Justice Department Finds 'Dehumanizing' Filth and Violence at Atlanta Jail Where Man Died Covered in Bugs
Justice Department investigators found squalid living conditions, unchecked violence, and illegal mistreatment of minors and mentally ill inmates.

Two years after a mentally ill man died malnourished and covered in insects in Atlanta's Fulton County Jail, a Justice Department investigation has found that man's death was only one of a string of fatalities due to pervasive unconstitutional conditions at the jail.
The Justice Department's Civil Rights Division released a report Thursday concluding that the Fulton County Jail, which handles pre-trial detention for most of Atlanta, subjects incarcerated people to pest infestations and malnourishment, excessive force from correctional officers, and fails to protect them from rampant violence and sexual assaults from other inmates. The report found that these conditions violate the Eighth and 14th Amendments, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
The Justice Department launched the civil rights investigation in the wake of the 2022 death of Lashawn Thompson. Thompson, a 35-year-old man with schizophrenia, had been incarcerated at the Fulton County Jail for three months on a misdemeanor battery charge when he was found dead in an extremely filthy cell. Thompson's body was covered in lice, bedbugs, and lesions. An independent autopsy listed his cause of death as "severe neglect," noting Thompson was suffering from a "severe body insect infestation."
In a press statement, Attorney General Merrick Garland said Thompson's "horrific death was symptomatic of a pattern of dangerous and dehumanizing conditions in the Fulton County Jail."
"The Justice Department's report concluded that Fulton County and the Fulton County Sheriff's Office allowed unsafe and unsanitary conditions at the Jail," Garland said. "As a result, people incarcerated in the Fulton County Jail suffered harms from pest infestation and malnourishment and were put at substantial risk of serious harm from violence by other incarcerated people—including homicides, stabbings and sexual abuse."
Justice Department investigators reported widespread infestations of mice, roaches, bedbugs, lice, and scabies.
In addition to being unsanitary, the jail's kitchen also fails to adequately feed detainees. The report notes that jail medical staff determined in 2022 that 90 percent of the people in the mental health unit where Thompson died were "significantly malnourished with obvious muscle wasting."
Because Georgia is one of four states where the juvenile justice system ends at age 16, the Fulton County Jail routinely holds 17-year-olds and subjects them to the same conditions.
Minors and those with mental illness are held in solitary confinement for prolonged periods. Correctional officers use Tasers and pepper spray against mentally ill inmates and minors without justification.
The report also found that the prison inadequately investigated and reported sexual assault allegations, even though the federal Prison Rape Elimination Act (PREA) is supposed to create zero-tolerance policies for rape in prisons and jails. Justice Department investigators wrote that this negligence extended to the jail's minor population:
Even a grievance about the sexual assault of a 17-year-old boy triggered no apparent action to address the violence. In June 2023, a 17-year-old submitted an emergency grievance reporting that he had been anally penetrated and was bleeding. The grievance officer responded that she had turned the grievance over to the Jail's investigations unit, provided no other information, and closed the grievance. Later that week, the same person filed another emergency grievance from the same housing location, reporting that he was being sexually harassed and made to perform sex acts, and requesting a move to another location. The grievance officer responded that she forwarded the grievance to the PREA investigator, again provided no other information, and closed the grievance. Despite a request, we received no incident reports or documents indicating that anyone investigated these complaints.
Sen. Jon Ossoff (D–Ga.), who urged the Justice Department to launch the investigation, said in a press statement that Thursday's report "confirms that abuse at the Fulton County Jail has been not just horrific, but also unconstitutional. Each day these conditions persist is a failure to uphold Georgians' human and Constitutional rights."
But those conditions persist in jails and prisons across the country, where negligence, apathy, and cruelty result in hundreds of deaths a year. In a Texas county jail, three people died of thirst over a two-year period.
The Justice Department report notes that so far in 2024 three men have died in the Fulton County Jail: one of a suspected drug overdose, one by stabbing, and one by suicide.
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Did they find a Kamala campaign office there?
Matt Gaetz will put a stop to this! He would never tolerate sexual abuse of 17-year-olds!
This is how the democrats run business.
It's how the Democrats run government, period.
Note that in this case, and also for George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and many more, it's Democrats running local law enforcement. Also note the "Defund the Police" campaign started just after the Floyd death. It was designed to distract the public from the responsibility of the Democratic party, to run their cities correctly, rather than oppressing minorities and the poor. It was Democratic policy that led Derek Chauvin to treat Floyd the way he did.
