Justice Department Inspector General Launches Investigation Into Inmate Death Following Judge's Contempt Order
Reason first reported last week on the scathing contempt order, which said the Bureau of Prisons should be "deeply ashamed" of its conduct.

After an outraged judge issued an order holding the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) in civil contempt for allowing an incarcerated man to waste away from treatable cancer—first reported by Reason last week—the Office of Inspector General for the Justice Department announced on Friday that it is launching an investigation into the case.
Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz said in a press release that his office would investigate the circumstances of federal inmate Frederick Bardell's death due to colon cancer. U.S. District Judge Roy Dalton for the Middle District of Florida Orlando Division requested the investigation in his contempt order, writing that the Bureau of Prisons' cruel treatment of Bardell, as well as its misrepresentations to his court, were "inconsistent with the moral values of a civilized society and unworthy of the Department of Justice of the United States of America."
Sen. Dick Durbin (D–Ill.) tweeted that the case was "appalling" and called for an investigation.
The details unveiled in this case are appalling, and may not be isolated. Given BOP's disgraceful actions in this case, I'm asking the DOJ IG to investigate BOP's treatment of medically vulnerable individuals both while incarcerated and upon their release. https://t.co/L3nTxiqiYZ
— Senator Dick Durbin (@SenatorDurbin) October 12, 2022
Criminal justice advocates say the case is another example of why the BOP needs more oversight. Earlier this month, bipartisan legislation was introduced in both the House and Senate that would create an independent ombudsman to act as a BOP watchdog.
"I am glad the IG is going to look into this matter, but, frankly, we need more investigations to occur before people die, not after," says Kevin Ring, president of the criminal justice advocacy group FAMM. "That's why we are pushing for independent oversight of prisons. We need to prevent these tragedies instead of reacting to them."
Bardell was convicted in 2012 of downloading child pornography from a peer-to-peer file-sharing website and sentenced to 151 months in federal prison. In November 2020, he filed a motion for compassionate release, arguing that he likely had advanced colon cancer. An affidavit from a doctor accompanying his motion said he had "a high likelihood of having cancer of the colon with likely metastasis to the liver."
Dalton denied Bardell's motion, largely based on reassurances from the BOP that Bardell was receiving adequate treatment and that no one had determined his condition was life-threatening. He was not being treated.
Bardell filed a second motion for compassionate release in February 2021, this time with an affidavit from an oncologist. The oncologist wrote that a more than year-long delay in getting Bardell a colonoscopy after he first noticed rectal bleeding "allowed this tumor to progress from a stage III with an average cure rate of 71 percent in November 2019 to a stage IV disease in September 2020."
That delay would "more likely than not, cost Mr. Bardell his life in a matter of weeks to months," the oncologist wrote.
The government again opposed Bardell's motion, arguing that it was still not definitive that Bardell even had cancer. However, this time Dalton ordered Bardell to be released as soon as the U.S. Probation Office crafted a proper release plan for him.
But that's not what happened. Instead, the BOP immediately released Bardell and forced his parents to pay nearly $500 for a commercial flight to get their dying son home. By that point, Dalton wrote, Bardell "had a tumor protruding from his stomach and was visibly weak and bleeding." As Reason reported last week:
Although he had to be pushed out of prison in a wheelchair, a BOP van dropped Bardell off on a curb outside the Dallas/Fort Worth airport without a wheelchair and left him there. Bardell was weak, as well as bleeding and soiling himself, but he managed to navigate the airports, layovers, and connecting flights through the help of good Samaritans. When he arrived back in Florida to meet his parents, "his father had to take off his own shirt and put it on the seat of [Bardell's lawyer's] car to absorb the blood and feces," Dalton's opinion says.
Bardell died in the hospital nine days later. Pictures accompanying Dalton's order show Bardell severely emaciated.
In his contempt order, Dalton ordered the BOP to reimburse Bardell's family for the cost of the airline ticket, as well as more than $200,000 in attorney fees for a special master appointed to investigate the case.
BOP director Colette Peters said in a statement to The Washington Post that "my heart goes out to Mr. Bardell's family, to whom I send my deepest condolences. Humane treatment of the men and women in Bureau of Prisons custody is a paramount priority. In instances where we have failed at upholding our mission, we are taking steps to find out what happened, how it happened, and how we can prevent it from happening in the future."
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No person who masturbates to child pornography deserves this cruel and unusual punishment.
RIP in Power, sweet prince. You're in Heaven with the angels now.
Rabbi, you just grow stranger by the post.
Point is same thing happens to people in jail/prison regardless of what they have done to get there.
From a left libertarian perspective, how can processing child pornography be illegal? I can understand the production of child pornography being illegal but at some age, maybe 13+, children understand consent and have matured enough to express themselves sexually using any medium of their choice.
Producing it ought to be illegal at any age under 18. Distributing it should be illegal. The mere possession of it, however, should not be illegal. I loathe child pornography and sexualization of children as much as anyone. I cannot, however, bring myself to support the criminalization of the possession of photos no matter how disgusting the photos are.
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"my heart goes out to Mr. Bardell's family, to whom I send my deepest condolences. Humane treatment of the men and women in Bureau of Prisons custody is a paramount priority. In instances where we have failed at upholding our mission, we are taking steps to find out what happened, how it happened, and how we can prevent it from happening in the future."
Now THAT is some first class garbage language. Says nothing yet guarantees that nothing will be done. Amazing, huh?
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Did the BOP mistakenly think this guy was a January 6th detainee or something?
That is one of the few J6 paraders they've let out.
https://www.cnn.com/2021/11/03/politics/jan-6-rioter-released-unsafe-jail-conditions/index.html
Even CNN is covering the J6 political detainees more than Reason. But this pervert is worth two articles so far?
"After an outraged judge issued an order holding the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) in civil contempt . . . "
The entire BOP?
Any actual individual at all?
Is this like the red SUV, where there were no actual persons involved at all?
That Judge should name names, and put those named into prison until the matter is resolved. That is what contempt of court is for. No investigation needed; the judge gave an order, it was ignored (by people, not an institution).
Lock 'em up.
Agreed. We're approaching the point where a judges order against a government institution, can safely be ignored. Nothing will come of it except some rhetoric. Now if they actually arrested & jailed some of these self-important bureaucrats, maybe something would actually get accomplished. But I suppose it's expecting too much to believe that all people are Actually treated equally under the law.
Bardell was convicted in 2012 of downloading child pornography from a peer-to-peer file-sharing website and sentenced to 151 months in federal prison.
So millions of people got their hopes fulfilled?
Law enforcement likes to point out that a criminal who gets busted for some crime against other people has done it many times, and this is just the time they got caught.
It goes both ways.
I wonder if he was one of Buttplug's NAMBLA buddies.
Someone should ask Chemjeff if this guy was a NAMBLA member. As Jeffy is the new NAMBLA majority shareholder and CEO.
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Basic healthcare for felons? Ok.
Cancer treatment? Negative. I don't want my tax dollars wasted like this.