Pubdate: Sun, 30 Apr 2006 Source: St. Petersburg Times (FL) Copyright: 2006 St. Petersburg Times Contact: http://www.sptimes.com/letters/ Website: http://www.sptimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/419 Author: Rebecca Catalanello, Times Staff Writer Note: Times researcher Cathy Wos contributed to this report. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?246 (Policing - United States) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) A SON'S SUICIDE, A MOM'S CRUSADE After Her Son Hanged Himself in a Police Holding Cell, a Mother Gets Mandatory Suicide Screenings Implemented. TEMPLE TERRACE - Donald Rubin killed himself in plain sight, on camera, with police a few paces away. A security camera caught him stripping the laces out of his shoes. It videotaped him wrapping them around his neck. But no one saw the video footage live. Thirty-six minutes after he collapsed to the ground from hanging, an officer discovered his body pressed up against the bars of a Temple Terrace Police Department holding cell. Officers tried to revive him, but it was too late. No one in the Police Department expected that the seemingly calm 39- year-old detainee would kill himself. Now, more than three years after Rubin's Feb. 20, 2003 death, the Temple Terrace Police Department has agreed in a lawsuit settlement to meet Rubin's mother's demands. Foremost among them: instituting a mandatory suicide screening for anyone entering a holding cell. "It's a few extra questions in the booking process," said Seth Nelson, attorney for Elizabeth Rubin, 70. "It's not expensive." Still, the agreement appears to be unprecedented in the Tampa Bay area. While large jails like the Pinellas County Jail and Orient Road Jail in Hillsborough County include a suicide screening as part of their regular booking procedures, a Times survey of area agencies reveals it is far less common for smaller municipal police departments to perform a formal check for suicidal tendencies before placing inmates in holding cells. Holding cells are typically used as an in-between place for inmates. It's where they go when they are awaiting some process such as booking, interrogation or a court appearance. Prisoners are not supposed to be kept in a holding cell more than eight hours, according to Florida Model Jail Standards. Many small police agencies try to use them as infrequently as possible, for one simple reason. "It's safer for everyone," said Capt. Sanfield Forseth of the Pinellas Park Police Department. Forseth estimates Pinellas Park uses the holding cells once a month, if that, and prefers to transport inmates directly to the county jail run by the Pinellas County Sheriff's Office. But Col. David Parrish, who oversees Hillsborough County jails, says police departments need to get out of the business of using holding cells altogether. The Temple Terrace incident may illustrate why. Less than three hours before Rubin died, an officer discovered him and a longtime female friend parked in a 1998 Ford Econoline van at a park near Riverhills Elementary School. It was after 3 a.m. and parking there was against city ordinance. So, Officer Jacob Carlisle stopped. Rubin told police he was showing Angelia Verran his childhood stomping grounds. He'd attended the elementary school and grew up in nearby Lamont Place, he said. But Rubin - who had been out with Verran shooting pool, downing shots and singing karaoke before coming to the park - smelled of alcohol and, police said, he had white powder on his nose. Elizabeth Rubin wishes that morning ended simply with her son's arrest for cocaine possession. Donnie, the youngest of three boys, had had his troubles. He never really settled into a career, but supported himself working now in restaurants, now in construction. Sometime in his 20s, she thinks, he started hanging with people who dabbled in drugs. He had been arrested and charged with driving under the influence in 1998. Elizabeth Rubin urged him to take care of himself, to avoid drugs. She knew his weaknesses. But she always believed he had goodness in him. He cooked for her. He played golf with her. He sang terribly, but she misses hearing him play his guitar and sing his sad songs. He was sensitive, but also a jokester known for his bear hugs. It's hard to find a photo of him where he's keeping a straight face. "He was just - he was a normal guy to most people, but he was my baby," Elizabeth Rubin said. At 11 a.m. Feb. 20, 2003, Elizabeth Rubin learned her baby died alone in a holding cell with a shoelace around his neck. The Temple Terrace police lieutenant who came to the door to help deliver the news had attended King High School with Donald. She knew him and liked him. She'd always had a good relationship with the Police Department, even getting formal recognition from the agency for her participation in events aimed at preventing crime. Yet, she didn't believe her ears. She wanted a lawyer. She had one burning thought. "That they killed him," she said. Jail suicide looms large on the corrections community radar. No one wants a dead inmate on their hands, partly because of the liability. "There are lots and lots of suicides (in the world) every day," said Parrish, who oversees jails for the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office. "However, once someone is in our custody, oh my gosh, the standards suddenly change. People are lining