Suicides are relatively rare events in state prisons, but the hanging death of Cleveland kidnapper Ariel Castro in an Ohio state prison is refocusing scrutiny on how prisoners are evaluated for doing harm to themselves or to others.
Suicides by prisoners in state prisons have jumped 10 percent between
2001-11, peaking in 2006 with 219 such deaths, according to the US
Bureau of Justice Statistics. They accounted for 5.5 percent of state
prison deaths in 2011.
Overall, prisoner deaths in state prisons
over the last decade have increased nearly 17 percent to 3,353 in 2011.
The overwhelming cause of death is illness.
State prisoners are less likely to commit suicide than are those
incarcerated in local jails, where suicides represented 35 percent of
deaths in 2011. The reason is that state prisoners are more assimilated
to their environment and resigned to their sentences, whereas those in
county jails are newcomers and are more uncertain of their fates, says Lindsay Hayes, project director for the National Center on Institutions & Alternatives, in Mansfield, Mass.,
“They
are individuals right from the street and who have just been arrested.
They are highly agitated and are coming into an environment new. To
them, the fear of incarceration, the unknown aspect of how long they
will stay there, the uncertainty of their charges – these are all
factors where a reaction could be suicide,” Mr. Hayes says.
Mr.
Castro was sentenced in August to life in prison plus 1,000 years for
the decade-long kidnapping and torture of three women. The story
attracted international attention for the systemic abuse that Castro
inflicted over that time, and his insistence, expressed during his
sentencing, that he was a loving father to a daughter he conceived by
rape by one of the women, plus his claim that he was trying to maintain
“a normal family.”
During the investigation, Cuyahoga County prosecutors said a suicide
note and confession penned by Castro was found at his home. He was
placed under suicide watch after his arrest, but it is uncertain if the
watch was lifted once he was found competent to stand trial.
Suicide
watches are never permanent, says Hayes, and they require a battery of
assessments to determine if a prisoner, upon entering the state prison
system, warrants a higher level of observation, such as every 15 minutes
or continually.
“It’s easy to put someone on suicide watch, but
difficult to take him off. You don’t put someone on indefinitely. You
put them on it only if you clinically believe it is necessary," he says.
An inmate is removed from suicide watch when an assessment "determines
the inmate is no longer suicidal by their words or behavior or a level
of stability over time,” he says.
The Ohio Department of
Corrections, in a statement released late Tuesday, said Castro, who was
incarcerated at the Correctional Reception Center outside Cleveland, was
found hanging in his cell at 9:20 p.m. Eastern time.
He was not under
suicide watch at the time, but was being checked by guards every 30
minutes. He was awaiting a series of mental and physical evaluations
before being transferred to a permanent facility, said JoEllen Smith, a
spokeswoman for the Ohio Department of Corrections.
Jaye
Schlachet, Castro’s attorney, told Reuters that prison authorities
denied requests for an independent psychological examination, both in
the county jail and the state prison.
Suicides in prison occur at a
higher rate than in the general population. A 2010 study commissioned
by the US Justice Department’s National Institute of Corrections
calculated that the suicide rate in county jails – where suicides are
highest – were 38 deaths per 100,000 inmates – about three times greater
than for the general US population, which sees 11 such deaths per
100,000 citizens.
Suicide rates in both jails and prisons
are down from the past 20 years because of “increased scrutiny,” Hayes
says. “Correctional administrators now have been convinced that there
are things that can be done to prevent suicides,” such as better staff
training, safer facilities, and improved procedural standards, he says.
Ms. Smith says the state plans to review how Castro managed to commit suicide.
On
Wednesday, Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Tim McGinty released a statement
calling Castro a coward. “This man couldn’t take, for even a month, a
small portion of what he had dished out for more than a decade,” Mr.
McGinty said.
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