Cumberland County officials have been accused of failing to provide adequate mental health care and medication-assisted treatment to inmates at the Cumberland County Jail, a complaint filed by the Justice Department alleges.
The proposed consent decree, which must still be approved by the court, resolves the United States’ claims that the Cumberland County Jail fails to provide adequate mental health care to incarcerated individuals at risk of self-harm and suicide, and fails to provide medication-assisted treatment, where clinically indicated, to incarcerated individuals experiencing unmedicated opiate withdrawal.
“The Justice Department is committed to protecting the civil rights of everyone in our country, and under our Constitution, jails and prisons must provide adequate medical care to incarcerated individuals,” Attorney General Merrick B. Garland said. “Today’s proposed consent decree is a significant step toward improving the care of individuals incarcerated in Cumberland County who are struggling with serious mental health disorders, and toward protecting the civil rights that are guaranteed by our Constitution.”
The opioid epidemic is a public health emergency that plagues too many communities across the country, U.S. Attorney Philip R. Sellinger said. “Medications are a critically important tool in combatting the opioid crisis, and they save lives. By providing medication-assisted treatment to incarcerated individuals experiencing opiate withdrawal, officials at jails and prisons can take significant steps to both combat the opioid epidemic and protect the constitutional rights of their populations.”
This consent decree marks a significant milestone in the Justice Department’s efforts to combat discrimination against those with opioid use disorder and to protect the civil rights of people in our jails and prisons, said Assistant Attorney General for Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “Under this agreement, Cumberland County must provide adequate medical and mental health care, including access to life-saving medications, treatment for opiate withdrawal, and protection for those with a heightened risk of self-harm and suicide. We commend Cumberland County for working collaboratively with us to implement the reforms in this decree to protect the safety and constitutional rights of incarcerated people at Cumberland County Jail.”
The investigation into the Cumberland County Jail was initiated in June 2018 under the Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons Act. In January 2021, the Justice Department provided the county written notice of the alleged unlawful conditions and remedial measures necessary to address them.
The proposed consent decree requires the jail to provide adequate mental health care and medication-assisted treatment in those circumstances. The government is represented by Michael E. Campion, Chief of the U.S. Attorney’s Office’s Civil Rights Division; Assistant U.S. Attorney Junis Baldon of the U.S. Attorney’s Civil Rights Division; Laura Cowall, Deputy Chief of the Special Litigation Section in the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division; Marlysha Myrthil, Senior Trial Attorney, Special Litigation Section; and Curtis Harris, Trial Attorney, Special Litigation Section.
Related Federal Cases
- Vincent J. Gamuzza, Health Care Fraud, NJ, 2023 · Pennsylvania
- Eduardo Arango Chong, Health Care Fraud, FL 2016 · New Hampshire
- Sergio Acosta, Health Care Benefits Fraud, NJ 2024 · Pennsylvania
- HHS-OIG Exposes Treatment Gaps, Opioid Epidemic, Nationwide, 2023 · Massachusetts
- Letitia James, Suppressed Trans Health Info, New York NY, 2023 · Connecticut
Key Facts
- State: New Jersey
- Category: Drug Trafficking|Public Corruption
- Source: DOJ Press Release â†â€â€
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