Berliner Boersenzeitung - Extreme heat another form of death sentence in Texas jails

EUR -
AED 4.064723
AFN 75.974113
ALL 98.904461
AMD 428.519326
ANG 1.99829
AOA 1056.311002
ARS 1073.188322
AUD 1.60194
AWG 1.991988
AZN 1.881866
BAM 1.955994
BBD 2.238701
BDT 132.50316
BGN 1.957009
BHD 0.417096
BIF 3226.474667
BMD 1.10666
BND 1.427677
BOB 7.661761
BRL 6.004178
BSD 1.10875
BTN 92.930191
BWP 14.474653
BYN 3.628464
BYR 21690.534229
BZD 2.234901
CAD 1.491645
CDF 3173.351877
CHF 0.936472
CLF 0.036265
CLP 1000.675459
CNY 7.774843
CNH 7.75939
COP 4671.510277
CRC 574.723323
CUC 1.10666
CUP 29.326488
CVE 110.275952
CZK 25.288297
DJF 197.438904
DKK 7.458567
DOP 66.993021
DZD 146.740896
EGP 53.383722
ERN 16.599899
ETB 131.349424
FJD 2.420598
FKP 0.842787
GBP 0.833137
GEL 3.01566
GGP 0.842787
GHS 17.541742
GIP 0.842787
GMD 76.916514
GNF 9573.518268
GTQ 8.570387
GYD 231.873029
HKD 8.595704
HNL 27.570243
HRK 7.524193
HTG 146.29792
HUF 397.916722
IDR 16846.683805
ILS 4.156892
IMP 0.842787
INR 92.815455
IQD 1452.544262
IRR 46576.547237
ISK 149.907982
JEP 0.842787
JMD 174.527871
JOD 0.784291
JPY 159.245002
KES 143.035311
KGS 93.226467
KHR 4511.244219
KMF 492.408623
KPW 995.993291
KRW 1459.960952
KWD 0.338118
KYD 0.923992
KZT 533.512987
LAK 24168.089966
LBP 99288.577852
LKR 327.194756
LRD 214.539676
LSL 19.186465
LTL 3.267679
LVL 0.669407
LYD 5.249237
MAD 10.824075
MDL 19.352873
MGA 5074.228845
MKD 61.61612
MMK 3594.388218
MNT 3760.430323
MOP 8.878282
MRU 43.86378
MUR 50.928911
MVR 16.998597
MWK 1922.386698
MXN 21.681566
MYR 4.60701
MZN 70.693204
NAD 19.186292
NGN 1848.7984
NIO 40.802209
NOK 11.716419
NPR 148.688706
NZD 1.754195
OMR 0.426068
PAB 1.10881
PEN 4.110108
PGK 4.348235
PHP 62.033267
PKR 307.816682
PLN 4.286702
PYG 8640.389676
QAR 4.041601
RON 4.976433
RSD 117.040389
RUB 105.520538
RWF 1513.468256
SAR 4.15216
SBD 9.177048
SCR 15.069879
SDG 665.651393
SEK 11.358203
SGD 1.423989
SHP 0.842787
SLE 25.284194
SLL 23206.099285
SOS 633.628576
SRD 33.970037
STD 22905.625793
SVC 9.701964
SYP 2780.516152
SZL 19.190865
THB 36.037293
TJS 11.808873
TMT 3.87331
TND 3.373635
TOP 2.591907
TRY 37.835815
TTD 7.521271
TWD 35.224213
TZS 3010.115208
UAH 45.808066
UGX 4067.403961
USD 1.10666
UYU 46.092079
UZS 14126.402986
VEF 4008933.660515
VES 40.809831
VND 27265.333524
VUV 131.384888
WST 3.09584
XAF 655.986585
XAG 0.03523
XAU 0.000416
XCD 2.990804
XDR 0.818237
XOF 655.986585
XPF 119.331742
YER 277.024653
ZAR 19.199889
ZMK 9961.266992
ZMW 29.077311
ZWL 356.344039
  • CMSC

