US Prisons. |
Sean O'Torain.
It is correct to be horrified at the burning and drowning and beheading of prisoners by groups such as ISIS. ut there is the saying about the moat in the eye. The US has 5% of the world's population but it has 25% of the world's prisoners. Below we print a report on how one of these prisoners was treated. US capitalism is a horrific system.
The June 2012 death of
Darren Rainey, an inmate at the Dade Correctional Institution in South Florida,
attracted national attention after other inmates claimed he was burned like “a
boiled lobster” after about two hours in a shower that guards had modified to
punish prisoners.
A Florida prosecutor
issued a 101-page report earlier this month that
cleared guards of any wrongdoing in Rainey’s death. The prosecutor, Miami-Dade
State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle, called Rainey’s death an accident
resulting from his schizophrenia and heart disease and from confinement in the
shower room.
But a trove of official
documents reviewed by The Huffington Post indicates that some information from
police, the prison and emergency services was not included in the prosecutor’s
final report, which raises questions about the circumstances surrounding
Rainey’s death. A review of the documents was permitted by a person with close
access to the investigation who asked not to be identified sharing non-public
information.
Numerous official photos
taken of Rainey’s body several hours after he died were also reviewed by
HuffPost. The images reveal extreme damage to his skin, with wounds over his
entire body and significant sections of skin missing, exposing red and white
tissue and, in some areas, what appear to be blood vessels. A medical examiner
who has reviewed the Rainey autopsy and to whom HuffPost described the
information contained in the records says the cause of death as stated doesn’t
make sense. (HuffPost was not given permission to copy or share the actual
documents.)
Some of the information in
the records HuffPost reviewed has been referenced in court records or the reporting
of The Miami Herald’s Julie Brown, who has
followed the case for years. Here’s what we found in comparing the information
from the documents and photos to the prosecutor’s report.
DADE CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION
In
surveillance video the night inmate Darren Rainey died, Rainey is seen being
escorted from his cell to the shower by a guard.
The prosecutor’s report omits that the water was too hot for an
investigator’s skin.
One record, dated Sept.
10, 2014, contains the transcript of an interview with Capt. Darlene Dixon, the
environmental health and safety officer at the prison, who, two days after
Rainey’s death, was ordered to check the shower’s water temperature by Warden
Jerry Cummings. (Cummings was fired two years after Rainey’s death and after another inmate died.)
The shower didn’t have
working water controls in the room, and the water didn’t spray from a shower
head. It had been rigged to use water taps in an adjacent janitorial closet,
where piping that carried hot and cold water from the faucet went up the shared
wall, through the wall and into the shower room.
Dixon told investigators
about her first attempt to test the water in the shower room. After the
prison officer who accompanied her turned on the hot water from inside the
janitorial closet, the water hit the wall of the shower and splashed “on her
hand, and was hurting her because it was too hot,” according to an interview
report reviewed by HuffPost. Steam “appeared in the shower within a few minutes
of turning on the hot water,” Dixon said, according to the report of her
interview with Miami-Dade police Det. Wilbert Sanchez, the lead
investigator.
But these details do not
appear in the prosecutor’s report. It describes Dixon taking the temperature
only at the tap, which, according to the original investigative interview, was
actually her second attempt to test the water. At the hot water tap in the
janitor’s closet, using a meat thermometer borrowed from the prison’s food
services department because her digital thermometer was broken, the water
registered 160 degrees ― 40 degrees higher than the
maximum mandated temperature setting for hot water in the prison, the
prosecutor’s report says.
Most adults will suffer
third-degree burns if exposed to water hotter than 150 degrees for even
a few seconds. First-degree burns cause redness, second-degree burns
create swelling and blistering and third-degree burns go through the skin to
deeper tissues, according to WebMD.
MIAMI-DADE STATE ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
The
janitor’s closet next to the shower where inmate Darren Rainey was found dead
shows tubing that provided water to the shower.
The prosecutor’s report highlights the county medical examiner’s
conclusion that Rainey wasn’t burned. But a paramedic noted skin burns in his
report.