The Democrats created the "Defund the Police" to distract from failing to do their jobs correctly. Now we are all reaping the lousy results of their policy.
I look forward to them arguing against defunding the FBI, CIA, NSA and DOJ all so Trump can remake them to do their job, rather than do what Democrats want for their own benefit.
Were they in the country legally? If so then this is bad. If not then good riddance to bad rubbish. Amirite?
It is weird that when I posted the pictures of conditions of J6 prisoners you celebrated it. Too bad they weren't illegals. Maybe you would have cared.
Is this the latest lie that you're going to repeat until the idiots think it's the truth?
Ideas™ !
Do you think screaming “liar” deletes the past? How many times have you screamed that and shown that it is you lying.
You even mocked babbit again just yesterday.
You truly are pathological.
By ‘lie’, you really mean the absolute truth, right? We all know Jesse tells the truth, and you have an extensive history of lies and distortions.
I'm waiting for Trump to pardon ALL Jan.6 prisoners and instead, jail Garland.
And just who has been in charge of Fulton County and Atlanta for the past 40 years or so? How many Atlanta mayors, mayor's staff, city officials, and Fulton county bureaucrats have been subjects of FBI corruption probes over that same time?
Heck, just a few months ago...
Aug 28, 2024 ATLANTA (AP) — A former top official during Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed's administration was sentenced Tuesday to three years in prison under a federal corruption probe that ensnared nearly a dozen people on bribery or other related charges.
Two years ago...
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/26/us/politics/atlanta-federal-prisons-corruption.html
Prison Personnel Describe Horrific Conditions, and Cover-Up, at Atlanta Prison
AJC a dozen years ago...
Atlanta region sees spike in public corruption cases
By Bill Rankin
Oct 22, 2012
In recent years, federal authorities in Atlanta have seen a spike in public corruption convictions and investigations. Among them:
Ex-Gwinnett County Commissioner Shirley Lasseter was sentenced on Sept. 5, 2012, to serve 33 months in prison for her role in a bribery scheme after attempting to sell her vote on a proposed real estate development project. Her son, John Fanning, and Hall County businessman Carl "Skip" Cain also were sentenced to four years and nine months in prison for public corruption and drug offenses. Developer Mark Gary has pleaded guilty to corruption charges and is awaiting sentencing.
Two former Transportation Security Administration officers, Richard Cook and Timothy Gregory, have pleaded guilty to conspiring and attempting to smuggle what they believed to be drugs through Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport.
Former DeKalb County Deputy Chief of Police Donald Frank and former DeKalb Police Lt. Willie Daren Durrett were both convicted of accepting bribes from a local businessman. They will be sentenced this month.
Marvie Trevino Dingle, a former Fulton County Deputy Sheriff, was convicted of accepting more than $2,000 in bribes to distribute cocaine inside and outside the Fulton County Jail. In June, Dingle was sentenced to serve 41 months in prison.
Fidelis Ogbu, a DeKalb County Department of Public Works engineering supervisor, was sentenced in June to three years in prison for extorting money from a private construction contractor.
In addition, former DeKalb construction inspector Neacacha Joyner also pleaded guilty to extorting money from a private construction contractor.
Jasen Minter and Louis Nock were indicted on federal charges of conspiracy and theft of more than $2.7 million from the U.S. government while Minter was serving as an Army captain and Nock as a senior noncommissioned officer in Saudi Arabia. They are awaiting trial.
Former Fulton County Jail Detention Officer Brian Anthony was sentenced in March to serve 10 years in federal prison on drug charges and accepting bribes of more than $26,000 to further the distribution of drugs inside the county jail and elsewhere.
Desi Wade, a U.S. Department of Defense employee assigned to Afghanistan as the chief of Fire and Emergency Services, pleaded guilty to influencing an Afghan-based contractor to give bribes to him in return for guarantees of future contracts. In March, Wade was sentenced to 20 months in prison.
A county commissioner swaps her vote for $30,000 in casino chips. A public works supervisor demands $18,000 from a construction contractor looking for county work. A detention officer pockets more than $26,000 to help distribute drugs at the jail.
These former metro Atlanta officials are now convicts. And their cases are part of a growing number of public corruption cases pursued by federal authorities in the metro area.
An analysis of federal crime statistics by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution shows the number of public corruption convictions here has spiked in recent years. The federal judicial district that includes metro Atlanta now ranks among the top districts in the country in corruption convictions, the newspaper found.
