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More than 400 people died in custody in the Inland Empire from 2011 to 2022
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October 23, 2024   |   Donate

Protestors hold signs outside the John F. Tavaglione Executive Annex building in Riverside to protest jail deaths, on Oct. 31, 2023. Photo by Jules Hotz for CalMatters

Dear Sang,


Jail time or arrests became death sentences for 442 people who died in custody in the Inland Empire from 2011 to 2022, a criminal justice nonprofit found.


That includes 216 deaths in custody in San Bernardino County and 226 deaths in Riverside County, according to Inland Empire Lives Lost, a report released in early October by Care First California. 


“Advocates across the state are demanding accountability for in-custody deaths as there is a tendency by law enforcement to downplay or outright deny their role in these deaths,” the report stated.


The authors analyzed public records from the Attorney General’s Office from January 2011 through December 2022.They counted at least 2,312 people who died while in custody in California. About 19% of those deaths occurred in Riverside and San Bernardino Counties, although the Inland Empire makes up about 12% of the state’s population.


Its disproportionate death rate is consistent with a CalMatters investigation by CalMatters reporters Nigel Duara and Jeremia Kimelman. They concluded some of the state’s deadliest jails are in Riverside County and counted 45 people who have died in lockup there since Jan. 1, 2021.


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The most dangerous period for inmates is before they get through trial, Care First reported.  Statewide only 14% of deaths happened after sentencing. Nearly a quarter of deaths happened during arrests, and 40% took place during the first week in jail, the report found.


Why is that first week so deadly? 


“When you’re bringing someone in who has documented mental health concerns and they’re put in an isolated and not well monitored cell, the early days of incarceration are vulnerable,” said Marcella Rosen, media coordinator for the nonprofit. 


The Lives Lost report didn’t analyze causes of death because of disputes over how they’re recorded and categorized.


“A lot are listed as natural deaths, and we have problems with that terminology since most deaths are preventable if given proper care,” Rosen said. 


Broadly speaking, people often die in custody from suicide, overdose, disruption of medication or injuries sustained during arrest, she said. 


The organization recommends several ways to prevent those deaths, including ending the cash bail system, enforcing the right to an immediate trial, creating diversion programs for people with mental health or substance use conditions and oversight by coroners who are separate from sheriff’s departments, Rosen said.


Other stories you should know

Who was the man arrested at a Trump rally in Coachella Saturday?

Former President Donald Trump gestures to the crowd as he arrives on stage during a campaign rally near Coachella on Oct. 12, 2024. Photo by Andy Abeyta, REUTERS

After deputies arrested a heavily armed man near a Donald Trump rally in Coachella on Saturday, Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco announced they had probably prevented a third assassination attempt. But the man, Vem Miller, 49, told the San Bernardino Sun and the Las Vegas Review-Journal he was there to support Trump, not threaten him. Miller said he’s a caucus captain for the former president’s campaign, was invited to the rally and was carrying the guns for self-protection. Miller was booked for misdemeanor possession of a loaded firearm and high-capacity magazine but was released on $5,000 bail the same day. Miller’s Instagram page supports his MAGA credentials, with photos showing him with Trump associates Stephen Miller and Roger Stone and right-wing figures such as Vivek Ramaswany, Newt Gingrich and Trump's son, Don Jr.  Bianco also is a Trump supporter; earlier this summer in an Instagram video he declared: “I think it’s time we put a felon in the White House.”


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How Inland Empire hospitals are trying to prevent maternal deaths

Baby Eren is daughter of Stephanie Herrera and Guillermo Saravia. Angela Sojobi, lead midwife at Martin Luther King Community Hospital in Los Angeles, helped with her birth on March 22, 2024. Photo by Jules Hotz for CalMatters

California has released a blueprint for cutting maternal mortality in half by 2026, by helping people learn about their health risks during pregnancy, Black Voice News reported. Although California has lower maternal death rates than other parts of the country, Black mothers are more than three times more likely to die in childbirth than White or Asian mothers, according to the California Department of Public Health. Heart disease and hemorrhage are top causes of maternal death. Local hospitals are already on board. In March the White House listed Arrowhead Regional Medical Center in Colton as a “birthing-friendly hospital,” and Loma Linda University Medical Center is piloting a program that offers doulas, who guide mothers through pregnancy and birth. 


Thanks for reading! While you are here, please sign up for the Inland Empire newsletter and let me know what kinds of stories you’d love to read.


And please add my email to your contacts:  inlandempire@calmatters.org


Deborah Sullivan Brennan

Inland Empire Reporter



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