A medic’s record reviewed
by HuffPost from the night Rainey died indicates that he suffered burns despite
the county medical examiner’s conclusion in the prosecutor’s report that he did
not. Lt. Alexander Lopez, a firefighter and paramedic with Miami-Dade Fire
Rescue, reported that he examined Rainey’s body about 50 minutes after he was
found dead on the shower floor “with 2nd and 3rd degree burns on approximately
30 percent of his body.” Also, Lopez notes that CPR was administered to Rainey
and that when he arrived his body was “cool” to the touch. Rainey could have
been dead up to 30 minutes before his body was discovered, according to the
prosecutor’s report.
The report notes the CPR
Rainey received and Lopez’s view that Rainey’s body was “cool” but omits the
skin burn information. Instead, the report suggests that Lopez believed what he
saw were “burns and/or skin slippage,” the report reads.
The prosecutor’s report says a nurse failed to take Rainey’s
body temperature. But in her original report, she noted that she had and it
registered nearly 105 degrees.
An emergency room record
from the Florida Department of Corrections dated the night of Rainey’s death
also notes substantial burns on Rainey’s body. Britney Wilson, who worked at
Dade Correctional Institution as a licensed practical nurse, writes in her
report, which indicates she examined Rainey’s body 10 minutes after it was
discovered, that he was found with “1st degree burns to 90% of his body” and
that his skin was “hot/warm” to the touch.
She also notes that she
took his “tympanic” body temperature (via his ear), and it was 104.9 degrees. (A
body temperature above 103 is considered dangerous, according to the Mayo
Clinic.) These details are largely omitted from the prosecutor’s memo, which
indicates only that Wilson observed that Rainey’s skin “appeared red and
wrinkled,” that she told a 911 operator that “Rainey’s body appeared to be
burned” and that she “noticed some skin slippage.” The most notable
inconsistency is that the memo says Wilson tried “unsuccessfully” to take
Rainey’s temperature.
Photos of Rainey’s body and indications of thermometer readings
suggest his body temperature was “much higher than normal when he died,” a top
pathologist says.
HuffPost also examined
about 10 images of Rainey’s body taken by county officials about 12 hours after
he was discovered dead.
The disturbing images show
severe wounds on numerous sections of Rainey’s skin. Entire swaths of skin and,
in places, what appear to be multiple layers are either missing, bunched up at
the edges of wounds or hanging loosely at the edges of wounds.
Some wounds are a deep
red, with blood vessels clearly visible. Other wounds expose underlying
tissue.
Rainey’s chest and back
appear to be the most severely damaged. His chest wound exposes a dark red
layer of tissue from his neck to mid-abdomen. White tissue is exposed on his
entire upper and mid-back with some red splotches throughout the large exposed
area.
The skin on his left arm
appears severely wounded, with deep red and white tissue exposed as well as
sections of blood vessels. Rainey had a tattoo on his upper left arm, under his
shoulder, which is nearly indecipherable because it appears that several layers
of skin are missing.
Rainey’s legs show wounds
on his thighs, shins and calves.
Multiple skin wounds are
visible on his forehead, cheeks, ears, neck and nose, with what appears to be
the deepest wound on the bridge of his nose, where white and red tissue is
exposed.
One image shows a rectal
thermometer reading of about 94 degrees ― the
temperature of his body believed to have been taken the morning after his
death.
The photos and the
temperature reading were described to Dr. Michael Baden, a nationally
recognized forensic pathologist known for his work on many high-profile deaths,
including the private autopsy conducted on Michael Brown,
the unarmed black teenager killed by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri,
and for his work on HBO’s “Autopsy” series.
Baden explained that the
94 degree temperature may be unusual. “This temperature would indicate, if
the photos were taken about 10 or 12 hours after he died, that his body
temperature was much higher than normal when he died,” Baden said.
He explained that when a
person dies, body temperature drops about 1.5 degrees every hour, on average,
depending on the temperature of the environment the body is kept in. If a
person dies in a 70 degree room, 10 hours later, pathologists would expect the
body temperature to have dropped about 15 degrees. And that would speed up if
the body was placed in a cold environment or slow down in a warm one. Although
it’s not clear if Rainey’s body was put into refrigeration in the medical
examiner’s office before these photos were taken, that would be a standard
procedure, Baden said. That means that if Rainey’s body temperature was still
94 degrees the morning after he died, his body temperature may have been as
high as 109 degrees when he died.
