Texas Prisoners Are Being 'Cooked Alive' by High Temperatures, Investigation Says
Last year, one prison's temperatures stayed above 100 degrees for 11 days.

Inmates in Texas state prisons are being "cooked alive" by scorching temperatures in facilities without air conditioning, a new investigation claims. Documents obtained by The Texas Newsroom, a public radio collaboration of multiple Texas stations, showed that even as inmates died with body temperatures nearing 107 degrees, officials have continued to blame their deaths on causes other than extreme heat.
In 2023, a Texas prisoner filed a lawsuit challenging the state's refusal to adequately control heat levels. The suit alleged that the state was violating its own laws surrounding prison temperatures, as well as violating inmates' Eighth Amendment rights to be free from cruel and unusual punishment.
"For many years now, the extreme heat has wreaked havoc on Texas's prisons, coinciding with a dramatic increase in illnesses and deaths. And as temperatures increase with global climate change, the problem is only getting worse. Last summer was the second hottest on record in Texas, with some [Texas Department of Criminal Justice] units reaching an astonishing 149 [degrees] Fahrenheit," reads an amended complaint filed in April. "Extreme heat in Texas's unairconditioned prisons caused or contributed to an average of 14 deaths per year from 2001 to 2019."
Only about 30 percent of Texas prisons are fully air-conditioned. While state law mandates that prison temperatures be kept between 65 degrees and 85 degrees, at dozens of state prisons, daily high temperatures topped that. At one prison, Garza West Unit, temperatures stayed above 100 degrees for 11 days straight in the summer of 2023.
This week, The Texas Newsroom published a series of documents obtained in connection with the suit. The report detailed the circumstances of several inmate deaths, in which state officials admitted that extreme heat may have played a role—but wasn't a direct cause.
One 50-year-old inmate died with a core body temperature of 106.9 degrees, and another 32-year-old prisoner died with a 107.5 body temperature. Elizabeth Hagerty, 37, died in June of last year after complaining of a heat rash and gastrointestinal issues. At the time of her death, the temperature in her cell was over 95 degrees.
"[The Texas Department of Criminal Justice] does not count those deaths as heat deaths because the primary cause of death was due to other reasons such as underlying medical disorders, overdoses, etc.," a TDCJ spokesperson told The Texas Newsroom.
However, not everyone agrees.
"To suggest to the community, to the citizens of Texas, that the heat is not killing people in the Texas prison system is an absolute falsehood," said Jeff Edwards, the plaintiff's lead lawyer, told The Texas Newsroom. "It's outrageous, it's wrong and that's what our case is all about."
By refusing to install adequate heat-control systems, Texas officials aren't just imprisoning their inmates—they're subjecting them to obviously cruel conditions. A prison sentence shouldn't also mean enduring life-threatening heat.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Well good luck getting A/Cs right now with 410A phase out now in effect, because global warming. Shortages everywhere. Thanks government.
By refusing to install adequate heat-control systems, Texas officials aren't just imprisoning their inmates—they're subjecting them to obviously cruel conditions.
Also please Emma, this is not obvious. A/C is relatively new. And since the EU doesn't even mandate this a universal right for its free citizens, don't see how here in America you can make that claim. Control of the weather is in the hands of the Rothschilds and not Texas officials.
The EU doesn't even mandate AC for Olympic athletes. I can't imagine how they treat prisoners.
We've got literally over a 100 window AC units unsold at the Walmart where I work, each $150 or so
Shh!! You're gonna disrupt the MAGA talking points and make them cry.
If they built proper dungeons underground they would stay at around 58F all year.
65 minimum? Pussies.
Even with the lava?
*pushes glasses up bridge of nose*
It’s called magma when it’s underground.
That's the racist word for lava. Stop separating them by region. We need lava unity.
That's awfully igneous of you.
Best thread today!
Safer from tornadoes too.
I like where you're going with this.
Did these recommendations get passed through the environmental impact plan or are we just accepting the conflicting requirements? And it seems silly to call the conditions of most of human history as some sort of special abuse.
Fortunately for sane humans in the United States, many of the "conditions of most of human history" have been overcome and relegated to the type of 3rd world nation you favor.
" . . . officials have continued to blame their deaths on causes other than extreme heat."
COVID, yeah, that's it, COVID.
Died with COVID.
They had hot covid.
Is hot covid another Chinese hoax ?
‘Chinese hoax’
Like what?
No. It is covid with added spices and tajin.
I survived my childhood with limited air conditioning. I remember many 100 degree days. Baking hay, detassling corn, riding criterions. Sounds like another good reason to avoid prison. Also sounds a little better than my childhood.
