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Jose Garcia

(3,551 posts)
Sun Dec 1, 2024, 08:45 PM Dec 2024

Chicago hate crime shooting suspect dead after being found unresponsive at jail's health center

Source: ABC 7 Chicago

CHICAGO (WLS) -- A Chicago hate crime shooting suspect is dead after being found unresponsive at the Cook County Jail's health center, the sheriff's office said on Sunday.

The Cook County Sheriff's Office said staff found 22-year-old Sidi Mohammad Abdallahi unresponsive from an apparent suicide attempt at Cermak Health Services around 3:30 p.m. Saturday.

The Chicago Fire Department transported Abdallahi to Mt. Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.

Abdallahi was facing terrorism and hate crime charges for a West Rogers Park shooting that wounded an Orthodox Jewish man who was walking to a synagogue on Oct. 27.

Read more: https://www.google.com/amp/s/abc7chicago.com/amp/post/west-rogers-park-chicago-shooting-hate-crime-suspect-sidi-mohamed-abdallahi-found-dead-cook-county-jail-sheriff/15610901/

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Chicago hate crime shooting suspect dead after being found unresponsive at jail's health center (Original Post) Jose Garcia Dec 2024 OP
There is an old saying LPBBEAR Dec 2024 #1
Ditto. Lunabell Dec 2024 #2
"NHI". No human involved in the suspect's death. C0RI0LANUS Dec 2024 #3
Bette Davis comes to mind Behind the Aegis Dec 2024 #4
He should have been on a suicide watch or something. Mosby Dec 2024 #5
They usually only do that if the person is showing signs of mental illness or distress Jose Garcia Dec 2024 #8
Unacceptable, should never have happened. Should have been better supervision Beringia Dec 2024 #6
From 2018, Sun Times, oversight of Cermak Health Services Beringia Dec 2024 #7

LPBBEAR

(683 posts)
1. There is an old saying
Sun Dec 1, 2024, 09:21 PM
Dec 2024

that goes something like

If you have nothing good to say about someone say nothing at all



Nothing at all

 

Mosby

(19,491 posts)
5. He should have been on a suicide watch or something.
Mon Dec 2, 2024, 01:47 AM
Dec 2024

I wonder how long he was dead before someone noticed.

Jose Garcia

(3,551 posts)
8. They usually only do that if the person is showing signs of mental illness or distress
Wed Dec 4, 2024, 08:05 PM
Dec 2024

Last edited Thu Dec 5, 2024, 10:25 AM - Edit history (1)

Beringia

(5,631 posts)
7. From 2018, Sun Times, oversight of Cermak Health Services
Wed Dec 4, 2024, 05:36 PM
Dec 2024
http://web.archive.org/web/20201109003812/https://chicago.suntimes.com/2018/6/30/18415081/federal-oversight-of-cermak-health-services-dissolved


Cermak Health Services is free from an eight-year-old consent decree with the U.S. Department of Justice, a U.S. District court decided Tuesday.

The county-operated hospital, located at Cook County Jail, was found to have “systematically violated inmates’ constitutional rights by the use of excessive force by staff.”

There were three parties to the decree — the county’s sheriff’s office, the county’s facilities department and Cermak Health Services. The Justice Department’s finding of excessive force was on the sheriff’s office, according to Caryn Stancik, a spokesperson for the county’s health and hospitals system.

In a statement from the Department of Justice when the decree went into effect in 2010, officials also cited “the failure to protect inmates from harm by fellow inmates, inadequate medical and mental health care, and a lack of adequate fire safety and sanitation” as a reason for the decree.

County officials were then tasked with developing policies and procedures to ensure constitutionally adequate medical and mental health care, including suicide prevention.

On Tuesday, that decree was dissolved by U.S. District Judge Virginia Kendall.

“For the past decade, Cermak Correctional Health Services has worked closely with the Justice Department, the court-appointed monitors and the Cook County Department of Corrections to institute best practices in the areas of physical and mental health,” Jay Shannon, CEO of the Cook County Health and Hospitals System, said in a statement.

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle said she was “grateful” for the decision.

In a tweeted statement, she said, “I’m proud the court noted the policies and practices at Cermak that support the constitutional rights of detainees in healthcare are in full compliance.”

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