In the Rainey autopsy report, Miami-Dade medical
examiner Dr. Emma Lew notes that Rainey’s rectal temperature is at 94 degrees
12 hours after death. That, coupled with a 102 degree temperature taken by a
second nurse after he was found dead, does indicate that Rainey “had an
elevated body temperature at the time of death,” Lew notes. However, because it
remains unknown what Rainey’s body temperature was when he first entered the
shower room, Lew doesn’t conclude that it was the hot shower water that caused
Rainey’s increased body temperature. Rainey had defecated in his cell and had
smeared feces on himself, his cell and bedsheets, which is why he was taken to
the shower, the prosecutor’s report said.
Lew writes that it cannot
be ruled out that Rainey’s high temperature may have been associated with a
“psychotic episode which prompted him to smear feces on his body.”
MIAMI-DADE STATE ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
Water
flows through the wall and into the shower where inmate Darren Rainey was found
dead.
The medical examiner’s opinion in the prosecutor’s report cites
causes of death that “raise problems,” a forensic pathologist says.
Baden, who has examined
Rainey’s official autopsy report but who did not examine any of the documents
or photos that HuffPost reviewed, also questioned the stated cause of death.
Baden says it “raises problems.”
“Number one, schizophrenia
is a disease; it isn’t a cause of death. Schizophrenia is not a cause of sudden
death,” Baden said. Secondly, Baden explained, according to the autopsy
report, Rainey’s heart disease is “minimal” and his “heart is not remarkable
for a 50-year-old person.” Lastly, Baden said, the indication that confinement
in the shower also contributed to his death “does not make sense.”
“That wouldn’t cause death
itself,” Baden said. “People don’t die in confined spaces unless there’s
something else happening. The only way you really die in a confined space is if
you use up all the oxygen.”
Baden also questions the
notion that the death was accidental.
“What is being described
is a natural death,” Baden said. “Even if it were schizophrenia and it was
heart disease, why then is it an accident? Because of the confined space? No.
The cause of death as indicated does not appear to me to be consistent with the
autopsy findings.”
“Skin slippage” doesn’t explain the state of Rainey’s body, a
pathology expert says.
Rainey’s skin wounds,
described as “skin slippage” by Dr. Lew, were the result of normal post-mortem
decomposition, “exposure to a warm, moist environment” and friction or pressure
placed on his body by medics or prison officials who were trying to revive him
or when they moved his body.
Baden also questions this
conclusion.
“Skin slippage can occur
in decomposition, but not in a matter of hours. That doesn’t make sense either
that there’d be skin slippage of any kind at this point after his death,” Baden
said. “The circumstances I’m aware of along with the autopsy report would
indicate the cause of death is not accurate and that he died of the heat, the
hot water that he was placed under. The cause of death as attributed does not
make sense.”
Prosecutors disregarded the testimony of multiple inmates
because they say it was inconsistent.
Multiple inmates claimed
that the shower had been used to punish uncooperative inmates, the prosecutor
report noted. Some inmates said that they saw Rainey’s lifeless body carried
out of the shower and that his skin appeared to be peeling off his body and was
red in some sections. One inmate claimed Rainey looked like a “boiled lobster.”
Other inmates said they could hear Rainey screaming in the shower for several
minutes.
One inmate, Harold
Hempstead, who worked as an orderly in the mental ward building of the prison
that Rainey was housed in on the night he died, said he heard Rainey cry out,
“I’m sorry,” “I won’t do it anymore” and “I can’t take it no more,” until the
inmate “heard a fall,” according to the prosecutor’s report.
The prosecutor’s office
ultimately found the inmates’ allegations not credible. They said Hempstead’s
timeline of events did not match that of prison surveillance video from the night Rainey died and said
he couldn’t have seen some of things he claimed to have seen. Prosecutors also
suggested that other inmates’ allegations may have been influenced by meetings
with Hempstead.
The prosecutors concluded
that there was no evidence that the shower had ever been used for punishment
and that the shower Rainey was placed in was neither “dangerous nor
unsafe.”
