UPDATED JULY 1 2014: There's nothing new about this, sadly - the AZ DOC has been executing prisoners all along by way of failing to treat their critical medical and psychiatric conditions. Three death row prisoners in just over a year have also committed suicide...
You must be a subscriber to see Gary Grado's newest article at the Capitol Times about the above notice of Robert Murray's death - if you can afford it, check it out. Below is the original piece on Murray's cancer last fall, also by Grado, along with my post at the time. Not sure anything more needs to be said, except condolences to anyone who might have cared about this prisoner, as well as to the loved ones of his victims, for whom this will be an emotional time as well.
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SOS from Arizona's living dead:
Deliberate indifference to life on death row
(originally posted to arizonaprisonwatch.org on September 26, 2013 7am)
one of many letters received at AZ Prison Watch re:
prisoner frustration over difficulty accessing medical care.
A big thanks goes out to Gary Grado at the AZ Capitol Times for interviewing this prisoner, and to the publication for making this particular article accessible to non-subscribers. Prisoners don't make sympathetic news subjects - especially not those on death row. A lot of folks would just as soon let Murray die of throat cancer untreated, in favor of putting those health care resources into the community (as if the state would actually re-direct "savings" there, instead of into the private pockets of profiteers).
All I can say is that withholding medical care from Murray because the state plans to kill him anyway is akin to choosing to execute him by applying acid to his throat in small doses over the course of 9 months or so, letting it eat slowly away at his ability to swallow, speak, and breathe, knowing this will not only kill him, but will make him suffer horribly as he dies. This has nothing to do with one's feeling about the death penalty - it's a question of whether or not you are for the constitution and against torture. If you believe in the rule of law, and that we should not torture our prisoners, then you have to support the provision of a basic standard of medical and mental health care to them.
The other thing is that prisoner health IS public health, and if we don't treat them inside, they come out with high rates of chronic illness, infectious disease, psychiatric disability, and so on. The imprisoned population is especially high-risk, medically, and many live marginally once back in the community, where they are more likely to lack access to health care than most non-felons. In prison they're frequently exposed to things like Hepatitis C (at least 40% of prisoners are believed to be infected), but as a captive patient population, they would be more likely than not to follow up on treatments and regimens that lower their mortality and long term health risks considerably, if their dietary plans and health care provider will offer them.
But that's not what appears to be happening. Deliberate
indifference to human suffering is the absolute worst cancer there is in a society,
and it's metasticized from the head of the AZ DOC to the agency's extremities. I hear stories like Murray's all the time, sadly - and it's not just the guys on death row. Remember Benny Joe Roseland? I've written to him a few times, but haven't heard back from him since writing that post. DOC says he's still alive, but that's all I can get from them.
Furthermore, as Dan Pochoda points out below, how we treat our prisoners says a lot about our society. The conditions in Arizona's prisons - from the medical neglect to the prevalence of heroin, the dominance of criminal gangs, and the rampant racialized violence - are among the worst in the country. There was a brief spell of progressive vision a the AZ DOC while Dora Schriro was director, under then-governor Janet Napolitano, but she was often mocked as being a "thug-hugger" for favoring rehabilitative programs over punishments, and her efforts were frequently undermined by the Good Old Boys network of DOC administrators and officers.
According to prisoners and former employees, things at the AZ DOC got dramatically worse as soon as Jan Brewer became governor, bringing Charles Ryan out of retirement to be her chief disciplinarian at the AZ DOC. The culture of contempt for prisoners and human rights that permeates that institution has actually been decades in the making, much of it under the direction of the younger Chuck Ryan, so all the bad stuff began to flourish again once he took over the reins there.
I don't understand that man at all, I have to say. He's spent his career climbing that ladder, but now there, he appears to have utterly ceded control of his prisons to the gangs and profiteers - either that, or he's knowingly and intelligently aiding and abetting them. In either case, his directorship should be an embarassment to the Governor's office - for some reason Jan still stands by her man, though.
Check out the other work the Capitol Times has been doing on the prison system here. If you're a subscriber, this is a pretty good piece that just came out about the class action lawsuit over health care, also by Gary Grado:
Death row inmate struggles with cancer
By
Gary Grado
Published: September 16, 2013 at 8:41 am
A lab discovered death-row inmate Robert Murray had cancer the same
day a Scottsdale surgeon removed his tonsils, but his disease went
unknown to him and untreated for seven more months.
As Murray, 48, and his lawyers try to figure out what went wrong with
his medical treatment, one thing is certain. The breakdown coincided
with the turmoil surrounding the Department of Corrections’ transition
to a private health care provider for Arizona prisoners, and his
situation didn’t improve after the first company parted ways with DOC
and a new company came under contract.
