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Carrollton's police chief has been held in contempt of court for his role in the removal of a mentally ill man from jail and the man's banishment to Florida in April 2015.
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A Carroll County jury late Tuesday found two local police officers not guilty in connection with charges stemming from the removal of a mentally ill man from jail last year and his banishment to Florida.
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Though illegal in Kentucky since 1965, the age-old practice of banishment still occurs today. Denver Stewart's story shows how wrong turns by the legal system can wreak havoc on someone’s life.
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Throughout our extensive reporting on jails this year, one group has been relatively quiet: the Kentucky Jailers Association.
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A Carrollton man claims police put him a bus without his prescribed medications and banished him to Florida. Adam Horine says he experienced “psychotic episodes” during the trip, urinated on himself and was “forced to catheterize himself.”
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Police found "no indication of foul play" in Derrick Rose's jail death. But our investigation found a bevy of missteps, from the courts system to the corrections system and everything in between. "It's a cascade of failures, it really is," one expert said.
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Carrollton Mayor Robb Adams issued a show of support for the city's police chief and a veteran officer who were indicted on kidnapping and misconduct charges. Adams noted that both officers will continue to work as city employees, but in a non-law enforcement capacity. Adams also stressed that the officers are "innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt."
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A grand jury indicted the Carrollton police chief and a veteran officer for allegedly springing a mentally ill man from jail, putting him on a bus and banishing him to Florida earlier this year.
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Adam Horine, the mentally ill Kentucky man removed from jail and put on a bus to Florida by Carrollton police earlier this year, faces a new criminal charge. Meanwhile, a police misconduct probe continues.
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An estimated 15 to 25 percent of jail and prison inmates nationwide suffer from serious mental illness, according to the Treatment Advocacy Center.