Lew, the medical examiner,
ultimately concluded that claims that temperatures inside the shower room
were “excessively high” were unsubstantiated. She dismissed reports that the
water temperature was 160 degrees and said that there was no evidence
Rainey had actually suffered any burns to his body at all. Lew said that people
with schizophrenia can have an “impaired ability to compensate for heat stress”
and that, coupled with a medication he was taking to help with his mental
illness, it could have contributed to Rainey suffering from hyperthermia
in the shower and a “pre-disposition to sudden cardiac arrest.”
DADE CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION
Surveillance
video the night inmate Darren Rainey died shows prison staffers carrying his
body from the second-floor shower down to a stretcher.
When contacted about the
documents and photos reviewed by HuffPost, Ed Griffith, public information
officer for the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office, said that in the course of
its investigation into the incident, the office “amassed a large volume” of
materials and as such it would not be possible to include every detail in their
report.
“The contradictions and
inconsistencies contained within the materials are part of the reason for the
prolonged consideration,” Griffith said.
When asked about the water
temperature in the shower room that “hurt” the skin of Dixon, the prison health
and safety inspector, Griffith explained that Dixon tested the hot water two
days after Rainey’s death, which “would not be determinative evidence of the
water temperature two days earlier.”
With regard to the medic’s
report describing “2nd and 3rd degree burns on approximately 30 percent of his
body,” Griffith said that those details were a “recounting” of what others at
the scene of Rainey’s death told him when he arrived and does not reflect “an
independent medical evaluation.”
Griffith provided HuffPost
with Lopez’s sworn testimony about what he saw the
night of Rainey’s death and the contents of his report. Lopez says that the
description of Rainey’s body on the front page of his report was what he was
told by prison staffers. In his testimony, he added that he saw “what appeared
to be burns,” but when asked if what he observed could have been “skin
slippage,” Lopez says, “it could have been.”
“The amount of slippage,
about 30%, is not inconsistent with the photos,” Griffith added. He also said
that the slippage did not begin until Rainey’s “skin was touched in efforts to
provide medical assistance” and that three prison nurses noted that Rainey’s
skin appeared to be intact while he was still on the floor of the shower.
Initially, Griffith explained that skin was displaced when Rainey was picked up
and carried to the stretcher. Then more skin was displaced on his chest and
back while CPR was performed for about 45 minutes.
Regarding nurse Wilson’s
report about a nearly 105 degree temperature measured from Rainey’s ear,
Griffith referred to Wilson’s sworn testimony, which he also
provided to HuffPost, in which she does not mention the ear temperature
reading. Instead, she says she tried to take Rainey’s temperature with a
digital thermometer under his arm and rectally but both attempts resulted in an
“error” readout on the thermometer.
Regarding Rainey’s body
temperature at death, Griffith said “there definitely was an elevated body
temperature.” But attempting to explain that temperature, “in the absence of
burns, is one of the reasons the case evaluation was prolonged.”
Griffith said his office
ruled out the water causing Rainey’s raised body temperature “because of the
medical evidence and witnesses.”
Lew, responding to
Braden’s remarks that Rainey’s body temperature was likely higher than normal
when he died, told HuffPost she doesn’t disagree with his point. On his remarks
on Rainey’s cause of death not making sense, Lew said, “Dr. Baden is an expert.
Experts are allowed to give their opinions.” Responding to Baden’s remarks on
skin slippage, she said simply, “It is Dr. Baden’s opinion.”
The Miami-Dade Police
Department did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
Milton Grimes, attorney
for the Rainey family, said he could not comment specifically on the documents
and photos reviewed by HuffPost but did say he has seen inconsistencies in the
report when compared against other materials.
“I can say that a lot of
statements in the report are inaccurate based on the discovery we have
received. I am confused and troubled by what I’ve seen,” Grimes said and added
that there are “important, pertinent and relevant facts” that were left out of
the prosecutor’s memo.
“At a minimum, based on
the totality of information that I have seen,” Grimes said, “there was culpable
negligence in the death of Darren Rainey.”
In 2016, Grimes filed a
lawsuit on behalf of Rainey’s family against the Florida Department of
Corrections over the death, which is pending.
In
May 2016, The New Yorker published an article written by Eyal Press about the
experiences of Harriet Krzykowski, a former counselor at Dade Correctional
Institution who says she faced retaliation from prison staff when she raised
questions about alleged inmate abuse in the facility. She told the magazine the
water from the faucet that fed into the shower where Rainey died was so hot
that she sometimes used it to cook ramen noodles.