Skimming TFA doesn’t educate me.
A lot of buildings get ferociously hot inside compared to outside, such as the classic dog/baby in a car.
How are these prisons built? Do they amplify the heat, like a car, or reduce it, like my home without A/C? We had a 2-3 week heat spell, mostly 100F+; 4 days in a row at 105F outside, couple at 102F. I didn’t turn on the swamp cooler until 95F most days, sometimes 97F.
And why is this a problem now, and not, say 20-50-100 years ago? What changed?
Emma dear, this is the kind of shit a good reporter would find out.
I too would like to know more. Swamp cooler with high humidity during monsoon season. Would see outside at 110+.
One factor could be prison drug use as many will increase body heat or make you sensitive to heat.
Really curious as to why one prisoner name was mentioned but not the other.
More people are overweight now. Thinner people can handle the heat better.
Poor Jeff.
Basement dwelling helps.
I have a theory that he ate so much Ben & Jerry’s ice cream that he eventually found he couldn’t fit through the door to enable egress from his basement , and is now trapped there.
Like the South Park WoW guy?
https://pbs.twimg.com/media/CKjSDLdUsAAojV4.jpg:large
Prisons are hot boxes, no A/C, few or no windows, no fans, lots of people crowded in a room. Definitely not designed to shed heat.
On that note, did Little Emma actually VISIT one of these hellhole prisons to see anything for herself? Should be easy, as it’s middle of summer right now.
Nah, she just phones it in, and only included information that supported her conceived narrative.
Agree in re: wanting to know more. Officials say the people that died had other things going on (e.g., drug use, medical ailments, etc.). However, the article says not everyone agrees and then only cites the lawyer who is bringing the lawsuit. Getting info from only governmental officials (who have a large incentive to explain the heat away) or the lawyer (who has a large incentive to say its the heat) isn't really that helpful. Given this, the final conclusion that "obviously" this is cruel and unusual punishment seems a bit premature.
I hadn't seen that "obviously" -- thanks.
Emma, dear, anyone who has to say obviously, clearly, indisputably, inarguably, or any other of those empathizers, is whistling past a graveyard. All they do is signal that you are desperate to yank the rubes in before they get a chance to realize they don't want to be in.
Like "Hurry hurry, this deal is only good in the next 5 minutes" -- because they don't want you to realize what a stinker of a deal it is.
Stop trying to sucker the rubes. If your facts are valid (I can't tell) and complete (they are too one-sided), if your logic is impeccable (you don't have enough facts to tie the logic together), then you don't need those adjectives to rope in the suckers.
We’re also talking about an Emma Camp article. Little Emma is usually light on facts, often to preserve her leftist narrative. Sometimes she’s just sloppy.
Little Emma isn’t a reporter, and if she was, not a good one.
Certainly better than mine. I lived in a matchbox buried in hot asphalt. We had to eat the asphalt every morning for breakfast then go to the mill for a 26 hour workday - for no pay and 220 degree heat. If we even thought about complaining, then we got the business end of a flamethrower. I tell you - napalm is a lot more uncomfortable than a mere hot day. Kids these days just don't know how good they have it.
Even worse. You had to walk around with people who weren't masked up.
And when we got home, our father would chop us in two with an ax.
Just 2 pieces?
Easy life.
And you try and tell that to the young people of today...and will they believe you?
And you try to post as if you have 3 brain-cells, shit-bag.
Being outside in 100 degrees is a bit different than being inside where the corresponding temperature is likely 120 degrees.
Texas is hot.
Film at 11.
So I found the source material of Emma’s article. It also includes Northern states like Indiana in the collection of lawsuits.
Sheriff Joe Arpaio in Arizona ran a tent city lockup for Maricopa county for years. Arizona gets pretty hot. I never heard about a rash of heat related deaths there.
ITS A DRY HEAT!!
They were outdoors. That is better than being cooked in an indoor oven.
I grew up in a world where AC wasn't available to the vast majority of people if at all. Didn't have central air til I was in my 30s and still only run it a couple of weeks in the summer. Somehow the species survived. Having said that being locked in a concrete box with limited circulation for weeks in 100 degree temperatures sounds cruel to me. Not everybody locked up is guilty of a capital crime and if they're being executed by heat it's a sentence they don't deserve. If the state of Texas requires prisons to maintain a particular temperature then they are bound to expend the resources to make that happen.
"...If the state of Texas requires prisons to maintain a particular temperature then they are bound to expend the resources to make that happen..."
See this as the key: Regardless of the architecture, the state, by law, requires them to be cooler. Texas state gov't, obey the law.
They may find it easier to change the law.
That may be, but until they do, obey the law.
