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“Malicious Abuse”: Inmate’s Freezing Passing Ruled Homicide, Lawsuit Reveals Horrific Details
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“Malicious Abuse”: Inmate’s Freezing Passing Ruled Homicide, Lawsuit Reveals Horrific Details

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Trigger warning: explicit description of violent death, mental illness

A jailed man’s death has just been ruled a homicide in Alabama, USA, after he was subjected to freezing temperatures, sparking allegations of deliberate abuse and neglect. The case has further unveiled a doctor’s note with gruesome details about the inmate, as well as unaddressed mental illness.

Highlights
  • An inmate died from hypothermia and his death was ruled a homicide.
  • The victim's mother filed a lawsuit alleging deliberate abuse and medical neglect.
  • The victim's death certificate listed hypothermia and sepsis from jail injuries as causes of death.

Inmate Anthony Don Mitchell, also nicknamed “Tony,” who had “serious mental and psychiatric needs,” was reportedly put in a concrete tank known as “the freezer” before he died from hypothermia.

Mitchell reportedly passed away on January 26, 2023, at the age of 33, while in custody at the Walker County Sheriff‘s Department after spending two weeks “incarcerated under horrendous conditions” at the Walker County Jail, Jasper, Alabama.

According to The Blaze, Mitchell’s mother, Margaret Mitchell, claimed in a 53-page lawsuit that officers at the jail deliberately exposed her son to freezing temperatures for more than 24 hours straight.

RELATED:

    A man’s death was ruled a homicide after he was subjected to freezing temperatures, sparking allegations of abuse and neglect

    Image credits: Secrets True Crime Podcast

    The heartbroken mother additionally alleged in the suit, filed last February, that law enforcement had forbidden her son from receiving medication, medical treatment, water, and access to the toilet.

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    On February 29, Walker County Coroner Joey Vick confirmed the authenticity of a death certificate posted on a Facebook group called Justice for Tony Mitchell.

    “Yes, this is the death [certification] that we signed,” Vick told AL.com.

    Image credits: Google Maps

    The documents, which were filed on February 1, 2023, listed Mitchell’s manner of death as a homicide and listed the causes as hypothermia and sepsis “resulting from infected injuries obtained during incarceration and medical neglect.”

    Jon Goldfarb, the attorney representing Mitchell’s family, said in the ongoing lawsuit against the Walker County Sheriff’s Department: “Tony’s death was wrongful, the result of horrific, malicious abuse and mountains of deliberate indifference.”

    The suit further indicated that the defendants included Walker County Sheriff Nick Smith, jail administrator Justin White, a nurse practitioner, an investigator, and more than a dozen jail correctional officers.

    A defendant is a person or entity against whom a legal action is brought, typically in a civil lawsuit or criminal proceeding.

    At the time of his death, Mitchell was being held at the jail after being arrested following “a mental breakdown”

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    Image credits: Secrets True Crime

    Randy McNeill, representing the sheriff and the correctional officers in the case, told USA Today that he could not comment on the case “because of the ongoing investigation.”

    The lawsuit also reportedly included that a doctor wrote in emergency room notes that Mitchell was “unresponsive apneic and pulseless and cold to the touch” when he arrived for treatment.

    The doctor’s note, as per the lawsuit, read: “I am not sure what circumstances the patient was held in incarceration, but it is difficult to understand a rectal temperature of 72° F 22° centigrade while someone is incarcerated in jail.”

    “The cause of his hypothermia is not clear. 

    “It is possible he had an underlying medical condition resulting in hypothermia. 

    “I do not know if he could have been exposed to a cold environment.”

    The death certificate labeled Mitchell’s death as a homicide due to hypothermia and sepsis

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    Image credits: Secrets True Crime

    A response to the 2023 lawsuit filed by jail nurses disputed Mitchell’s family’s claims that he was locked in a freezer.

    Attorneys for the sheriff’s office also said Mitchell was never placed in a freezer and asked that the allegation be removed from the lawsuit, as per AL.com.

    The document stated: “He was not held in a freezer.”

    Image credits: Secrets True Crime

    “In fact, the only times that he left the booking area was to attend his 72-hour hearing and to be transported to the hospital.”

    At the time of his death, Mitchell was being held at the jail after being arrested during a welfare check when shots were fired at deputies as they were called to Mitchell’s home for what family members believed to be “a mental breakdown,” USA Today reported.

    A Facebook group called Justice for Tony Mitchell published Mitchell’s death certificate, which was later verified by the coroner

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    Image credits: ABC 33/40

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    On the day he was taken to jail, a cousin called 911 for help because Mitchell was in serious need of psychiatric help, “spouting delusions about portals to heaven and portals to hell.”

    A written statement released from the sheriff’s office on Facebook reportedly stated that when deputies arrived at the home, Mitchell brandished a handgun, fired one shot toward officers, and fled into nearby woods.