The June 2012 death of
Darren Rainey, an inmate at the Dade Correctional Institution in South Florida,
attracted national attention after other inmates claimed he was burned like “a
boiled lobster” after about two hours in a shower that guards had modified to
punish prisoners.
A Florida prosecutor
issued a 101-page report earlier this month that
cleared guards of any wrongdoing in Rainey’s death. The prosecutor, Miami-Dade
State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle, called Rainey’s death an accident
resulting from his schizophrenia and heart disease and from confinement in the
shower room.
But a trove of official
documents reviewed by The Huffington Post indicates that some information from
police, the prison and emergency services was not included in the prosecutor’s
final report, which raises questions about the circumstances surrounding
Rainey’s death. A review of the documents was permitted by a person with close
access to the investigation who asked not to be identified sharing non-public
information.
Numerous official photos
taken of Rainey’s body several hours after he died were also reviewed by HuffPost.
The images reveal extreme damage to his skin, with wounds over his entire body
and significant sections of skin missing, exposing red and white tissue and, in
some areas, what appear to be blood vessels. A medical examiner who has
reviewed the Rainey autopsy and to whom HuffPost described the information
contained in the records says the cause of death as stated doesn’t make sense.
(HuffPost was not given permission to copy or share the actual documents.)
Some of the information in
the records HuffPost reviewed has been referenced in court records or the
reporting of The Miami Herald’s Julie Brown, who has
followed the case for years. Here’s what we found in comparing the information
from the documents and photos to the prosecutor’s report.
DADE CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION
In
surveillance video the night inmate Darren Rainey died, Rainey is seen being
escorted from his cell to the shower by a guard.
The prosecutor’s report omits that the water was too hot for an
investigator’s skin.
One record, dated Sept.
10, 2014, contains the transcript of an interview with Capt. Darlene Dixon, the
environmental health and safety officer at the prison, who, two days after Rainey’s
death, was ordered to check the shower’s water temperature by Warden Jerry
Cummings. (Cummings was fired two years after Rainey’s death and after another inmate died.)
The shower didn’t have
working water controls in the room, and the water didn’t spray from a shower
head. It had been rigged to use water taps in an adjacent janitorial closet,
where piping that carried hot and cold water from the faucet went up the shared
wall, through the wall and into the shower room.
Dixon told investigators
about her first attempt to test the water in the shower room. After the
prison officer who accompanied her turned on the hot water from inside the
janitorial closet, the water hit the wall of the shower and splashed “on her
hand, and was hurting her because it was too hot,” according to an interview
report reviewed by HuffPost. Steam “appeared in the shower within a few minutes
of turning on the hot water,” Dixon said, according to the report of her
interview with Miami-Dade police Det. Wilbert Sanchez, the lead
investigator.
But these details do not
appear in the prosecutor’s report. It describes Dixon taking the temperature
only at the tap, which, according to the original investigative interview, was
actually her second attempt to test the water. At the hot water tap in the
janitor’s closet, using a meat thermometer borrowed from the prison’s food
services department because her digital thermometer was broken, the water
registered 160 degrees ― 40 degrees higher than the
maximum mandated temperature setting for hot water in the prison, the
prosecutor’s report says.
Most adults will suffer
third-degree burns if exposed to water hotter than 150 degrees for even
a few seconds. First-degree burns cause redness, second-degree burns
create swelling and blistering and third-degree burns go through the skin to
deeper tissues, according to WebMD.
MIAMI-DADE STATE ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
The
janitor’s closet next to the shower where inmate Darren Rainey was found dead
shows tubing that provided water to the shower.
The prosecutor’s report highlights the county medical examiner’s
conclusion that Rainey wasn’t burned. But a paramedic noted skin burns in his
report.
A medic’s record reviewed
by HuffPost from the night Rainey died indicates that he suffered burns despite
the county medical examiner’s conclusion in the prosecutor’s report that he did
not. Lt. Alexander Lopez, a firefighter and paramedic with Miami-Dade Fire
Rescue, reported that he examined Rainey’s body about 50 minutes after he was
found dead on the shower floor “with 2nd and 3rd degree burns on approximately
30 percent of his body.” Also, Lopez notes that CPR was administered to Rainey
and that when he arrived his body was “cool” to the touch. Rainey could have
been dead up to 30 minutes before his body was discovered, according to the
prosecutor’s report.
