The Justice Department's annual tally of deaths in state prisons and jails was short by nearly 1,000 last year, an investigation by the Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations found, reported Reason.
States are required under the Death in Custody
Reporting Act (DCRA) to submit data on deaths in prisons and jails to the
Justice Department, but in a report released
today, the committee says that the Justice Department has failed to effectively
implement the law, undermining the accuracy of its data and congressional
oversight of deaths in custody.
The committee and the Government Accountability
Office (GAO) found that in the last year alone the department missed 990 prison
and jail deaths that were reported on state websites, news articles, and other
public databases.
Those failures have "deprived Congress and the
American public of information about who is dying in custody and why," the
report says. "This information is critical to improve transparency in
prisons and jails, identifying trends in custodial deaths that may warrant
corrective action—such as failure to provide adequate medical care, mental
health services, or safeguard prisoners from violence—and identifying specific
facilities with outlying death rates. DOJ's failure to implement this law and
to continue to voluntarily publish this information is a missed opportunity to
prevent avoidable deaths."
Despite the Constitution's bans on cruel and unusual
punishment and excessive force, incarcerated people in prison systems and jails
across the U.S. are regularly subjected to medical neglect, brutality, and
unsafe living conditions.
Federal judges in both Arizona and Illinois recently
held those state prison systems in contempt for failing to address gruesome
medical neglect within their walls. The Justice Department has in recent years
found unconstitutional conditions in prisons in Florida and Alabama,
and it is investigating similar allegations in Mississippi and Georgia.
In New York City, the infamous Rikers Island jail complex is under threat
of being put in receivership by a federal judge because of a string
of preventable
deaths and chronic
corruption.
Congress passed the DCRA in 2000 and reauthorized it
in 2013. The law requires states to report deaths in prisons and jails. It also
authorized the attorney general to cut up to 10 percent of federal law
enforcement grant funding to states that fail to comply.
But a series of changes over the past several
administrations have degraded what was supposed to be a strong law, the report
says. In 2019, the Justice Department moved responsibility for the DCRA from
the Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) to the Bureau of Justice Assistance
(BJA). The latter office is responsible for federal grant-making, not
tabulating data. The BJA then stopped publicly reporting the mortality data it
collected, which the BJS had done annually for 16 years.
Since the switch between offices, the quality and
accuracy of the data submitted to the Justice Department has plummeted. The
subcommittee's investigation found that 70 percent of the records submitted to
the BJA were missing at least one required field.
A WBUR investigation last
year found 37 in-custody deaths that local sheriffs never reported to the
Justice Department, and an analysis published earlier
this year in The Appeal found that most states were not in compliance
with the DCRA.
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