California prisons alter treatment of mentally ill

Prison officials pledge to take a gentler approach with mentally ill inmates after graphic images of prisoners being repeatedly doused with pepper spray were made public.|

SACRAMENTO — California prison officials pledged Friday to take a gentler approach with mentally ill inmates after graphic images of prisoners being repeatedly doused with pepper spray in their cells were made public several months ago.

The Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation said in a federal court filing that its move will create a system-wide culture change in how 33,000 mentally ill offenders are restrained and isolated.

The state is revising its policies after U.S. District Court Judge Lawrence Karlton ruled in April that California's treatment of mentally ill inmates violates their constitutional safeguards against cruel and unusual punishment.

He acted after the graphic video tapes made by correctional officers were released, showing guards throwing chemical grenades and pumping large amounts of pepper spray into the cells of mentally ill inmates, some screaming and delirious.

In a separate incident, a mentally ill inmate, who breathed through a hole in his throat, died after being pepper-sprayed at Mule Creek State Prison in Ione.

Guards generally were acting after the inmates refused to take their medications, would not leave their cells or defied orders in other ways, officials said.

The state now requires guards to consider the mental health condition of each inmate before using force and to employ the least amount of force necessary while seeking alternatives when there is no imminent threat of harm.

That generally requires guards to have a cool-down period before using force — time in which a mental health professional will try to intervene with the inmate.

Pepper spray can't be used at all in many specialized mental health facilities within the prisons without the permission of a senior prison official.

Instead of physically dragging a combative inmate from a cell, guards will be allowed to enter the cell just long enough to administer the inmate's medication before withdrawing.

Attorneys representing inmates were cautiously optimistic, said Michael Bien, whose firm sued the state over its treatment of mentally ill inmates.

"It is going to be a culture change, a sea change, if they can actually do it," he said.

He cautioned that the policies will require training and more cooperation between guards and mental health professionals.

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