November 21, 2021

A Death Sentence for Disorderly Conduct

 




The story of Shali Tilson, a 22-year-old who died from dehydration at a jail in Georgia.

by JACLYNN ASHLY

It took a little more than atorture
week after his arrest for
twenty-two-year-old Shali Tilson
to be pronounced dead at the
Rockdale County Jail in Conyers,
Georgia, about a thirty-minute
drive east of Atlanta. The cause
of death: dehydration.
“Shali didn’t break any laws.
He didn’t hurt anyone.
He didn’t steal anything,” says
Tynesha, his grieving mother.

Shali was studying criminal
justice at Community College
of Rhode Island and working at
the statehouse. However, after
his father suff ered a stroke,
he returned to his family’s home
in Rockdale County in September
2017 to help care for him.

“I think it really upset Shali,
because he never saw his father
in that state before, and he felt like
he needed to be here to help him
recuperate,” Tynesha tells me, her
voice cracking. “He didn’t think
twice about it. He left his school
and his job. He gave up a lot
to come back and help his family.”

Shali, along with his sister, took
responsibility for the family’s bills
so that Tynesha could leave her
work and stay at home with Shali’s
father full-time. “Shali went to
physical therapy with his father.

He helped his father walk up and
down the driveway. He was a big
part of his father’s recovery.”
“He was very selfl ess,” she adds.
“He put everyone’s needs before
his own.” Tynesha describes
Shali as funny, friendly, loving,
and driven. “He was hardworking
and motivated. Whatever he
was going to do, he would do it.
In his twenty-two years of being
on this earth, if he didn’t do it,
then he was in the process of
getting it done.”

The pressures of seeing his father
in a vulnerable state began to
weigh on Shali, who suff ered from
bipolar disorder and schizophrenia.
In Rhode Island, he was able to
manage some of his mental health
issues with diet, exercise, and
medical marijuana — preferring this
regimen to the adverse side
eff ects of prescription medication.
In Georgia, however, access to
medical marijuana is limited;
Shali was forced to juggle the
emotional turmoil of seeing
his father suff ering at the same
time that he lost access to
the medicine he depended on to
stabilize his mental state.

“We saw the toll it was taking on
his mental health, seeing his
father in that state. He couldn’t
communicate with his father like
he used to. He didn’t know how to
handle that. It was overwhelming
for him,” Tynesha explains.

A Death Sentence

On the morning of March 3, 2018,
Shali suff ered a serious mental
health episode and wandered to
the family’s still-vacant former
apartment, which they had moved
out of a few months earlier, and
began slamming on the door. The
owner of the property, located just
down the street from their current
home, called the police on Shali,
assuming he was intoxicated.

According to a civil rights lawsuit
the family has lodged against
detention offi cials at the jail,
when the police arrived, it was
“apparent that [Shali] was in the
midst of a mental health crisis,”
and that prior to and during his
arrest, the young man “yelled
words and phrases that revealed
that his mental state was completely
detached from reality.”

Shali was arrested, transported to
the Rockdale County Jail, and
charged with disorderly conduct
and obstruction of justice, both
misdemeanors. Shali’s bond was
set at $6,000 — $850 of which
the family was expected to pay.
But they could not aff ord it.
“I felt panicked,” Tynesha
recounts. Despite the family
calling several times to request
a visit with their son, they were
told each time that Shali was
not permitted to see visitors.

On March 9, Tynesha and her
husband went to the jail to
demand a visitation. They were
told by one of the deputies that
Shali was under medical supervision
due to his erratic behavior.
They were assured, however,
that Shali was safe.

The family was told they could
return on March 12 for a visit. But
when Shali’s sister arrived at the
jail that day, she was again turned
away. Just a few hours later, Shali
was found dead in a fi ve-by-ten-foot
isolation cell — surrounded
by trash, food, feces, and urine.

According to the family’s civil
suit, when Shali arrived at the jail,
he “remained in an obvious state
of extreme mental distress”; an
offi cer punched him and forcibly
placed Shali into a restraint chair.
The detention offi cers used
force against Shali on numerous
occasions, the suit says. Shali
acted in an “erratic and unpredictable
— but not violent — manner”
that was “a clear manifestation
of his psychosis,” while repeatedly
requesting medical attention.

After about three days, Shali was
transferred to isolation in a
padded cell and placed on suicide
watch, in which the jail’s staff wa
expected to check on him every
fi fteen minutes. The cell he was
locked inside had no furniture,
no bed, no sink or other source of
water, and no toilet — only a hole
in the fl oor covered by a metal
grate for urination and defecation.
Shali remained in isolation for
the next seven days — and died
there. According to an autopsy
conducted by the Georgia Bureau
of Investigation (gbi), Shali died
from blood clots that formed in
his lungs owing to severe dehydration.
He had also experienced
a traumatic brain injury, but the
autopsy could not conclude how
that injury was sustained.

Mawuli Davis, a civil rights
attorney who has taken up Shali’s
case, tells me that Shali was left
without water for at least three
days. According to the civil suit,
the jail’s deputies observed Shali
kicking and banging on the door,
throwing himself against the
door and wall, crying out for help,
and asking for water in the days
leading up to his death — even
noting these observations in their
end-of-shift logs.

According to a grand jury
presentment, which was released
after a monthslong investigation
into Shali’s death, the Rockdale
County Jail did not preserve the
video recordings inside and
around Shali’s cell from March 9
through the early afternoon of
March 12, despite Georgia
mandating that visual recordings
in a jail setting be retained for at
least 180 days. The grand jury was
forced to rely on witness testimonies
for this period of time, which
they had no ability to confi rm.

Two of the jail staff stated that
they had provided Shali with a
cup of water and Gatorade on the
day of his death but were not
sure he drank them. The grand
jury discovered that Sergeant
Dan Lang, the supervisor at the
time of Shali’s death, had falsifi ed
and backfi lled the fi fteen-minute
suicide watch logs that morning,
when in reality he had ignored
Shali for hours before he was
found dead.

The grand jury was able to watch
time-stamped visual recordings of
the inside of Shali’s cell beginning
at 4 p.m. on March 12. It was
8:32 p.m. when Shali’s body was
fi nally discovered.
In the footage, Shali, who is naked
and surrounded by trash and
food, can be seen jumping up and
down, frantically slamming on
the door and pressing an emergency
button that inmates can
use to call for medical help, which
was not working at the time.

Shali then collapses and slumps
over in the corner of the cell.
The video shows his head dropping
to his chest as he loses
consciousness. About three hours
pass before the cell door is opened
and Lang fi nally checks on Shali,
who is unresponsive. A nurse
then arrives on the scene but
makes no attempts to revive him.
Shali’s family was informed the
following day. “My son received
a death sentence for disorderly
conduct,” Tynesha says, as tears
well up in her eyes. “He got a
death sentence for knocking on
the wrong door.”


Torture Chamber

Shali’s body had begun to grow
stiff with the onset of rigor
mortis by the time he was found.
According to the grand jury
presentment, a detainee who was
being held in a cell nearby testifi ed
that he heard Shali screaming
“help me,” and “why y’all doing
me like this,” and “I don’t want
to die like this,” shortly before he
succumbed to dehydration.

The fellow detainee mentioned,
however, that Shali had been
yelling similar statements
throughout the week he was in the
padded isolation cell. A medical
expert and former director and
chief medical examiner for the
gbi noted in his testimony to the
grand jury that the blood clots
in Shali’s lungs would have begun
to accumulate six to twelve hours
before his death.

Shali would have begun to
“experience low blood pressure
and his heart rate would have
been fast.” He also would have had
“dry mouth, possibly sunken
eyes and would have been
lethargic and confused,” the expert
said. “If medical personnel had
been checking skin turgor or
taking vital signs, the dehydration
would have been easily discernible
near the time of Tilson’s death.”

According to Davis, detention
offi cers did not once open the door
to Shali’s cell during the week he
was put into isolation — only
peeking through the cell door’s
window to observe him. The jail’s
staff claims they were not aware
that Shali was in physical distress.
“They never opened the door,”
Davis tells me. “They didn’t
realize he was in distress because
they did not care for him or check
on him. They never opened that
door until he was already dead.

“He was never taken for a shower.
He was not allowed to go to the
bathroom. The lights were not
dimmed, and he could not sleep.
He could not access water on his
own,” he adds. “He was in distress
within hours after they put him in
there because the whole situation
is like a torture chamber.”

The grand jury investigation
concluded that the jail’s administration
“failed to live up to [its]
responsibility [of ensuring Shali’s]
... safety and well-being” and that
this played a “signifi cant role in
failing to prevent [his] death.”

Despite this, however, the grand
jury did “not fi nd evidence that any
person criminally or intentionally
caused the death of Shali Tilson”
or that any “person or persons ...
intentionally withheld water” from
him or “consciously ignored signs
that he was suff ering from physical
distress and/or dehydration.”
The grand jury pointed to a lack of
adequate training of staff as a cause
of the deadly neglect and mistreatment
Shali faced in the Rockdale
County Jail.

“I’m so tired of hearing that these
people need more training,”
Tynesha says, her voice rising
sharply. “Shali was in that jail for
nine days. You have medical
staff and deputies at the jail, and
three diff erent shifts of people —
and not one of those people
noticed that Shali was severely
dehydrated and dying in front of
their eyes?