    Mitchell was reportedly found in the woods with his face covered in a black substance. Upon arrival at the jail, a correctional officer claimed Mitchell had spray-painted his face black “because he was planning to enter a portal to hell located inside his house.”

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    “This was a human being who deserved better,” a reader commented

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    Andréa Oldereide

    Andréa Oldereide

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    I’m a journalist who works as Bored Panda’s News Team's Senior Writer. The news team produces stories focused on pop culture. Whenever I get the opportunity and the time, I investigate and produce my own exclusive stories, where I get to explore a wider range of topics. Some examples include: “Doberman Tobias the viral medical service dog” and “The lawyer who brought rare uterine cancer that affects 9/11 victims to light”. You've got a tip? email me: andrea.o@boredpanda.com

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    Andréa Oldereide

    Andréa Oldereide

    Writer, BoredPanda staff

    I’m a journalist who works as Bored Panda’s News Team's Senior Writer. The news team produces stories focused on pop culture. Whenever I get the opportunity and the time, I investigate and produce my own exclusive stories, where I get to explore a wider range of topics. Some examples include: “Doberman Tobias the viral medical service dog” and “The lawyer who brought rare uterine cancer that affects 9/11 victims to light”. You've got a tip? email me: andrea.o@boredpanda.com

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    Donata Leskauskaite

    Donata Leskauskaite

    Author, BoredPanda staff

    Hey there! I'm a Visual Editor in News team. My responsibility is to ensure that you can read the story not just through text, but also through photos. I get to work with a variety of topics ranging from celebrity drama to mind-blowing Nasa cosmic news. And let me tell you, that's what makes this job an absolute blast! Outside of work, you can find me sweating it out in dance classes or unleashing my creativity by drawing and creating digital paintings of different characters that lives in my head. I also love spending time outdoors and play board games with my friends.

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    Jeevesssssss
    Community Member
    9 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Holy cow. They go to do a welfare check on a guy clearly suffering from psychosis and THIS is his treatment??! Sepsis from infected injuries as well as hypothermia??! I feel sick. It would be completely unacceptable were he the worst type of criminal (if perhaps a nice fantasy for the child pørn peddlers etc.) but this is just... I feel ashamed to be of the same species.

    Nadine Bamberger
    Community Member
    9 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    In many US states, Florida for example, prisons are the biggest mental health care providers. And they just lock them up again and again without ever touching the root causes. Should be infuriating.

    Load More Replies...
    Jack Burton
    Community Member
    9 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Even if he was dangerous what was the point about this freezer tank ? Arresting him ? Ok he fired a gun towards police officers. I work in E.R in France and a lot of psychotic people are first arrested by police during mental breakdow or deliriously behavior rampage. But just a day or even few hours in custody are enough to bring them at hospital and then the psychiatrist can make a statement about mental healthcare needs. This story was just about cruelty, torture and at the end it's a police perpetrated homicide on a vulnerable person.

    Cora C
    Community Member
    9 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Police usually bring them straight to ER and we will admit them. But I think I can understand why, becuase they have to PAY for healthcare in USA.

    Load More Replies...
    Lantana Howell
    Community Member
    9 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is tragic and was 100% avoidable. No one deserves to die in such conditions.

    Load More Comments
    Jeevesssssss
    Community Member
    9 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Holy cow. They go to do a welfare check on a guy clearly suffering from psychosis and THIS is his treatment??! Sepsis from infected injuries as well as hypothermia??! I feel sick. It would be completely unacceptable were he the worst type of criminal (if perhaps a nice fantasy for the child pørn peddlers etc.) but this is just... I feel ashamed to be of the same species.

    Nadine Bamberger
    Community Member
    9 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    In many US states, Florida for example, prisons are the biggest mental health care providers. And they just lock them up again and again without ever touching the root causes. Should be infuriating.

    Load More Replies...
    Jack Burton
    Community Member
    9 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Even if he was dangerous what was the point about this freezer tank ? Arresting him ? Ok he fired a gun towards police officers. I work in E.R in France and a lot of psychotic people are first arrested by police during mental breakdow or deliriously behavior rampage. But just a day or even few hours in custody are enough to bring them at hospital and then the psychiatrist can make a statement about mental healthcare needs. This story was just about cruelty, torture and at the end it's a police perpetrated homicide on a vulnerable person.

    Cora C
    Community Member
    9 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    Police usually bring them straight to ER and we will admit them. But I think I can understand why, becuase they have to PAY for healthcare in USA.

    Load More Replies...
    Lantana Howell
    Community Member
    9 months ago DotsCreated by potrace 1.15, written by Peter Selinger 2001-2017

    This is tragic and was 100% avoidable. No one deserves to die in such conditions.

    Load More Comments
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