Murray endured long, painful delays between doctor’s appointments, a
misdiagnosis, and a time in which blood from a burst abscess on his
tonsil gushed from his mouth. He came to learn he had cancer when the
surgeon he hadn’t seen in months asked him if he was finished with
radiation to treat the illness, a treatment he never had.
Despite the delays, the cancer didn’t spread. Murray said an
oncologist told him that although the situation could have become grave,
he should have a full recovery with proper treatment.
“It was prayer, luck it just didn’t explode like it could have,”
Murray said in a 21-minute interview from death row in Arizona State
Prison Complex-Florence, where he’s been locked up since October 1992.
Such allegations aren’t unusual. A class-action lawsuit alleging DOC
has provided inadequate health care for years offers other medical
horror stories. And a suit recently filed by the survivors of an inmate
who died in October 2012 alleges employees of Wexford Health Sources
Inc. of Pittsburgh refused to treat him while he convulsed on the floor.
Wexford is a company that provides prisoner health care in Arizona and
elsewhere.
“We get weekly at least one letter that is equivalent, literally, to
this fellow on death row,” said Dan Pochoda, the legal director for
ACLU-Arizona.
Pochoda is one of more than 20 lawyers involved in the class action
suit. He said the medical hardships of prisoners don’t resonate with the
public, but they should because the state has a heavy obligation to
provide adequate health care once it takes control of someone’s life.
“To paraphrase Dostoevsky, the test of a society is how they treat persons in prison,” Pochoda said.
Pleas for help
Murray and his brother, Roger Murray, are on death row for
convictions in the May 14, 1991, robbery and murders of Dean Morrison,
65, and Jacqueline Appelhans, 60, at their store in Grasshopper Junction
in Mohave County.
Morrison and Appelhans were found face down in their bathrobes, shot
several times each in the head with shotguns and handguns. Appelhans was
clutching Morrison’s arm.
Murray wrote a book titled “Life on Death Row” in which he denied committing the murders.
He has contended with an assortment of health problems during his 21
years in prison, and it was during an examination in February 2012 that
he first complained of a lump in his throat.
Murray’s tonsils were becoming swollen and sore by April 2012, which
was one of the final months that DOC provided medical care. Murray saw a
DOC doctor in May and was diagnosed with an infected tonsil and given
antibiotics.
Just days before his appointment, DOC and Wexford Health Solutions
announced the company had been awarded a five-year contract to provide
onsite medical, dental, pharmacy and mental health care, as well as the
administration of third-party services.
Murray claims in a nine-page affidavit that the antibiotics had no
effect and his many requests over the next month to see a doctor went
unfulfilled as the swelling worsened and swallowing became difficult.
“His neck and face were visibly deformed,” said Murray’s attorney, Jennifer Garcia, a deputy federal public defender.
Wexford took over on July 1, 2012, and the company informed Murray he
was on a waiting list to see a doctor, even as he continued to submit
medical requests pleading for help.
“At least once during this period I overheard RX delivery nurses
state that ‘Wexford has no available doctors for (the infirmary),’”
Murray wrote.
In a Cure Notification, a letter to Wexford to outline how it wasn’t
complying with the contract, DOC said the company’s staffing shortage
created “inappropriate scheduling gaps in on-site medical coverage.”
In his requests to see a doctor, Murray writes about shooting pains
in his ear, choking and coughing and difficulty breathing. He saw a
nurse practitioner on July 20, 2012, who became alarmed by his condition
and prescribed “magic mouthwash,” a formula of various medicines used
to treat ulcers in the mouth.
Four days later the abscess burst.
“A warm fluid gushed into my mouth, I thought I may be vomiting and hurried to my sink,” he wrote.
He was rushed to the hospital, but he didn’t see a surgeon until
September and wasn’t on the operating table until Nov. 19, 2012.
DOC, meanwhile, was already unhappy with Wexford’s performance,
stating in the Cure Notification that the company was inadequately
staffed, administered medication incorrectly, inconsistently and
incompletely, and lacked a sense of urgency in addressing crisis
situations.
DOC referred to several incidents in which it said Wexford did not
comply with the terms of the contract, including not giving medication
to a mentally ill inmate who hanged himself and a nurse who contaminated
diabetes insulin with syringe tainted with Hepatitis C and continued to
inject inmates with it.
Wexford responded with a letter of its own explaining that “the
majority of the problems Wexford now faces are long-standing issues,
embedded into (DOC) health care policy and philosophy, and which existed
well before Wexford Health Sources assumed responsibility of the
program.”