    0.0500

    24.77

    +0.2%

  • BCC

    0.4100

    141.39

    +0.29%

  • RBGPF

    59.5000

    59.5

    +100%

  • BTI

    -0.1300

    36.45

    -0.36%

  • JRI

    -0.1400

    13.53

    -1.03%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    7.03

    +1.42%

  • NGG

    0.3800

    70.05

    +0.54%

  • GSK

    -0.5800

    40.3

    -1.44%

  • SCS

    -0.2900

    13.2

    -2.2%

  • RIO

    -0.0100

    71.16

    -0.01%

  • CMSD

    0.1600

    24.94

    +0.64%

  • RELX

    -0.1200

    47.34

    -0.25%

  • VOD

    -0.0700

    9.95

    -0.7%

  • BCE

    0.0300

    34.83

    +0.09%

  • AZN

    0.7600

    78.67

    +0.97%

  • BP

    0.7000

    32.09

    +2.18%

Extreme heat another form of death sentence in Texas jails
Extreme heat another form of death sentence in Texas jails / Photo: Francois PICARD - AFP

Extreme heat another form of death sentence in Texas jails

Prison cells so hot that inmates splash themselves with toilet water. Jails described as ovens where convicts are baked to death.

Text size:

An advocacy organization is suing the US state of Texas to mandate air conditioning for tens of thousands of inmates, arguing that temperatures reaching 120 degrees Fahrenheit (49 Celsius), according to convicts, are cruel and unconstitutional.

The suit, filed by Texas Prisons Community Advocates, follows three inmate deaths in the state's prison system in 2023 that officials admitted were partly due to extreme heat.

Fifty-year-old Patrick Womack died after being denied a cold water bath. John Castillo, 32, who suffered from epilepsy, fetched water 23 times before he died with a body temperature above 105.8 degrees Fahrenheit.

And days before her death, Elizabeth Hagerty, 37, warned prison officials that she was at a higher risk of a heat stroke because of her obesity and diabetes.

"In Texas, every summer we get triple digit weather. Every summer we have high humidity, and every summer we lose lives," the group's director Amite Dominick told AFP. "Because we are baking people in that brick building."

- 'A matter of surviving' -

As temperatures rise in the southern United States, helped by global warming, inmates' families are never sure if their loved ones will survive another summer.

With only a third of the state's prison population of 134,000 inmates having adequate air conditioning, Dominick's group wants US District Court Judge Robert Pitman to require Texas to maintain temperatures of between 65 and 85 degrees Fahrenheit inside the cells.

The heat and humidity cause inmates to become more aggressive, and fuel suicide attempts and trauma which then spread to their communities, she warned.

"We do see both assault numbers and aggressive behavior in general and suicide rates increasing every summer," Dominick said. "It really is a matter of surviving each summer."

She added: "Ninety-five percent of these individuals are coming home. The question is, what condition are they going to be coming back to our communities in?"

- At least three deaths -

Official attitudes toward the problem have been changing in Texas in recent years.

In 2012, then Texas senator John Whitmire said that Texans "are not motivated" to pay for air conditioning for "sex offenders, rapists, murderers" at the expense of regular citizens who may also need air conditioning.

But at a court hearing in early August, TDCJ director Bryan Collier acknowledged the gravity of the situation and said that "heat contributed to the death" of the three inmates in 2023.

Since 2017, the agency has been asking the state legislature for funding. A part of the requested sum was finally disbursed last year and the agency is currently building 1,760 additional climate-controlled beds.

While Collier urged lawmakers to approve more funding, he said prisons will continue relying on fans, ice water, cold baths and temporary transfers to air-conditioned common areas such as the library or medical center to help inmates deal with the heat.

- A humanitarian right -

Meanwhile, the suffering continues.

Marci Marie Simmons, 45, who spent 10 years in a women's prison in Texas for accounting offenses, said at one point she saw the reading on a thermometer in her jail dormitory -- 136 degrees Fahrenheit.

It would get so hot that she would "use toilet water because the toilet water was cooler than the water that came out of the tap."

"We believe that safe temperatures, that's a humanitarian right," Simmons, who is now a spokeswoman for the Alliance of Women Impacted by Justice, told AFP.

From her home in Weatherford, Texas, Simmons uses social media to talk about the deadly heat in prisons.

"You are not asking for a privilege. You are asking for something human, humanitarian consideration for people who (are) inside the prison under extreme heat," she said.

Samuel Urbina, 59, was recently released from jail after serving a sentence for drug offenses. He recalled serving time in a jail in Brazoria county in Texas, where the temperature would climb to 120 degrees Fahrenheit.

"It's extremely hot, very humid," Urbina told AFP, before hugging his daughter who came to pick him up. "It was miserable. I would not come back."

(T.Burkhard--BBZ)