The report notes the CPR
Rainey received and Lopez’s view that Rainey’s body was “cool” but omits the
skin burn information. Instead, the report suggests that Lopez believed what he
saw were “burns and/or skin slippage,” the report reads.
The prosecutor’s report says a nurse failed to take Rainey’s
body temperature. But in her original report, she noted that she had and it
registered nearly 105 degrees.
An emergency room record
from the Florida Department of Corrections dated the night of Rainey’s death
also notes substantial burns on Rainey’s body. Britney Wilson, who worked at
Dade Correctional Institution as a licensed practical nurse, writes in her
report, which indicates she examined Rainey’s body 10 minutes after it was
discovered, that he was found with “1st degree burns to 90% of his body” and
that his skin was “hot/warm” to the touch.
She also notes that she
took his “tympanic” body temperature (via his ear), and it was 104.9
degrees. (A body temperature above 103 is considered dangerous, according
to the Mayo Clinic.) These details are largely omitted from the prosecutor’s
memo, which indicates only that Wilson observed that Rainey’s skin “appeared
red and wrinkled,” that she told a 911 operator that “Rainey’s body appeared to
be burned” and that she “noticed some skin slippage.” The most notable
inconsistency is that the memo says Wilson tried “unsuccessfully” to take
Rainey’s temperature.
Photos of Rainey’s body and indications of thermometer readings
suggest his body temperature was “much higher than normal when he died,” a top
pathologist says.
HuffPost also examined
about 10 images of Rainey’s body taken by county officials about 12 hours after
he was discovered dead.
The disturbing images show
severe wounds on numerous sections of Rainey’s skin. Entire swaths of skin and,
in places, what appear to be multiple layers are either missing, bunched up at
the edges of wounds or hanging loosely at the edges of wounds.
Some wounds are a deep
red, with blood vessels clearly visible. Other wounds expose underlying
tissue.
Rainey’s chest and back
appear to be the most severely damaged. His chest wound exposes a dark red
layer of tissue from his neck to mid-abdomen. White tissue is exposed on his
entire upper and mid-back with some red splotches throughout the large exposed
area.
The skin on his left arm
appears severely wounded, with deep red and white tissue exposed as well as
sections of blood vessels. Rainey had a tattoo on his upper left arm, under his
shoulder, which is nearly indecipherable because it appears that several layers
of skin are missing.
Rainey’s legs show wounds
on his thighs, shins and calves.
Multiple skin wounds are
visible on his forehead, cheeks, ears, neck and nose, with what appears to be
the deepest wound on the bridge of his nose, where white and red tissue is
exposed.
One image shows a rectal
thermometer reading of about 94 degrees ― the
temperature of his body believed to have been taken the morning after his
death.
The photos and the
temperature reading were described to Dr. Michael Baden, a nationally
recognized forensic pathologist known for his work on many high-profile deaths,
including the private autopsy conducted on Michael Brown,
the unarmed black teenager killed by a police officer in Ferguson, Missouri,
and for his work on HBO’s “Autopsy” series.
Baden explained that the
94 degree temperature may be unusual. “This temperature would indicate, if
the photos were taken about 10 or 12 hours after he died, that his body
temperature was much higher than normal when he died,” Baden said.
He explained that when a
person dies, body temperature drops about 1.5 degrees every hour, on average,
depending on the temperature of the environment the body is kept in. If a
person dies in a 70 degree room, 10 hours later, pathologists would expect the
body temperature to have dropped about 15 degrees. And that would speed up if
the body was placed in a cold environment or slow down in a warm one. Although
it’s not clear if Rainey’s body was put into refrigeration in the medical
examiner’s office before these photos were taken, that would be a standard
procedure, Baden said. That means that if Rainey’s body temperature was still
94 degrees the morning after he died, his body temperature may have been as
high as 109 degrees when he died.
