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Why did 220 inmates die in Ohio’s prisons within four years?

Over a year ago, we set out to find out who was dying in Ohio’s prisons and why these deaths were occurring.

The Cincinnati Enquirer, the Columbus Dispatch and USA TODAY Network Ohio reviewed complaints, inspection reports, autopsies, obituaries, investigative documents, surveillance videos and other records related to what happened in Ohio’s prisons.

We interviewed more than 40 sheriffs, state officials, politicians, criminal justice experts, inmates and their families. We toured several prisons and made more than 135 records requests.

The Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction provided copies of inspection reports, prison standards and a table of reported deaths. We tracked down coroner reports for nearly all 219 deaths reported to the state between January 2020 and December 2023.

The investigation took more than a year, largely due to delays in submitting public records, with some counties not providing jail surveillance footage until several months after we received our requests and only after our legal team asked for it.

It has also taken time to gain the trust of those who have lost loved ones behind bars. Many have spoken out, demanding changes in prison operations so that other families do not have to suffer the same pain as they did.

(Reporters from USA TODAY’s Ohio newspaper network spent a year investigating deaths in the state’s prison system. Consider supporting their work with a subscription. )

Dying behind bars: At least 220 people died in Ohio prisons within 4 years

July 14, 2023; Mansfield, OH, USA; Lacee Bowersox blames the Richland County Jail for the December 2021 death of her brother, Zachery Marshall. He had trouble breathing and called an ambulance, but was eventually arrested on an outstanding warrant. In jail, he did not receive the medical care he needed, she said. He died less than two weeks later from endocarditis and sepsis.

Across Ohio, people are dying in local jails. Suicides, drug overdoses, withdrawals and medical problems claim an average of one life each week.

Why does this happen so often?

Read the full story.

Who dies behind bars in Ohio’s prisons?

Maggie J. Copeland, 29, of Mansfield, is seen unconscious in this jail surveillance video as she is taken on a stretcher from the Richland County Jail on May 11, 2022. Less than a half hour later, she was pronounced dead at OhioHealth Mansfield Hospital.

Every year, dozens of Ohioans die in local prisons, losing their lives to suicide, drug overdoses, medical neglect, violence, accidents, or other causes.

One man choked on a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. Another was strangled. Two inmates beat a man unconscious with vicious blows. In other cases, inmates or prison guards administered opioids that caused fatal overdoses.

Read the full story.

Ohio’s prisons house about 300,000 people each year. How does the system work?

July 13, 2022; Columbus, Ohio, USA; The new James A. Karnes Corrections Center for Franklin County was dedicated Wednesday, but the $360 million facility won't open until the fall. Mandatory Photo Credit: Barbara J. Perenic/Columbus Dispatch

On any given night, Ohio’s 89 prisons hold about 16,500 people, and prison guards detain about 300,000 people each year – some of whom are incarcerated multiple times.

Prisons are not the same as detention centers. They are temporary holding facilities for people who have just been arrested, are awaiting court appearances, are on bail, or are serving short-term prison sentences.