A government owes its prisoners humane living conditions, of course. Fire the administrators and upgrade the AC.
But Texas has had prisoners for a lot longer than AC has been around. Somehow they made it through the 1930s when it was equally as hot as it is now. And even had to go outside and work on the roads on the chain gang, thanks to governor Pappy O’Daniel.
I doubt he would make Reason his brain trust though.
*checks the Constitution*
Nope, nothing in there about AC. In fact, AC is a relatively recent invention – and American convicts endured adverse weather all the time without it being an affront to 8A.
Anyway, we don’t want to advocate AC for convicts. That’ll just piss off the environmentalists. And god knows their idiotic, inane whining is cruel and unusual punishment for people who haven’t been convicted of crimes.
That's the same logic leftists use when they say "Nope, nothing in the 2A about ARs" and ban them. You're just like the leftists you hate. Funny. I'm more and more convinced that you're the Arizona cunt or the Canadian cunt.
I’m more convinced than ever that you’re a drunken cunt. You’re stupid too.
But please enlighten us with more discussion of your ‘ideas’ Drunky.
Talls about ideas. Never people.
Is the anger because you exposed yourself as a bog standard fascist supporting democrat this morning? Defending government using its power to have corporations act on their behalf with you screaming it isnt force? That was quite embarrassing for you.
Except, you're trying to equate the freedom to purchase something, with the entitlement to be provided something. Common Marxist idiocy.
Also, language.
And you are trying to equate freedom with confinement. Prisoners aren't free to move to a cooler room or step outside to take advantage of whatever breeze exists.
You sure you replied to the correct post?
Wasn't that Mississippi?
But no investigation into ordinary, tax-paying citizens without air. L
Ordinary, tax-paying citizens can purchase A/C or go to where it is cooler.
If you are trying to prove yourself to be an ignoramus, you've got the gold.
Nah, Sevo, you've claimed it --demanding convicted criminals be provided luxury goods.
People lived in Texas before A/C. People went to prison in Texas before A/C.
And people live in Texas NOW without A/C.
Murdering people and fucking children doesn't and shouldn't get you ANY guaranteed creature comforts.
What a fucking stupid comment! Not everybody in prison is there for "murdering people" and "fucking children". You are an idiot.
>Last year, one prison's temperatures stayed above 100 degrees for 11 days.
Yeah man, but its a dry heat.
No joke - I spend around 12 hours each workday in 100F+ temps with high humidity while doing labor. If the prisoners don't like it, maybe they'll make sure not to go back?
Heat isn't dangerous if you have enough water, some air circulation, shade, and aren't working.
Now, if the prisoners were being forced to sit outside in the sun, if they were forced to work, or if they were being denied water, then that's a different story.
However, if it's just that the prisons were built without air conditioning, then that's not some human rights violation. That's just how most of the world lives. We are a tropical species for goodness sake.
>And as temperatures increase with global climate change,
Well, except that this is not actually happening. People lived in Texas for generations before AC existed in these temperatures.
>At one prison, Garza West Unit, temperatures stayed above 100 degrees for 11 days straight in the summer of 2023.
Did they? Or did you fuck up, Camp, and actually they *peaked* at over 100F for 11 days, not stayed over 100F for 260 hours, including in the early hours just before sunrise?
This sounds awful and like something that should be addressed. If it's the full true story. A lot of the comments here are giving me reason to suspect that there's a lot being left out. As others have said, it's hardly like air conditioning is some sort of ancient technology that has been with us since time immemorial. People were sent to prison for a pretty long time before air conditioning was ubiquitous, even in places where it's hot. And we aren't exactly inundated with stories about prisoners having died of the heat. So, the obvious question is what the hell gives? What aren't we being told?
Air conditioning, actually, is an ancient technology.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windcatcher
1977 we had a Teacher's strike in our school district. As a result we had to attend classes through the end of June. We had over 100 degree days then. There was no whining about air conditioning even with kids passing out. We had to attend class there was no choice.
Emma, you're missing a major point here. You are discussing prisons. The people in there MADE A CHOICE when they committed the crimes that put them there.
"And as temperatures increase with global climate change, the problem is only getting worse."
And just how does temperature going up by one 1/200th of a degree per year make anything worse?
Come on Art! She had to get "climate change" in there somewhere. I think it's a requirement of Reason's Style Guide.
Isn't it funny how they are whining about 1/100th of a degree when they have only had thermometers capable of that accuracy for about 20 years? Before that they were expensive and restricted to laboratories.
One more example of Texas being a third world country
Let's offer them a choice.
They can deal with their discomfort, or they can elect for the death penalty to ease their suffering.