Jailed Without Justice
In 2015, 24-year-old Jamycheal Mitchellâwho had schizophrenia and bipolar disorderâstole a Zebra cake and Mountain Dew from a convenience store in Norfolk, Virginia. Police arrested him on April 22, 2015, and about four months later, on August 19, he was found dead in his jail cell.
The case brought up a lot of questions for reporter Gary Harki, who covered it for The Virginian-Pilot and won the 2018 Al Nakkula Award for Police Reporting, co-sponsored by CMCIâs Department of Journalism and the Denver Press Club.
As he learned more about Mitchellâs case, Harki was left with as many questions as answers.
âWhy was this guy in jail for so long? He wouldnât have gotten that much time had he been tried and convicted,â he wondered. âIt was that small of a case, but he was caught in this criminal justice system that is not prepared to handle people that have his type of illness.â
Harki decided to look for similar cases, both locally and nationally. To his surprise, he found dozens of other cases throughout the country that were just as troubling. His attempt to build a more comprehensive investigation revealed another issue: No agencies or individuals collected the information necessary to document the extent of the problem.
After some urging by his editor, Harki applied for, and was awarded, the OâBrien Fellowship in Public Service Journalism at Marquette University. The opportunity allowed him to spend the 2017â18 school year working with Marquette students to further his study. With Harkiâs guidance, the team built a database to track 404 deaths of people with mental illness in jails across the country since 2010. According to their reporting, at least 11% of people with mental illnesses who died in jails had family or friends who warned the jails about their condition.
Based on these findings, Harki published âJailed in Crisis,â a series illuminating the deaths of mentally ill people in jails throughout the countryâoften under horrific and preventable circumstances. His reporting led to a U.S. Justice Department investigation into how the Virginia jail was treating inmates, especially those with mental illness.
Plunkett: Weâve seen horror stories for decades about problems that result when people suffering from mental illness are housed in jails, when what they need is treatment at a mental health facility. Why has it been so hard to find useful data about what happens when those jail stays go wrong?
Harki: I think a lot of it comes down to the fact that nobody collects the data. The federal government doesnât track it, and the states donât really track it. The Bureau of Justice Statistics tracks things through a death-in-custody report, but they have never really tried to track what somebodyâs medical history was, which mental illness would be a part of.
I think itâs frustrating to a certain degree to sheriffs, too, but itâs also part of a larger problem of criminal justice data in general, which is that thereâs all these questions out thereâpolice shootings, different things with jails and prisons and isolationâand none of it is tracked very well. Part of it is thereâs just not a lot of will from jailers or communities to track the data because then you might have to deal with a problem.
Plunkett: That might be the better way to fine-tune it. Is there some kind of institutional bias in these entities thatâs just too embarrassing or too much trouble or too many potential pitfalls?
Harki: I think a lot of it comes down to, one, it is work to try and track this stuff, and two, a lot of the time the data that gets collected is with the federal government, where youâve got a carrot and a stick. Itâs like, âWe might withhold funding from you if you donât provide us with information.â Thatâs how the uniform crime report data gets collected. Thatâs never been the case with this jail data, and itâs also a lot more decentralized.
Plunkett: This was quite an ambitious project. Iâd like to hear your thoughts on a state newspaper uncovering social injustices across the country.
Harki: It was a tricky thing to do a national story at a local paper, but I had written about this issue since 2015. It just seemed like, look, here it is and itâs a national story. We need to write it because itâs not just happening here in Norfolk, Virginia. Itâs happening all over the country.
Once I got the OâBrien Fellowship for Public Service Journalism from Marquette, the question was, âWhat do we do with this issue? How do we go at this again?â It was almost like a movie or something. We just needed to pull the camera back and look at it through a broader lens. My editors were thankfully on board from the beginning, saying, âLetâs create the database and letâs do the story. We think we have the knowledge to do it and the right location to do it because of Mitchell.â And thatâs what happened.
Plunkett: Letâs talk about the role that data journalism played in your work. How should newsrooms think about equipping their journalists with these skills? Not every beat accommodates the time and resources for this kind of work, but whatâs the right mix?
Harki: On some level, I think everybody should have a basic level of data journalism or a basic knowledge of it. Itâs just going to help you as a journalist. Youâre going to know a little bit more than other people about how to handle some of this stuff because everyone comes into contact with data.
It is easy to dismiss things sometimes because itâs one storyâitâs anecdotal evidence. Being able to put a number on it and say there are patterns to it and thereâs a reason behind those patterns, thatâs a really important thing to be able to do as a journalist and at the heart of why I believe in data journalism.
Plunkett: Your reporting highlights comments from jailers and sheriffs who argue that more resources should be invested in mental health treatment facilities, even if it means pulling funds from traditional policing budgets. What research needs to be done to help policymakers bring this kind of reform?
Harki: It gets really complicated. This is such a localized issue because of the way mental health systems are decentralized in the United States and because jails are decentralized. In a lot of places thereâs not a lot of oversight over county jails, including Virginia. What really needs to happenâalmost on a municipal level, not even a state levelâis sort of a cost-benefit analysis and people saying, âHey look, if we put more money into treatment, then youâre not going to have as many people getting into jails and into the criminal justice system, and thatâs going to save money in terms of court costs, lawyers, housing.â
Harki: If you look at places like Miami or Tucson, theyâve done that analysis over time, and theyâve recognized that not only is this better for us as a society because weâre keeping people out of jail and keeping people from suffering in these places because we donât have the ability to treat them there, but weâre also likely saving money and resources by doing it this way. Itâs just easier on everybody for both moral and monetary reasons.