“It doesn’t take a rocket scientist
to have basic common sense,” she
adds. “I’m not a medical professional,
but I can tell when someone
needs help and when someone is
not well. Shali lost twenty pounds
over those nine days he was in
jail. When you’re severely dehydrated,
your skin doesn’t look the
same. Your eyes don’t look the
same. Your organs are shutting
down. You’re not the same person.
“They treated him worse than
an animal. How are you going to
train someone to see other people
as human beings? How does
that work?”

Despite the family’s civil lawsuit
against detention offi cials at
Rockdale County Jail, no one
has been held responsible for
Shali’s death.

Lang had been transferred to
the jail division several months
before Shali’s death, while
criminal charges were pending
over suspicions that he stole
$40,000 in cash and guns from
the evidence unit and sold them
at local pawnshops. Lang then
resigned in April 2018, just a
few weeks after Shali was found
dead. The gbi arrested him in
September over multiple charges
of theft. “If he wasn’t qualifi ed to
be responsible for property, why
would you put him over someone’s
life? It makes no sense,” Davis
says. “It speaks to the jail’s lack
of institutional control and
total disregard for the sacredness
of human life.”

Fiefdom Mentality

No offi cial statistics are made
public on the number of deaths
inside the thousands of jails
scattered across the United States,
where about 10.6 million Americans
are funneled each year.

Most of those in jail have not been
convicted of a crime and will be
released once they pay bail — or,
for those who are too poor, like
Shali’s family, they will remain in
pretrial detention until their case
is concluded.

A 2020 Reuters investigation
documented 7,571 inmate deaths
in more than 500 US jails from
2008 to 2019, a number that rose
25 percent over the last decade.
At least two-thirds of the inmates
who died in these jails were never
convicted of the charges on which
they were being held.

According to Atteeyah Hollie,
senior attorney at the Southern
Center for Human Rights, jails
are a “catchall” for the most
vulnerable sectors of the American
population, such as those suff ering
from mental illness, poverty,
homelessness, or substance abuse
issues. Everything from a minor
traffi c violation, which left Sandra
Bland hanged in a jail cell in Texas
in 2015, to asking for money on
the street can put someone behind
bars in the United States.

“We have people coming into jails
with a host of issues in the exact
moment when they are the most
vulnerable and in the height of
crisis,” Hollie says. “They need
the most help, and they need
interventions, but too often they
enter jail cells or cages, where that
help is not being provided.
“What we see a lot, with people
with mental health issues, is
that they are further punished in
jails by being put into solitary
confi nement,” Hollie adds.
“They are put in cells that, by
design, deprive them of all
sensory stimulation and do
nothing but infl ict more harm on
them. Having a psychiatric
disability adds to the penalty of
this whole system.”

Jails are run by elected sheriff s
who have “outsize power,”
Hollie says. The dramatic power
disparity between sheriff s and
inmates creates ample opportunities
for a “fi efdom mentality”
among sheriff s in US jails who
abuse their power.

Since Shali’s death, three other
inmates at the Rockdale County
Jail have died in custody — one
from alleged suicide, one from
medical complications, and
one who was found unresponsive
in her cell less than forty-eight
hours after her arrest.

The practice of outsourcing
medical care to for-profi t
companies has added to the
rising death toll. Reuters’s
investigation revealed that more
than 60 percent of America’s
top jails now hire private companies
to administer medical
care to inmates. They also found
that, from 2016 to 2018, the jails
relying on the fi ve leading health
care contractors had higher
death rates than facilities where
medical services are run by
government agencies.

The Tilson family’s civil suit
names Wellpath llc, a private
company that was contracted
to provide medical and mental
health services to Rockdale
County Jail, as being partly
responsible for Shali’s death.

“These companies’ primary
motive is to raise profi ts,” Hollie
explains. “And the way they do
that is by spending as little money
as possible. So, when you have
a situation where you have people
who are in the most need of help
being put in the care of a company
trying to spend as little money
as possible, then you have this
potentially deadly situation where
people are not getting the care
they need and losing their lives
because of that.”

Tynesha, meanwhile, has continued
to fi ght for justice years
after her son’s death. “I’m still
here, begging for justice for my
son,” she says. “We have two
dogs, and if I starved them and
left them severely dehydrated,
I would have been slapped
with a felony charge and thrown
in jail three years ago.

“But they have a badge that
allows them to take human life
and get away with it. And I’m
tired of it. I’m so tired of seeing
these families in Georgia that
are suff ering the same grief as I
am — so I’m going to keep
speaking up until I get justice for
Shali. And if I don’t get justice
for my son, maybe somebody else
in this fi ght will." 

JACOBIN

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