Attorney letter to AG re Request for Civil Rights Investigation of the Sheriff of Maricopa County, April, 2008
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Michael C. Manning STINSON MORRISON HECKER (602)212-8503 mmanning@stinson.com LIP www.stinson.com 1850 North Central Avenue Suite 2100 Phoenix, AZ 85004-4584 Tel (602)279-1600 April 23, 2008 Fax(602)586-5240 Honorable Michael B. Mukasey Attorney General of the United States U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE 950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW Washington, DC 20530-0001 Re: Request for Civil Rights Investigation of the Sheriff of Maricopa County, Arizona Dear Mr. Attorney General: I write to request an investigation into a pattern and practice of cruelty, abuse, deliberate indifference, and willful civil right's violations against detainees and inmates by Sheriff Joseph Arpaio and the Maricopa County Sheriffs Office. I am a commercial litigation attorney practicing in Phoenix, Arizona, but have served several families as counsel in wrongful death cases against Sheriff Arpaio and his Maricopa County's Sheriffs Office. It is my belief that the Maricopa County jails have become unconstitutional places of punishment. In support of this statement, the following is a summary of some of the cases I have litigated against Sheriff Arpaio. Other attorneys in this community have similar summaries. KANSAS CITY OVERLAND PARK WIC�IITA WASHJNUTON. O.C. l'lll)ENIX ST LOUI>' OMAHA IF.FFF.R,;ON CITY Let me begin with an inmate death civil rights case against Sheriff Arpaio that settled recently for $2,000,000. The case was about the death of Brian Crenshaw. Brian went into MCSO's jail for shoplifting dishtowels for his girlfriend. He was legally blind and mentally disabled. Jail doctors told MCSO four times in writing that Brian was too disabled and too vulnerable to be put in Tent City. MCSO ignored their own doctor's orders and put him into Tent City. Brian could manage his mental disability if he took his prescribed medicine each day. MCSO compounded the cruelty of the dangerous placement into Tent City by deciding not to give Brian the medicine he needed. Later, an overworked jail guard picked a fight with Brian, cuffed him, then roughed him up badly enough that he had to be sent to the jail infirmary. Without any hearing or investigation of Brian's claim of the guard's excessive force, MCSO put him in solitary confinement, refused him his mental health medication for six days, refused him the pain medication which had been ordered by the jail doctor after the altercation, and offered Brian food only twice in six days. Jail doctors were supposed to check on Brian's well-being three days into his solitary confinement - they never did.