A 57-year-old Kentucky inmate is dead after going on a five-week hunger strike, dropping 50 pounds between September and his death in January. A prison doctor was fired and two other staffers are in the process of being dismissed over the death of James Kenneth Embry, 57, found dead in his Kentucky State Penitentiary cell in Louisville on January 13 of dehydration and starvation. A criminal investigation was sparked after the AP got tipped off to Embry's death and started collecting documents and asking questions.
Embry, who had three years left on a nine-year drug sentence, stopped taking his anti-anxiety medication in May; his behavior became erratic, and he started refusing meals in December, ultimately refusing 32 of the last 33 meals he was served (and he did not eat the single tray of food he did accept). The 6-foot inmate weighed just 138 pounds when he died, yet prison staffers—including medical personnel—repeatedly failed to intervene. Just a few details from the AP's disturbing timeline and story:
- Embry asked to go back on anti-anxiety medications in December, but the lead prison psychologist denied the request even though Embry had spoken of wanting to harm himself.
- When a nurse noted Embry was down to 138 pounds, and was weak and shaky, on Jan. 4—32 pounds less than what he weighed on Dec. 26—the lead prison physician signed off on the nurse's report without seeing Embry.
- Hours before Embry was found dead, another nurse refused a request from medical staffers to move Embry to the infirmary, and stated that he should be taken off hunger strike watch.
Click for the
full story. (More
hunger strike stories.)