In the Rainey autopsy report, Miami-Dade medical
examiner Dr. Emma Lew notes that Rainey’s rectal temperature is at 94 degrees
12 hours after death. That, coupled with a 102 degree temperature taken by a
second nurse after he was found dead, does indicate that Rainey “had an
elevated body temperature at the time of death,” Lew notes. However, because it
remains unknown what Rainey’s body temperature was when he first entered the
shower room, Lew doesn’t conclude that it was the hot shower water that caused
Rainey’s increased body temperature. Rainey had defecated in his cell and had
smeared feces on himself, his cell and bedsheets, which is why he was taken to
the shower, the prosecutor’s report said.
Lew writes that it cannot
be ruled out that Rainey’s high temperature may have been associated with a
“psychotic episode which prompted him to smear feces on his body.”
MIAMI-DADE STATE ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
Water
flows through the wall and into the shower where inmate Darren Rainey was found
dead.
The medical examiner’s opinion in the prosecutor’s report cites
causes of death that “raise problems,” a forensic pathologist says.
Baden, who has examined
Rainey’s official autopsy report but who did not examine any of the documents
or photos that HuffPost reviewed, also questioned the stated cause of death.
Baden says it “raises problems.”
“Number one, schizophrenia
is a disease; it isn’t a cause of death. Schizophrenia is not a cause of sudden
death,” Baden said. Secondly, Baden explained, according to the autopsy
report, Rainey’s heart disease is “minimal” and his “heart is not remarkable
for a 50-year-old person.” Lastly, Baden said, the indication that confinement
in the shower also contributed to his death “does not make sense.”
“That wouldn’t cause death
itself,” Baden said. “People don’t die in confined spaces unless there’s
something else happening. The only way you really die in a confined space is if
you use up all the oxygen.”
Baden also questions the
notion that the death was accidental.
“What is being described
is a natural death,” Baden said. “Even if it were schizophrenia and it was
heart disease, why then is it an accident? Because of the confined space? No.
The cause of death as indicated does not appear to me to be consistent with the
autopsy findings.”
“Skin slippage” doesn’t explain the state of Rainey’s body, a
pathology expert says.
Rainey’s skin wounds,
described as “skin slippage” by Dr. Lew, were the result of normal post-mortem
decomposition, “exposure to a warm, moist environment” and friction or pressure
placed on his body by medics or prison officials who were trying to revive him
or when they moved his body.
Baden also questions this
conclusion.
“Skin slippage can occur
in decomposition, but not in a matter of hours. That doesn’t make sense either
that there’d be skin slippage of any kind at this point after his death,” Baden
said. “The circumstances I’m aware of along with the autopsy report would
indicate the cause of death is not accurate and that he died of the heat, the
hot water that he was placed under. The cause of death as attributed does not
make sense.”
Prosecutors disregarded the testimony of multiple inmates
because they say it was inconsistent.
Multiple inmates claimed
that the shower had been used to punish uncooperative inmates, the prosecutor
report noted. Some inmates said that they saw Rainey’s lifeless body carried
out of the shower and that his skin appeared to be peeling off his body and was
red in some sections. One inmate claimed Rainey looked like a “boiled lobster.”
Other inmates said they could hear Rainey screaming in the shower for several
minutes.
One inmate, Harold
Hempstead, who worked as an orderly in the mental ward building of the prison
that Rainey was housed in on the night he died, said he heard Rainey cry out,
“I’m sorry,” “I won’t do it anymore” and “I can’t take it no more,” until the
inmate “heard a fall,” according to the prosecutor’s report.
The prosecutor’s office
ultimately found the inmates’ allegations not credible. They said Hempstead’s
timeline of events did not match that of prison surveillance video from the night Rainey died and said
he couldn’t have seen some of things he claimed to have seen. Prosecutors also
suggested that other inmates’ allegations may have been influenced by meetings
with Hempstead.
The prosecutors concluded
that there was no evidence that the shower had ever been used for punishment
and that the shower Rainey was placed in was neither “dangerous nor
unsafe.”
Lew, the medical examiner,
ultimately concluded that claims that temperatures inside the shower room
were “excessively high” were unsubstantiated. She dismissed reports that the
water temperature was 160 degrees and said that there was no evidence
Rainey had actually suffered any burns to his body at all. Lew said that people
with schizophrenia can have an “impaired ability to compensate for heat stress”
and that, coupled with a medication he was taking to help with his mental
illness, it could have contributed to Rainey suffering from hyperthermia
in the shower and a “pre-disposition to sudden cardiac arrest.”
