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ACLU court order denounces Sheriff’s ‘abysmal conditions’

Los Angeles County Jail’s booking center, known as the Inmate Reception Center (IRC), is holding people in abysmal conditions of confinement and

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By OW Staff

Los Angeles County Jail’s booking center, known as the Inmate Reception Center (IRC), is holding people in abysmal conditions of confinement and violating decades of court orders, according to an emergency court filing by the ACLU and the ACLU Foundation of Southern California.

Attorneys from the ACLU who visited the IRC and spoke to people detained there describe shocking conditions of confinement, including:

• People with serious mental illness chained to chairs for days at a time, where they sleep sitting up.

• Dozens of people crammed together, sleeping head-to-foot on the hard concrete floor.

• People defecating in trash cans and urinating on the floor or in empty food containers in shared spaces.

• Unhygienic conditions, including floors littered with trash, overflowing sinks and toilets, no access to showers or clean clothes for days, and lack of adequate access to drinking water and food.

• Failure to provide adequate health care, including failure to provide people with serious mental illness or chronic medical conditions their medications, or to provide care to people dangerously detoxing from drugs and alcohol.

In one case, Jhean Banos, who is diagnosed with schizophrenia, was held at the IRC for more than four days in late August. He had cuts and bruises around his wrists likely caused by being cuffed for more than 99 hours.

“My son’s mental health is not a crime,” said Jhean’s mother, Celia Banos. “Instead of providing him with the treatment he needs from health professionals, the county resorts to locking him up without care and without his medication.”

Law enforcement arrests and take people to the IRC, where they are meant to get booked and transferred to another facility within 24 hours. Many of the people detained at the IRC experience houselessness, have serious mental illnesses, or both.

“L.A. County’s horrific treatment of people in the jails is egregious but sadly comes as no surprise,” said Ambrose Brooks, coordinator of the JusticeLA Coalition. “As we’ve seen time and time again, incarcerating people is never the answer to people experiencing homelessness, poverty, or unmet mental health needs.”

Conditions at the L.A. County Jails, the largest jail system in the nation, have been the subject of court oversight since 1978, when a federal court judge ruled in the ACLU SoCal case Rutherford v. Pitchess, finding numerous conditions that violated the constitutional rights of people who were incarcerated.


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