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A lawsuit resulting from the 2013 death of an inmate in the Montgomery County jail has been settled for more than $400,000. Ronald Gaunce's death was detailed in a 2015 KyCIR series on jail health care woes.
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A federal judge says there is evidence that a doctor, a nurse and the Montgomery County jailer all demonstrated “deliberate indifference” to the needs of an inmate who died in the jail. The inmate was featured in a KyCIR series last year on jail health care woes.
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Legislation designed to hold Kentucky’s jailers more accountable has achieved mixed results so far in this year’s General Assembly.
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The Kentucky Department of Corrections has named Rodney Ballard, Fayette County’s jailer, as its new commissioner.
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A panel to review deaths and near-deaths in Kentucky’s correctional facilities would be created by legislation introduced in the state House of Representatives. The proposal was sparked by KyCIR's investigations into jail deaths.
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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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Despite evidence, court settlements and sharp judicial opinions, Kentucky's Department of Corrections rarely probes deeply when a jail inmate dies. The agency has not sanctioned a single jail in connection with the more than 140 inmate deaths in the past five-and-a-half years.
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An examination of a health care system that runs counter to national standards, and often falls far short of meeting medical needs. While Kentucky counties look to cut costs, for-profit companies have stepped in. But inmates are suffering and state officials aren't doing anything about it.