DADE CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION
Surveillance
video the night inmate Darren Rainey died shows prison staffers carrying his
body from the second-floor shower down to a stretcher.
When contacted about the
documents and photos reviewed by HuffPost, Ed Griffith, public information
officer for the Miami-Dade State Attorney’s Office, said that in the course of
its investigation into the incident, the office “amassed a large volume” of
materials and as such it would not be possible to include every detail in their
report.
“The contradictions and
inconsistencies contained within the materials are part of the reason for the
prolonged consideration,” Griffith said.
When asked about the water
temperature in the shower room that “hurt” the skin of Dixon, the prison health
and safety inspector, Griffith explained that Dixon tested the hot water two
days after Rainey’s death, which “would not be determinative evidence of the
water temperature two days earlier.”
With regard to the medic’s
report describing “2nd and 3rd degree burns on approximately 30 percent of his
body,” Griffith said that those details were a “recounting” of what others at
the scene of Rainey’s death told him when he arrived and does not reflect “an
independent medical evaluation.”
Griffith provided HuffPost
with Lopez’s sworn testimony about what he saw the
night of Rainey’s death and the contents of his report. Lopez says that the
description of Rainey’s body on the front page of his report was what he was
told by prison staffers. In his testimony, he added that he saw “what appeared
to be burns,” but when asked if what he observed could have been “skin
slippage,” Lopez says, “it could have been.”
“The amount of slippage,
about 30%, is not inconsistent with the photos,” Griffith added. He also said
that the slippage did not begin until Rainey’s “skin was touched in efforts to
provide medical assistance” and that three prison nurses noted that Rainey’s
skin appeared to be intact while he was still on the floor of the shower.
Initially, Griffith explained that skin was displaced when Rainey was picked up
and carried to the stretcher. Then more skin was displaced on his chest and
back while CPR was performed for about 45 minutes.
Regarding nurse Wilson’s
report about a nearly 105 degree temperature measured from Rainey’s ear,
Griffith referred to Wilson’s sworn testimony, which he also
provided to HuffPost, in which she does not mention the ear temperature
reading. Instead, she says she tried to take Rainey’s temperature with a
digital thermometer under his arm and rectally but both attempts resulted in an
“error” readout on the thermometer.
Regarding Rainey’s body
temperature at death, Griffith said “there definitely was an elevated body
temperature.” But attempting to explain that temperature, “in the absence of
burns, is one of the reasons the case evaluation was prolonged.”
Griffith said his office
ruled out the water causing Rainey’s raised body temperature “because of the
medical evidence and witnesses.”
Lew, responding to
Braden’s remarks that Rainey’s body temperature was likely higher than normal
when he died, told HuffPost she doesn’t disagree with his point. On his remarks
on Rainey’s cause of death not making sense, Lew said, “Dr. Baden is an expert.
Experts are allowed to give their opinions.” Responding to Baden’s remarks on
skin slippage, she said simply, “It is Dr. Baden’s opinion.”
The Miami-Dade Police
Department did not respond to multiple requests for comment.
Milton Grimes, attorney
for the Rainey family, said he could not comment specifically on the documents
and photos reviewed by HuffPost but did say he has seen inconsistencies in the
report when compared against other materials.
“I can say that a lot of
statements in the report are inaccurate based on the discovery we have
received. I am confused and troubled by what I’ve seen,” Grimes said and added
that there are “important, pertinent and relevant facts” that were left out of
the prosecutor’s memo.
“At a minimum, based on
the totality of information that I have seen,” Grimes said, “there was culpable
negligence in the death of Darren Rainey.”
In 2016, Grimes filed a
lawsuit on behalf of Rainey’s family against the Florida Department of
Corrections over the death, which is pending.
In
May 2016, The New Yorker published an article written by Eyal Press about the
experiences of Harriet Krzykowski, a former counselor at Dade Correctional
Institution who says she faced retaliation from prison staff when she raised
questions about alleged inmate abuse in the facility. She told the magazine the
water from the faucet that fed into the shower where Rainey died was so hot
that she sometimes used it to cook ramen noodles.
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