Clearly Fulton County and Atlanta hires only the most efficient, honest and competent people. /s
Another fun fact. Fani Willis boy toy Nathan Wade was paid to investigate abusive conditions at DeKalb county jail. He never produced a report claiming it was all in his head.
Atlanta and Fulton County are among the tiniest fraction of areas in the country that became MORE blue this election.
Look at the "Shifts from 2020" version of the map...
https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2024/11/05/us/elections/results-president.html
"Justice Department investigators found squalid living conditions, unchecked violence, and illegal mistreatment of minors and mentally ill inmates."
This can't be right.
Atlanta is run by the woke and progressive democrats.
There has to be a typo some place.
You'll find similar conditions in their subsidized housing.
Isn't this the same Fulton County with the reputation of being one of the most liberal (and corrupt) counties in the state if not the entire south? The same county that has attempted to jail Trump on bullshit charges?
The same county that Fani Willis serves?
Mercy! To think that the jails and prisons there would be allowed to deteriorate to such awful conditions. Who's going to be saddled with the blame?
Since Fulton County is a democrat county and Atlanta is controlled by the Dems is it possible they are so corrupt they would allow such conditions to exist?
How much is this going to cost the local taxpayers when the lawsuit payouts result in the millions?
"Who’s going to be saddled with the blame?"
Trump.
And yet still nobody wants to contemplate the merits of a far more harsh, but at the same time exponentially more humane prison system that builds upon architecture and technology that wasn't obsolete 70 years ago.
The idea is simple. Build a prison (and for that matter, detention centers) where the core premise is: they never ever leave their solitary cell until they're lawfully released. 12'x6'x8' rooms. Hygienic facilities (sink, shower, toilet, which take up a corner) to themselves (with time limited showers); folding wall cot that converts to tabletop or completely to provide room for body-weight aerobics/calisthenics, and a freestanding chair. A stripped down tablet that provides for remote court appearances, remote visitation anytime (but monitored, and incoming-only), and access to local literary/educational/entertainment materials to pass the time. Regular laundry and linen changes. Three square meals a day under the door (and if we want to be really cool about it, let them choose from a three-option menu - also utilizing the tablet). Teledoc. Heat and AC. Plenty of vitamin D supplements in their food. And a 12"x12" window from which to view the outside world.
And design them both concentric and stackable (think stripped-down section 8 housing, only for an actually useful purpose). That cell becomes their entire universe for the length of their sentence. The only out being a genuine medical emergency - which can also be determined in-cell to discern legit from malingering.
We HAVE the technology. We have the means, and every dollar we waste on the current prison system is one that could be spent on a better one. We bitch and moan about the state of affairs in prisons - but NOBODY wants to meaningfully change them. It's just two tribal/partisan camps that say "who cares let them suffer" or "prison shouldn't exist."
Ignore both of them, and just start building good prisons.
Probably good ideas as long as the times served are shorter than the times served now and much shorter than many sentences given. What you envision is similar to the supermax prisons. Those are long-term-torture chambers designed for the worst criminals, but also likely the most insane. How we treat those we should never release is a difficult question to answer, but I doubt most Americans know of the questions regarding people who shouldn't be incarcerated, let alone the difficult ones. Independent oversight is an obvious, simple means for improvement, but establishing it may be difficult Constitutionally and nearly impossible politically.
Probably good ideas as long as the times served are shorter than the times served now and much shorter than many sentences given.
Yes, agreed, that's always been a key component. A harder prison is one that an inmate rehabilitates in much faster.
Now Reason should publish a report on the unspeakable conditions the Jan.6 prisoners are being held in, with no access to no medical, no visitors, no lawyers, no medications, being tortured and suffering beatings, thanks to that bloody little gew Merrick Garland.
Revenge will be sweet indeed.
Free them all and instead repopulate the prison with Fani Willis, Alvin Bragg, Leticia James, Judge Merchan, Jack Smith, Merrick Garland, Mayorkas, MIlley, the Bidens, ......
The J6 convicts are clearly held in no worse conditions than other prisoners. No wonder their defenders are outraged.
Atlanta, Georgia has been totally controlled by Democrats for decades. Recently, several contractors and employees for the Fulton county jail were arrested for various offenses.
Democrats in Atlanta are corrupt and incompetent. With them in charge, the current conditions at the jail is to be expected.