayne Page
The DeKalb County Jail will again be on the minds of the County Commissioners this week.
Members of the Commission, who make up a special jail committee along with County Mayor Matt Adcock, will meet with Sheriff Patrick Ray as a committee to again discuss existing problems related to the physical plant of the jail and what the Tennessee Corrections Institute (TCI) expects of the county in meeting standards for continued jail certification. The meeting will be held at 6 p.m. Wednesday, February 22 on the top floor of the veterans building downtown after which the county commissioners will be taken on a tour of the jail to observe some of the deficiencies for themselves.
Last month, Bob Bass, Deputy Director of the Tennessee Corrections Institute (TCI) along with Jim Hart, Jail Consultant and Field Manager of the County Technical Assistance Service (CTAS) met for the first time with the new County Mayor and County Commission along with the Sheriff to explain how TCI views the current condition of the DeKalb County Jail and Annex and the requirements for correcting structural deficiencies which may at some point in the future require a new building program.
“The particular standards you are in trouble with are physical plant. How the jail was built. It has nothing to do with what the sheriff’s department has done or the staff when it comes to operation. You just don’t meet TCI standards in some areas,” Bass said.
The oldest building, which has been in operation since 1959 and houses prisoners in its basement, currently poses the greatest concern. Eventually, Bass said the county will no longer be able to house inmates in the basement and that recommendation by TCI may come as early as the next inspection cycle this spring.
“Your jail is in trouble because of the housing units. You are housing people in the basement with twenty beds which don’t meet standards and you have some makeshift cells down there and when they are no longer in use which may occur after our next inspection cycle that will bring your total bed count down to around 85 which will probably put you immediately over (capacity),” said Bass.
“Your population is growing and as your community grows, chances are you will need a bigger jail. Of course, any given day you could be overcrowded for various reasons. In 2018, our inspection showed you had 90 inmates (total in Jail and Annex). In 2019 there were 107. After COVID you were back up to 77 inmates in 2021 and 99 in 2022 with 102 beds total capacity for 78 males and 24 females, ” said Bass.
Bass suggested last month that the county commission develop a master plan.
“A master plan would allow us to set up those steps to identify where you want to be six months from now, finding out cost factors and things like that, finding the property to put it (building project) on and all along the way the county commission could vote to either move forward or stop. There is no specific time limit. It takes time to get these things done. You could be in a plan of action three years. If you made a decision to build a jail tonight just in the design phase alone it would be a year so that plan of action is a good thing to have and as long as you have it and show measurable progress, we are not going to take away your certification,” said Bass.
Although jails in Tennessee may operate without state certification Bass said he doesn’t recommend it because of the risk of liability and lawsuits against the county.
The mission of TCI and CTAS is mostly advisory. Its up to the county commission to decide on a specific course of action, whether it be future construction of a new jail or criminal justice center, or expansion of the existing facility. A decision of that kind is not expected to happen anytime soon. Months of meetings and planning have to go into any project under consideration. “The only role we (TCI) play in this is the educational part of it. We are not here to say you have to do this or that. TCI oversees compliance. We are not regulatory. It just behooves a county to be in compliance to ensure that you are running a constitutionally correct jail so that if you have to go to court, we can go to court with you. We (TCI) certify the officers’ training and certify the jail to make sure it follows certain guidelines to standards,” Bass continued.
State Representative Michael Hale Seeks Changes in State’s Anatomical Gift (Organ Donation) Law
February 20, 2023
By: Dwayne Page
State Representative Michael Hale wants to change the state’s anatomical gift (organ donation) law.
Although a small percentage of persons choose organ donation, the law gives Tennessee Donor Services authority to contact families about organ donation before bodies of their deceased loves ones are released to them from the hospital.
Hale said the procedure needs to be changed to streamline the process for families who may or may not want to make an anatomical gift (organ donation) of a decedent’s body or body parts after their loved one dies in a hospital.
This bill requires the individual that signs the death certificate to ask whether the family wants to make an anatomical gift of the decedent’s body and it prohibits an organ procurement organization (Tennessee Donor Services) from contacting the family if they should refuse to make an anatomical gift of the decedent’s body or body parts.
“In Tennessee there is a rule through Medicare and Medicaid funding that hospitals have to notify an organ procurement company when someone dies in the hospital. It does not affect nursing homes, hospices, etc. but a hospital has to contact a procurement company and in Tennessee that is Tennessee Donor Services,” said Representative Hale.
“Tennessee Donor Services then contacts the family and asks if they want to donate. What is happening across the state is these bodies are being held in hospitals 10 to 12 hours until Tennessee Donor Services contacts the families. One funeral director in East Tennessee told me a body was held in the hospital for 22 hours until the family was contacted even though the family did not want to make an organ donation,” Hale continued.
“I had a family in December tell me they felt they were pressured. A couple of week ago I was in Carthage and a lady with tears rolling down her face said her family member was held at the hospital because of Tennessee Donors even though she had told them to call the funeral home. The law says in Tennessee when a person dies, they become the possession of the next of kin but in cases like this Tennessee Donors is able to hold these bodies in the hospital for hours,” he said.
“What I have proposed is when someone dies in a hospital or is on life support, a nurse and or doctor, or medical examiner, with the proper training, would be able to talk to the family about organ or tissue donation. This would allow healthcare professionals to handle this rather than a third party,” said Hale.
“Opponents of the legislation are pushing back saying it would affect hospital funding, but I have received verification from US Senator Bill Haggerty’s office that this would have absolutely nothing to do with funding as long as healthcare professionals are trained to have a conversation with the family about organ donation and then if a family declines organ donation they can sign a release to the funeral home,” said Representative Hale.
« First ‹ Previous 1 412 502 510 511 512513 514 522 612 2457 Next › Last »