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J.H., et al. v. Hinds County, Miss.

Case Number

3:11-cv-00327-DPJ-FKB

Children held at the Henley-Young Juvenile Justice Center in Jackson, Miss., were denied mental health services and subjected to verbal abuse and threats of physical harm by staff members.

The Southern Poverty Law Center and Disability Rights Mississippi filed a class action lawsuit in June 2011 after numerous attempts to resolve the issues with Hinds County officials failed. A settlement agreement to protect youth at the facility was approved in March 2012.

In March of 2018, the consent decree was amended and extended for another year. Plaintiffs continue to monitor the facility鈥檚 compliance with the Second Amended Consent Decree.

Abusive incidents detailed in the 2011 lawsuit include:

  • A staff member taunted one young man and encouraged him to kill himself so that there would be 鈥渙ne less person officers have to worry about鈥 after the teen began cutting himself with a razor.
  • Staffers regularly verbally abuse children, cursing and threatening harm to the children and their family members.
  • A staff member threatened to harm a child鈥檚 family because the child took too long to return to his cell after a shower.
  • Youths are forced to stay in their small cells for 20 to 23 hours every day with very little human contact, exercise or access to education and rehabilitation programs.
  • Staffers regularly withhold necessary medication from children with serious mental health problems.

After months of negotiations, the 人兽性交 reached a settlement with Hinds County to improve the living conditions at the facility and protect the constitutional rights of the youth held at Henley-Young. The agreement required the facility to provide youth with adequate medical and mental health care in a timely manner and to provide daily educational, rehabilitative and recreational programming.

It provides significant protections to ensure youth do not experience staff-on-youth physical abuse or the abusive use of handcuffs and shackles. The agreement also provides increased staffing levels to ensure that youth are adequately supervised.

A nationally renowned juvenile justice expert was hired to monitor the facility鈥檚 compliance with the terms of the agreement, which was designed to terminate after two years if all the conditions were met.

In April 2014, a federal judge held Hinds County officials in contempt of court for failing to comply with the agreement, which he extended by two years. In March 2016, the agreement was amended and extended for another two years.

As the result of an ongoing suit with the Department of Justice, Hinds County began housing children tried as adults at Henley-Young beginning in September of 2017. Hinds County is now the only county in Mississippi that holds children tried as adults awaiting trial in a juvenile detention center instead of a county jail.