-
Trump Sours on British Leader Over Iran War: ‘What If Donald Shouts at Me?’ - 39 mins ago
-
Europe Clinches Critical Mineral Access With Australian Trade Deal - about 1 hour ago
-
Late Night Doesn’t Feel So Hot About ICE at the Airport - 2 hours ago
-
The United States Is No Longer the Leader of the Free World - 3 hours ago
-
49ers Prediction Bags Dynamic Weapon for QB Brock Purdy - 3 hours ago
-
Colombian Military Plane Crash Kills 66 and Injures Dozens - 4 hours ago
-
Trump, Who Calls Mail-in Voting ‘Cheating,’ Just Voted by Mail - 4 hours ago
-
Why there are limited benefits when parents hold back their child in kindergarten - 5 hours ago
-
Ukraine Spent Big to Shield Energy Industry From Drones. Is the Mideast Next? - 5 hours ago
-
AOC Says Prediction Market Insider Trading Ban ‘Not Enough’ - 5 hours ago
L.A. County pushes new jail safety measures amid deaths
Los Angeles County leaders are demanding the Sheriff’s Department ramp up safety measures within the jail system as inmate deaths continue to mount.
Ten people died inside L.A. County jails in the first two months of this year, putting the county on track for another record-setting year of in-custody deaths. Autopsies to determine causes for all the deaths are still pending.
County supervisors voted 4 to 0 on Tuesday on a motion, crafted by Supervisor Janice Hahn, requiring the Sheriff Department take a series of steps to reduce inmate deaths, including increasing access to the overdose reversal drug Naloxone, more closely monitoring cameras and beefing up safety checks.
“If we don’t address this now, we will see another record year of deaths in the County jails — a record we do not want to repeat,” the motion stated.
The death rate has eclipsed the pace of 2025, which saw nine deaths by the end of February. The year ended with 46 in-custody deaths, a jump from the 32 reported deaths in 2024.
Supervisor Kathryn Barger abstained from the vote, arguing the county could not address the death rate without building a new facility.
“We must be honest about the limitations of facilities that were never designed to house today’s population,” she said in a statement. “I have consistently called for a modern replacement facility focused on treatment and rehabilitation because that is where the real solution lies.”
Sheriff Robert Luna conceded this month that 2026 was “not off to a good start.” He framed the challenge as due partially to the fact that the county was booking people who were older and sicker than prior populations and needed more intensive care than could be offered by the jail system. Four in 5 people face a mental or physical health issue, the department said.
“Every time I get notified that someone in my care has passed away, it’s like a kick in the groin,” Luna said.
The department said in a statement that it has “taken aggressive action to prevent overdoses and violence,” but believes “no jail system can eliminate all risks when people enter custody already critically ill.”
The supervisors voted more than four years ago to shut down Men’s Central Jail, a downtown facility notorious for dangerous and deteriorating conditions, without building a replacement. Since then, inspectors continued to find a litany of problems inside the jail, including mildew and lack of food.
“The fact is that we need to close down Men’s Central,” said Peggy Lee Kennedy, one of several callers to the board meeting who urged the county to speed up the closure. “Why are all these people living there with major mental health issues instead of getting the help they really truly need?”
The county continues to face intense scrutiny from the state over the conditions inside the jail. California Atty. Gen. Rob Bonta sued the Sheriff’s Department in September alleging that inmates “are forced to live in filthy cells with broken and overflowing toilets, infestations of rats and roaches, and no clean water for drinking or bathing.”
Bonta alleged inmates were barred from mental and medical care, leading to a “shocking rate of deaths inside the jails, many of which are caused by preventable circumstances, such as overdoses, suicides, or violence among incarcerated persons.”
Times staff writer Salvador Hernandez contributed reporting.
Source link






