Wrongful death lawsuit filed against Bexar County Sheriff’s Office over man’s death in jail

  

SAN ANTONIO – The estate of a man who died at the Bexar County Jail in 2022 has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Bexar County, Bexar County’s Sheriff’s Office and Sheriff Javier Salazar, according to court documents.

Derrick Ellison, 47, died in the emergency room at University Hospital on Dec. 5, 2022, hours after a detention officer found him in his jail cell having trouble breathing, BCSO said.

The lawsuit claims that the Bexar County jail and BCSO failed to protect Ellison from being assaulted and to provide medical treatment after his assault, violating his civil rights. The suit was filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas in San Antonio.

Ellison was in custody for nearly six months on a low-level misdemeanor criminal tresp assing charge. His bond was set at $1,500, meaning a $150 bail bond could have secured his release.

“Derrick struggled with mental illness much of his adult life,” the lawsuit stated. “At the time of his death, his medical history records indicate at least the diagnoses of Schizophrenia and Psychosis.”

According to the lawsuit, Ellison enlisted in the United States Air Force when he was 22 and was honorably discharged. After, he worked as a correctional officer for Wackenhut Corrections systems and eventually moved to San Antonio.

The suit asks a federal judge to grant a jury trial and award damages as well as punishment against Sheriff Salazar and the Bexar County Sheriff’s Office “in an amount sufficient to deter and to make an example of them because their actions and/or inactions” involved “evil motive or intent, “reckless or callous indifference” and “constituted oppression or malice resulting in great harm.”

READ MORE: Yet another Bexar County jail inmate dies in custody while held on low bond, criminal trespass charge

Trespassing arrest precedes death at jail

Ellison was arrested in San Antonio on June, 25 2022.

On Dec. 3, 2022, Ellison was assaulted by either correctional officer(s) at the Bexar County jail or other inmates, the lawsuit claims.

“[Ellison] told EMS officers, medical professionals and/or hospital administrators at University Hospital that he had been ‘jumped’ on this day,” the lawsuit stated.

On the next day, Ellison was found by jail staff unconscious on the floor of his jail cell alone, the lawsuit stated.

Ellison, according to BCSO officials, briefly regained consciousness and was taken to the hospital, where he died about five hours later.

During his medical evaluation at University Hospital, Ellison had a large injury to the right side of his face. On his right eye, he had a skin tear and abrasion on his eyelid, the lawsuit stated. He also had fractured ribs.

The Bexar County Medical Examiner’s Office said Ellison “most likely died of sepsis (blood poisoning) due to cellulitis (bacterial infection) of the right orbit and right side of the face,” the lawsuit stated.

The lawsuit claims that law enforcement officers intentionally refused to provide Ellison with necessary medical care and refused to transfer Ellison to a mental health facility.

The lawsuit also claims BCSO officers were inadequately trained, supervised or disciplined.

Other, similar cases at Bexar County jail

His death has similarities to the deaths of both Janice Dotson-Stephens and Jack Ule.

Dotson-Stephens, who suffered from mental health issues, died in December 2018, five months after she was charged with criminal trespassing. Her bond had been set at $300.

Her health deteriorated while she remained in jail awaiting a psychological evaluation that was ordered months before her death.

A federal jury in January ruled that Bexar County and University Health were not liable for the death of Dotson-Stephens.

Jack Ule, 63, died in April 2019 after detention officers found him unresponsive in his cell.

At the time of his death, Ule had been in custody for weeks on a $500 bond on a criminal trespassing charge.

The family of Ule settled a subsequent wrongful death lawsuit filed against University Health and Bexar County for a combined $85,000 in 2021.