Bland’s mother said a Texas Rangers official promised to show her a video of the hanging, but the footage was inconclusive, according to Lambert.
“That is incorrect,” said Tom Vinger, a rangers spokesman, said in an email. “The offer was to view available video.”
Officials have released hours of video showing Bland’s booking, mental health screening and surveillance of the corridor outside her cell.
Reed-Veal said she also was promised personal items confiscated from her daughter when she entered the county jail three days before her death. So far, Lambert said, nothing has been returned.
“All of this has built an inability for her to feel comfortable or confident in what they say,” Lambert said.
Lawyers for defendants in Reed-Veal’s lawsuit didn’t respond to HuffPost’s inquiries. They have filed motions to dismiss the complaint.
The incomplete batch of documents that have been pried loose by the lawsuit have provided a more detailed picture of Bland’s death than what authorities previously disclosed.
One report, written by Waller County jail investigator Marc Langdon, gives the most detailed timeline of events after a guard discovered Bland’s body hanging from a plastic garbage bag in her cell.
There were still signs of life when guards loosened the makeshift noose from Bland’s neck, the report said. The jail nurse, using a stethoscope, heard a pulse while a sheriff’s lieutenant performed CPR, according to Langdon’s report. Minutes later, at 9:06 a.m., a paramedic declared Bland dead, according to the report.
A deputy who rushed into Bland’s cell “loosened the noose to from Inmate Bland’s neck and slid it up and over her head so she could lay Inmate Bland on the floor,” Lt. Sherry Rochen told Langdon. That would have been around 9:01 a.m., when Rochen said she began CPR, according to the report.
Langdon’s report about the noose appears to be contradicted by a report on the autopsy conducted on July 14. The autopsy report mentioned a note in the bag containing Bland’s body that said the “trash bag used as a ligature” was removed at 12:14 p.m., shortly before Bland’s body was transported to the morgue in Harris County.
The difference in time could simply be the result of sloppy paperwork.
“The hope is that they did a much more thorough investigation than what they documented,” Lambert said.
Langdon’s report reveals that Bland, using the intercom in her cell, requested permission to make free phone calls from the booking counter less than an hour before her death. Instead, a jailer told Bland to use the telephone in her cell.
That exchange was around 7:55 a.m., around the time guards should have visited her cell. The last in-person inspection took place at 7:05 a.m., but no one checked on her again until her body was found.
From the time she entered jail on July 10, 2015, Bland made seven phone calls, according to Slate. Her family members said they didn’t hear from her after July 11, Lambert said.
Lapses have already been exposed at the jail. The Texas Commission on Jail Standards said jail staff failed to check on inmates face-to-face once an hour as “required by minimum jail standards.” Staff also had not gone through yearly trainings on dealing with inmates with mental disabilities and potential suicidal behavior.
Source Article from https://www.popularresistance.org/sandra-bland-familys-suspicions-mount-amid-fight-to-expose-death-evidence/
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