Pubdate: Sat, 11 Dec 2004 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2004 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Manny Fernandez, Washington Post Staff Writer Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Magbie (Jonathan Magbie) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mmj.htm (Cannabis - Medicinal) INSPECTOR GENERAL TO PROBE D.C. INMATE DEATH Quadriplegic Man Had Respiratory Failure The D.C. inspector general's office has launched an inquiry into the death of Jonathan Magbie, the quadriplegic inmate who died in September after suffering breathing problems. Magbie's family began pressing for an investigation soon after his death, raising questions about his treatment by the courts, the D.C. Department of Corrections and Greater Southeast Community Hospital, where he died Sept. 24. The central issue is whether authorities were equipped to handle a patient with Magbie's health problems while he served a 10-day sentence on a drug charge. Interim Inspector General Austin A. Andersen said yesterday that the inquiry will review probes that have been done by other D.C. agencies, evaluate policies and procedures and determine whether they were properly followed. The various reviews include one that was recently completed by the D.C. Department of Health, which found that the hospital had failed to provide Magbie with adequate care. Andersen said his office will examine the other probes and conduct an investigation into what took place. "We're planning on going through it from top to bottom," he said. City Administrator Robert C. Bobb said he asked the inspector general to conduct the investigation. Results are expected early next year, though no firm deadline was set. Bobb said he wanted the inspector general to look into the Health Department's report as well as other reviews of the case, including those by the D.C. Department of Corrections and Greater Southeast. "I want to satisfy myself that everything that we did in this case, throughout this entire chain of events, was done appropriately and consistent with best practices and our own policies," Bobb said yesterday. Bobb's request for an investigation was reported by WTOP radio yesterday. Magbie, 27, of Mitchellville, was paralyzed from the neck down after he was struck by a drunk driver when he was 4. He used a motorized wheelchair that he operated with his chin. He wound up in legal trouble in April 2003 when he was arrested while riding with a cousin in his family's Hummer in Southeast Washington. D.C. police found cocaine, marijuana and a gun in the vehicle. Magbie pleaded guilty to a charge of possession of marijuana. D.C. Superior Court Judge Judith E. Retchin gave him the jail sentence, noting the presence of the gun in the Hummer and Magbie's insistence that he would continue to smoke marijuana because it made him feel better. A pre-sentence report had recommended probation, and prosecutors did not object to giving Magbie probation. Retchin had said that she was led to believe that Magbie's medical needs could be met by corrections officials. Hours after he arrived at the D.C. jail Sept. 20, Magbie had difficulty breathing. He told a jail nurse that he used a ventilator to help him breathe at night, according to the Health Department's investigation. The jail did not have such equipment, and he was taken to the emergency room at Greater Southeast. The Health Department said that an emergency room doctor erred by releasing Magbie to the jail's care Sept. 21 without addressing his ventilator needs at night. The doctor, however, maintains that Magbie's breathing stabilized and that the jail could aid him with nasal oxygen. Magbie ended up returning to Greater Southeast on Sept. 24 because of breathing problems, and he died later that day of acute respiratory failure. Magbie's mother, Mary Scott, has said that she holds the judge, the jail and the hospital responsible for her son's death. She did not return messages yesterday. Joan Phillips, Greater Southeast's chief executive, defended the care the hospital provided Magbie and said she welcomed "objective investigations." She said the hospital is conducting two reviews that will examine decision-making by its doctors, communication and other clinical issues stemming from the case. "I do think that everything that we did was according to practice," Phillips said. Leah Gurowitz, a D.C. Superior Court spokeswoman, said Chief Judge Rufus G. King III is reviewing procedures for transferring inmates and looking into whether communication can be improved between the courts and the jail. Corrections officials have said that Magbie received "all the necessary treatment" while in custody. A corrections spokesman said the department has cooperated with previous investigations and will do so with the inspector general's inquiry. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake