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Federal Appeals Court Rules Texas Overheated Prisons Endangers Inmate Health, Violates Constitutional Rights

Relatives of convicts who died during the high summer temps last year say heat index conditions sometimes exceeded 150 degrees. (KHOU 11 News)

(Brandi Grissom, Texas Tribune)
The U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals on Monday ruled in a Texas case that extreme heat can violate prisoners’ rights.

In a case involving a 64-year-old former Texas Department of Criminal Justice inmate who suffered from hypertension and other medical ailments, the federal court in New Orleans held that allowing an inmate to be “exposed to extreme temperatures can constitute a violation of the Eighth Amendment.”

“This is a huge victory for all Texas prisoners,” said Scott Medlock, director of the Texas Civil Rights Project’s Prisoners’ Rights Program. “Hopefully this decision will force TDCJ to reconsider housing prisoners in such dangerous conditions.”

TDCJ spokesman Jason Clark said agency officials had not reviewed the opinion and could not comment.

The Texas Civil Rights Project sued TDCJ in 2008 over conditions that Eugene Blackmon endured while he was in custody serving three years in the Garza East Unit in Beeville. Blackmon was a minimum-security inmate with high blood pressure. For more than 50 consecutive days that summer, according to court documents, temperatures inside the unit reached levels that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association considers cautionary or dangerous. Temperatures inside the prison, Blackmon’s lawyers said, reached a heat index of 130 degrees.

Blackmon, who is now out of prison, said he suffered dizziness, nausea and headaches. Even after he filed complaints, wardens took little or no action to help, the TCRP says in the suit, which argued that conditions amounted to unconstitutionally cruel and unusual punishment. The court ruled that the risks to Blackmon’s health were “obvious” and that prison staff “were deliberately indifferent.”
(Read more at the Texas Tribune)

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