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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Prisons Issue Drug Warning After Deaths Of Three Inmates
Title:US CA: Prisons Issue Drug Warning After Deaths Of Three Inmates
Published On:2000-12-21
Source:San Jose Mercury News (CA)
Fetched On:2008-09-02 08:17:55
PRISONS ISSUE DRUG WARNING AFTER DEATHS OF THREE INMATES

SACRAMENTO -- The Department of Corrections warned inmates Wednesday to be
cautious about using both legal and illegal drugs after three recent
unexplained deaths at the Central California Women's Facility in Chowchilla.

Letters from the department's health director went to inmates there first,
but will be sent to each of the state's approximately 160,000 inmates by
week's end, said spokeswoman Margot Bach.

Deputy Director for Health Care Services Susann Steinberg warned inmates to
avoid unprescribed medicines, combining medication, trading prescriptions
with other inmates, or hoarding medication.

In addition, Steinberg warned inmates against using illegal drugs.

"The illegal drugs (like heroin, marijuana, cocaine, methamphetamines,
etc.) that may be coming into the prison may be contaminated with toxic and
poisonous materials. In the past, we have identified drugs contaminated
with substances that range from potent insecticides to poisons, like
strychnine,'' Steinberg warned in her letter. "Inhaling, ingesting, or
injecting these substances may lead to agonizing and rapid death.''

Steinberg's office is also reviewing deaths throughout the prison system to
see if there are similar instances elsewhere, Bach said.

However, Youth and Adult Correctional Agency Assistant Director Steve Green
labeled "absolutely untrue" reports by prison advocacy groups of scattered
unexplained deaths among male inmates.

Meanwhile, a medical team from the University of California-Davis began its
independent investigation of the three Chowchilla deaths Wednesday.

Pamela Coffey, 46, of Los Angeles, collapsed in her cell Dec. 2. Stephanie
Hardie, 34, of Pomona, died Dec. 9, and Eva Vallario, 33, of San Diego,
died Friday.

"The women were young, they didn't have any ongoing health problems...and
they were here one minute and the next they're gone," Bach said.

Toxicology reports on the women inmates aren't expected for another week.
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