Lawyers Ask Judge To Hold Illinois In Contempt Over Treatment Of Prisoners With Mental Illness
Lawyers are asking a federal judge to hold the state of Illinois in contempt over the way it deals with mental illness in prisons.
The federal courts already ruled Illinois’ care for inmates with mental illness falls below the minimum requirements of the U.S. Constitution.
Harold Hirshman is one of the lawyers representing a class of inmates, and said the state is failing to comply with past court orders.
“I think it would be a good thing if the public knew more about the sad situation where a federal judge tells an agency to do something, and they just don’t do it,” Hirshman said Tuesday in a telephone interview.
The Illinois Department of Corrections already settled the lawsuit, and has built and re-purposed facilities to treat inmates with mental illness.
But Hirshman said staff shortages are still a huge problem. He says the department should have been doing more to enforce its contract with Wexford, the private company hired to run health care in the prisons.
“It’s remarkable when you have a contract with somebody … and they’ve never fulfilled the contract, that you keep letting them have the job,” Hirshman said. “I can’t imagine somebody running their home like that.”
Hirshman said he plans to ask the judge to order the Department of Corrections to spend more money recruiting and retaining mental health workers.
He said Illinois is at least 75 people short of the number mental health professionals needed to comply with court orders.
The Illinois Department of Corrections did not respond to a request for comment.
Links
- ‘College Behind Bars’ PBS Documentary Shines A Light on Prison Education
- New Illinois Policy Bans Prisoners From Receiving Content Downloaded From The Internet
- Senator Bennett Says Education In Illinois Prisons Is ‘Inadequate’
- The Reason Why Hundreds Of Books Were Removed From An Illinois Prison Library