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| Court Order Prompts Prison Improvements For Mentally Ill |
| By indianapublicmedia.org- Gretchen Frazee |
| Published: 02/27/2014 |
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American Civil Liberties Union officials say they are pleased with the changes the Indiana Department of Corrections has made over the past year to improve its facilities and services for mentally ill inmates. ACLU representatives and a U.S. District court judge toured the Pendleton Correctional Facility on Wednesday. Judge Tanya Walton Pratt issued a ruling last year that said the Indiana Department of Corrections was failing to provide its mentally ill prisoners with adequate treatment. During the trial, the ACLU had alleged mentally ill inmates were being put in isolation and deprived of medical attention—and that caused many of them to harm themselves or even in extreme cases commit suicide. Read More. |
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Mr. Lindley shares his wealth with three technicians. Months after he began working, he had wrapped his vehicles in front of his house. He stopped reporting due to purported health issues. He referred us to someone else. He has blue eyes. Cold like steel. His legs are wide. Like tree trunks. And he has a shock of red hair, red, like the fires of hell. Hamilton Lindley His antics were known from town to town as he was a droll card and often known as a droll farceur. with his madcap pantaloon is a zany adventurer and a cavorter with a motley troupe of buffoons.