WALLER COUNTY, Texas — Sandra Bland is not the first inmate found hanging lifeless in her jail cell here in recent years. The question haunting authorities this time around is whether her death could have been prevented.
Video of the civil rights advocate’s arrest went viral after a seemingly ordinary traffic stop took a hostile turn when a state trooper ordered her out of her car. She was taken into custody, charged with assaulting a public servant. Three days later she was found hanged in her jail cell.
It’s a scene all-too familiar for a small-town jail that has already suffered a brush with tragedy. Three years after the jail facility was reprimanded after an inmate hanged himself in his cell, the same problems with protocols are seen again in a case that has drawn national scrutiny. As more details come to light about Bland and darker moments of her past, more questions swirl over whether jail officials missed warning signs of tragedy that were ultimately triggered by her arrest.
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So far, no jail official has been publicly disciplined for their role in Bland’s death. “Ms. Bland, based on jail staff observations, was not placed on any suicide watch,” Sheriff Smith said in a statement posted to Facebook Thursday evening.
The sheriff on Wednesday announced plans to establish a new outside commission to review jail procedures, evaluate staff and serve as a liaison to the greater public that has been skeptical of the circumstances surrounding Bland’s death.
Paul Looney, a prominent defense attorney in the region tapped to head the commission, says Smith has given him full authority to probe any element of the county’s jail procedure, enlist whomever he wants and take as much time as needed before offering up new recommendations.
“I’m fascinated that he’s willing to do it. It’s a really bold statement for him — I’m not used to the sheriff letting the fox into the hen house,” Looney told msnbc. “I’m far from being a jail standards expert.”
There is much for Looney and his commission to draw on. In November 2012, James Harper Howell IV was found hanging from a ceiling vent with a bedsheet wrapped around his neck, the Houston Chroniclereported at the time. Like Bland, Howell was arrested for assault of a public servant, but also for evading arrest and marijuana possession. The 29-year-old white man had been in custody for a week prior to his death.
State authorities who inspected the jail after Howell’s death found the county at fault for failing to observe inmates face-to-face every hour — the same noncompliance violation inspectors found with the Waller County jail in the wake of Bland’s death.
“The fact that it occurred again would be just one of those things that do happen,” Brandon Wood, executive director of the Texas Commission on Jail Standards, told msnbc.
The county jail in recent weeks has faced intense scrutiny for keeping garbage liners in cells with inmates, which authorities say Bland used to create a noose. The sheriff’s department maintains that the garbage bags were mandated by the jail commission a year earlier. But the prospect of two inmate hangings in the same jail in under three years has become unsettling for public officials.
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