up to file lawsuits claiming negligence was committed." Nationally, the 2003 suicide rate in local jails was 47 per 100,000 inmates - more than three times that in state prisons, according to the Bureau of Justice Statistics. And yet small agencies such as Temple Terrace have traditionally done little to raise internal awareness about the hazards of leaving someone alone in a cell. In the Temple Terrace wrongful death case Elizabeth Rubin filed last year, she said the department failed to safely detain and care for her son, thereby violating his constitutional rights. Officers failed to remove his shoelaces before locking him in the cell. They failed to effectively monitor the video surveillance pointed at him. And, Elizabeth Rubin holds, they failed to recognize warning signs that her son was a suicide risk. Temple Terrace Deputy Chief Patricia Powers admits officers did not receive any verbal indication that Donald Rubin was suicidal. But she also says that in her 25 years with the agency, the 39-year-old's suicide was a first. Before that, it was not standard procedure to remove the suspect's belt or shoes. While the cells were monitored via a camera hoisted in one corner of the two-cell room, the resulting video was small and obscure. The person charged with watching it had other duties as well and was never required to observe the screen every moment. Though officers were trained to look for signs of mental instability because the person can be detained for his or her own safety under the Baker Act, they did not get a lot of training on less obvious signs of potential suicide. Margaret Severson, an associate professor at the University of Kansas who has studied and worked in prisons for more than 20 years, said the main reason police tend to shy away from incorporating suicide screenings in their booking procedures is "our own discomfort in asking about suicide - because then you have to do something about it." Even now that Temple Terrace has strengthened its holding cell procedures with special attention to suicide risk, the agency does not have any specific plans to provide formal training sessions for the staff, Powers said. The agency is instead trying to transport suspects directly to county jail more often. Powers estimated that the number of people placed in holding cells has declined by 20 to 30 percent since the 2003 suicide. "We are not a detention facility," Powers said. "Just holding cells. We are not corrections." That's exactly why Parrish thinks local police agencies should do away with holding cells altogether. Small agencies simply don't have the means or staff to adequately run jails inside their departments, he said. "You can't lock people up in rooms and leave them unattended," he said. Running a jail means complying with a host of federal regulations - rules that the county jails are far more prepared to institute. Parrish recommends police departments use secure interview rooms to house people in custody before bringing them to county jail. But a survey of 13 municipal police departments in Hillsborough, Pinellas, Pasco, Hernando and Citrus found that nine use holding cells. The Port Richey Police Department doesn't have one, but it plans to build two in west Pasco County in the next few months, Chief Bill Sager said. "It's more of a convenience," said Lt. Scott Baker of the New Port Richey Police Department, which has six holding cells that it uses for most arrests. In stings that involve multiple arrests, for example, holding cells provide more room for officers to process sometimes lengthy paperwork. A cell can also be a more comfortable place for the detainee than the back of a hot patrol car. Of those that use holding facilities, Tampa police appear to be most in line with Parrish's recommendation. Each of the three districts has a secured interview room where the detainee sits in a cage in the same room with the arresting officer. Cpl. Larry McKinnon said the agency rarely uses the rooms. Unlike most of the agencies surveyed, the Tampa facilities do not include a toilet. And while there is video monitoring of the area, officers are bound by policy not to leave the suspect without direct supervision. In Brooksville, Chief Ed Tincher said the agency has never used cells for the exact reasons Parrish raised: "We decided a long time ago, it wasn't worth it," Tincher said. In Temple Terrace the new suicide screening policy became official on Wednesday - too late for Elizabeth Rubin's purposes. Three years after Donnie's death, the wounds are still fresh enough that she can't keep from crying when she talks about him. As a result of the lawsuit settlement, Rubin, who works in concessions at the St. Pete Times Forum, received $30,000. But she says what she really wanted was to see other mothers spared the news she received that February morning. Knowing the department is changing brings her hope. But, to her, the new measures just seem like common sense. "It will never heal the wound," she said. Deputy Chief Powers said the experience also had an impact on the officers who handled the incident. They are sorry, she said. They don't want this to happen again. Nelson, the attorney for Elizabeth Rubin, said it's the best remedy that can come of the situation: "At the end of the day, it's going to save lives. His death is going to save lives." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake