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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Blinded Inmate Lost in Shadows of Bureaucracy
Title:US CA: Blinded Inmate Lost in Shadows of Bureaucracy
Published On:2009-06-28
Source:Los Angeles Times (CA)
Fetched On:2009-06-28 16:51:52
BLINDED INMATE LOST IN SHADOWS OF BUREAUCRACY

Frank Lucero says his pleas for glaucoma medication were ignored at
Chino prison. Then his left eye 'just exploded.' Now he is suing the state.

A nubby black cloth covers the sole window in Frank Lucero's Hemet
living room, casting a perpetual dusk over his refuge, a space as
cramped as the prison cells where he spent a decade.

He can't bear the light. Even an overcast day on the sprawling range
shadowed by the San Jacinto Mountains brings on headache, dull pain
in his right eye and ghostly sensations in the empty socket of his left.

Lucero has been legally blind since his left eyeball burst a year ago
from glaucoma that went untreated during a stint in the Chino state
prison for parole violation. He can't read, drive or navigate the
world outside his tiny duplex except during the muted moments around
sunrise and sunset.

Out since February, he lives in an altered state of confinement, at
liberty yet locked in by his injury and chagrin over the deformity he
masks with plum-colored glasses.

Lucero has sued the state, his claims echoing accusations in two
high-profile class-action suits brought against the state seven years ago.

Those complaints, alleging that inmates die of curable or avoidable
illnesses at the rate of one a week, prompted U.S. District Judge
Thelton Henderson to deem prison healthcare in California so
deficient as to violate the Constitution. In 2006, Henderson seized
control of prison medical, mental health and dental services and
appointed a receiver to oversee them.

Lucero hadn't been able to see much since being diagnosed with
glaucoma while at Soledad State Prison in 2005. Still, with
medication, he was able to work jobs moving furniture in between time
served for drug use, petty theft and skipped meetings with his parole agent.

"I'd been using eyedrops to manage the pressure," said Lucero,
square-jawed and sporting a jet-black ponytail that reaches to his
waist, recalling the vial of prednisolone acetate that he said was
taken from him when he entered the California Institution for Men in
Chino in February 2008.

Prison rules barred medications other than those prescribed by staff
doctors. Fill out the forms, he said he was told, and he did so repeatedly.

Yet three months into a yearlong sentence, with dozens of appeals to
see an eye doctor unheeded and the pain growing unbearable, Lucero
said, he still had neither the anti-inflammatory medication nor a
prescription for glasses.

He had headaches and dizziness.

His equilibrium and speech were affected.

"Some days I couldn't put together a sentence without yammering and
stuttering," he said.

On May 23, 2008, Lucero was sitting on his bunk, his head cradled in
his hands, when his throbbing eyeball "just exploded."

His screams spurred what he describes as an unusual act of
camaraderie among the nearly 200 other prisoners milling around the
packed, makeshift cell built in what used to be an exercise yard.

Someone gave him a towel to stop the bleeding. Another prisoner
alerted the guards, who sounded a code three alarm, summoning the
team of guards and medics usually brought in to quell riots.

An ambulance raced him the 20 miles to Riverside County Regional
Medical Center, where his eye was diagnosed as irreparable. He went
back to Chino for two weeks, until the swelling subsided enough for
surgeons to remove the mangled eyeball, along with the connective
tissue, muscle and nerves he would have needed for a transplant.

Lawsuit Filed

In March, a month after his release, Lucero sued the state, alleging
dereliction of duty to safeguard the health of those in custody who
have no recourse.

State officials moved to dismiss the suit, said Scott Gerber,
spokesman for Atty. Gen. Jerry Brown.

But U.S. District Judge Gary Allen Feess found in late June that
Lucero's complaint of "cruel and unusual punishment" at the hands of
a prison medical appeals analyst was sufficient to go to trial. The
judge dismissed the case against others in the corrections system on
technical grounds, giving Lucero until mid-July to make a viable case
against them.

With litigation pending, state prison officials declined to discuss
the specifics of Lucero's case.

J. Clark Kelso, the court-appointed receiver overseeing the prison
medical system, argues that his team is making progress in fixing a
broadly broken system, while conceding that the effort is slowed by
the daunting scope of the task and the state's budget crisis.

"Even if I had all the money in the world, it's such an enormous set
of projects," Kelso said.

He plans to computerize paper medical records for 171,000 prisoners,
replace a deficient pharmacy operation, build at least $2 billion
worth of hospitals and upgrade existing ones.

Those improvements are all at least a year and a half away, probably
longer, given the state's search for $24 billion in spending
reductions, Kelso conceded.

Lucero scoffs at the outlook for fixing healthcare in a system
bursting at the seams. Most California prisons have at least twice as
many inmates as they were designed to accommodate.

"I don't think anyone went out of their way to keep me from getting
treatment," Lucero said, adding that prison nurses and orderlies gave
him the requisite forms for appointments that were never forthcoming.

"Paperwork gets shuffled, misplaced. Sometimes even when it does get
filed it goes through a lot of channels," he said.

But with an eye transplant that might have restored his sight and
mobility now out of the question, he wants someone held accountable.

At the very least, he says, the state should provide him with a prosthetic eye.

"I'm real self-conscious about having a hole in my head," said
Lucero, turning his face in profile to hide the socket he's plugged
with a plastic ball to hold its shape.

Lucero is theoretically eligible for state and federal disability payments.

But he finds himself mired in paperwork he can't read, and
negotiating an unfamiliar labyrinth of state and federal offices he
can't get to unless his mother comes over from her job running the
family's slot-machine factory in Bullhead City, Ariz.

Typical Childhood

Fit from lifting weights to break the monotony of days spent alone,
Lucero holds little hope of finding employment or a place in Hemet
beyond the two darkened rooms of the duplex.

Despite the lack of distraction, he insists that he won't again be
lured into the drug scene.

"I'm not interested in going back in ever again. I lost a body part
last time," Lucero said. "I'm done with all that, anyway. I'm 40
years old. My body's not young anymore."

He takes responsibility for what landed him in prison.

His parents split up when he was 11, but his childhood in Baldwin
Park was happy, or typical, at least, he says.

"I can't blame my family or my upbringing for getting into trouble.
It was more the availability of the drugs and where I was at at the
time," he recalled.

But he harbors resentment toward authorities who he says have
deprived him of any chance of a normal life and full rehabilitation.

"I don't think I should take any responsibility for being neglected,"
Lucero said. "My hands were tied. If I wasn't in custody at the time
I could have sought medical treatment. I would still have the option
of a transplant."
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