Wexford also alleged that DOC kept key information hidden during the procurement process.
An aggressive form of cancer
Dr. Joel Cohen of the Allergy Ear Nose and Throat Center in
Scottsdale removed Murray’s tonsils on Nov. 19 and sent them to a nearby
lab. The lab confirmed he had cancer and phoned the results to Cohen
the next day, according to the pathology report.
Dr. Sun Yi, a University of Arizona professor who specializes in
cancers of the head and neck, said that after diagnosis, blood work and
scans would be done to determine the severity, or stage, of the cancer, a
process that generally takes a few months.
From there, the patient would be referred to various oncologists.
“With malignancy, the more time you wait the more time the tumor has
to continue to populate and grow,” said Yi, who is not involved in the
case. “The worst case scenario is the cat’s out of the bag situation
where it metastasizes and becomes phase four and for most cancers
incurable at that point.”
Yi said cancer in the throat is extremely aggressive.
There are no records of any of the steps Yi described in Murray’s medical file.
Murray said Cohen wanted to see him 14 to 21 days after the surgery, but “ADOC-Wexford failed to take action.”
Cohen said he reported the cancer by telephone to a doctor at DOC on Nov. 20, 2012, and recommended treatment.
The doctor said he regularly treats prisoners and he understands
there are all sorts of prison protocol that must be followed for each
visit. He typically wants to see a patient for post-operative visit in
10 to 14 days.
“The prisoners can’t always come back when they’re told to come back,” Cohen said.
He said it is not his responsibility to prescribe the cancer treatment.
A spokesman for DOC and spokeswoman for Wexford declined to comment
for this story. The agency and company agreed Jan. 30 to end the
contract and DOC signed a new one with St. Louis-based Corizon Health
Inc., which took over services on March 4.
Murray’s throat was still irritated and swollen in the meantime, and he got an appointment with Cohen on May 14.
“He’s talking to Corizon all the time about this problem and no one
seems to be addressing them for months either,” Garcia said. “It doesn’t
seem to me things have been measurably better under Corizon.”
Murray said Cohen asked him about his radiation treatment, which he
never had, but the doctor still didn’t tell him about the cancer.
Records indicate Murray was prescribed radiation and a CT scan that
day, but there is nothing in the record explaining why. When Murray
returned to the doctor’s office on June 7 he saw Lee, Cohen’s associate.
“He said, ‘You have cancer, you didn’t know,’” Murray said. “It was
kind of an astounding moment, surreal.
I kind of expected something was
not right.”
Ray Norris, a medical malpractice attorney with the firm Gallagher
and Kennedy, said medical negligence is determined by whether a doctor
fell below the standard of care.
Norris, who is not involved in Murray’s case, said standard of care
is measured by what an ordinary, prudent, and reasonable health care
provider would do under the same circumstance.
“If there was a breach of the standard of care, the question then
becomes causation, or in other words, what difference did it make,”
Norris said.
Murray’s theory is he thinks Cohen expected him to return for a
follow up visit within a few weeks and was going to inform him then
about the cancer, but when Wexford failed to schedule the appointment
Cohen never followed up. “I think it was probably just an accident, but
an accident can be easily overlooked,” Murray said.
Murray is still undergoing treatment, and while it isn’t going at the
pace he would prefer, he said he’s been assured it is normal pace for
treating such a cancer. He said he is still considering his options on
filing a lawsuit and looking for a civil lawyer.
Health Decline
May 2012: Inmate Robert Murray diagnosed with
possible infected tonsils and given antibiotics. Wexford Health
Solutions is awarded $349 million contract to provide health services to
Arizona prisoners.
June 2012: Swelling in neck worsens.
July 1, 2012: Wexford takes over medical services.
July 24, 2012: Abscess in neck bursts and Murray rushed to hospital.
Aug. 17, 2012: In an incident not related to
Murray, Wexford nurses are accused of improperly administer medication
by making inmates lick powdered medication from hands.
Aug. 23, 2012: Mentally ill inmate who didn’t receive psychiatric medication for weeks found hanged in cell.
Aug. 27, 2012: Wexford nurse allegedly contaminates diabetes insulin with syringe tainted with Hepatitis C.
Sept. 21, 2012: Arizona Department of Corrections informs Wexford of assorted contract breaches.
Nov. 19, 2012: Murray, whose face is deformed from swelling, undergoes tonsillectomy and lab results show he has cancer.
January 2013: Murray’s requests for follow up with
surgeon unfulfilled, problems and pain with neck persist. Wexford and
DOC agree to cancel contract. Corizon becomes new contractor.
June 7, 2013: Murray informed he has cancer that went untreated for seven months.