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Woman who gave birth alone in Tarrant County Jail is suing the doctor

A photo of an empty jail cell, taken through a glass-front door with a thick lock. the inside is sparse, with a white cinderblock bed attached to the wall and a stainless steel toilet a few feet away.
Yfat Yossifor
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四虎影院
A cell at the Tarrant County jail in Fort Worth. A judge has allowed a woman who gave birth alone in her jail cell in 2020 to sue the doctor in charge of her care.

A woman who gave birth alone in her Tarrant County jail cell in 2020 is now suing the doctor in charge of her care, after a federal court reversed its earlier ruling that protected him from litigation.

Chasity Congious is intellectually disabled and has schizophrenia and bipolar disorder diagnoses, according to court documents. Her daughter Zenorah died 10 days after Congious gave birth unattended.

A federal court previously dismissed claims against Dr. Aaron Ivy Shaw, the medical director at the Tarrant County Jail while Congious was incarcerated. The court decided there was a lack of evidence Shaw knew Congious was in pain and refused her medical care.

Judge Reed O鈥機onnor reversed that ruling on July 16, in response to new evidence.

During of the lawsuit, Congious鈥 attorney says he found an email sent to Shaw the morning Congious gave birth. The email noted Congious was having abdominal cramps.

鈥淭he Court finds that Congious鈥檚 case must proceed in light of the newly discovered evidence so that justice may be achieved,鈥 O鈥機onnor wrote.

A screenshot of a legal filing, including a medical report about Chasity Congious. The brief report states Congious is 37 weeks pregnant, and includes this summary: "took PM ENSRE but Refused Breakfast, C/O ABD CRAMPS"
Screenshot
The message Dr. Aaron Ivy Shaw received regarding Chasity Congious' condition the day she gave birth. Shaw's attorneys included it in a legal filing on Apr. 23, 2024.

In May, Tarrant County settled a lawsuit from Congious鈥 mother and guardian for $1.2 million, the largest payout in county history.

The new phase of the lawsuit is another opportunity to hold someone accountable for Congious鈥 loss, said Jarrett Adams, the attorney representing Congious and her mom.

鈥淭his woman who鈥檚 pregnant says she doesn鈥檛 want to eat because her stomach hurts,鈥 Adams said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know what more do you need to have heard.鈥

四虎影院 reached out to Shaw鈥檚 legal team for an interview. One of his attorneys, Jordan Parker, responded that his firm does not comment on pending litigation.

In a court filing in April, Shaw鈥檚 lawyers argued the discovery of the email doesn鈥檛 change anything. Even if the new evidence 鈥渃an be said to 鈥榮trengthen鈥欌 Congious鈥 case, it doesn鈥檛 warrant the court鈥檚 reconsideration, they wrote.

鈥淓ven if one were to assume that Dr. Shaw saw and read this email (which was purportedly sent to his inbox about an hour and forty minutes before Chasity went into labor), it merely corroborates the notion that Dr. Shaw was subjectively aware that Chasity was at risk,鈥 the filing states.

O鈥機onnor decided the email was enough to reopen the lawsuit.

鈥淭he new evidence reveals conduct of a far more wanton nature,鈥 he wrote.

Congious鈥 attorney also got an expert witness, Dr. David A. Gutman, who said her cramps the morning she gave birth were contractions from labor.

Shaw鈥檚 lawyers dismissed that expert report in their April filing.

鈥淪uch reports are hearsay and do not constitute competent evidence,鈥 they wrote.

In his latest ruling, O鈥機onnor laid out what happened to Congious behind bars. During her incarceration, her mental state worsened to the point she stopped speaking. A doctor reported Congious may not be able to recognize when she went into labor or express her symptoms.

Because of those risks, the doctor recommended an induced labor. Shaw did not immediately act, according to O鈥機onnor鈥檚 filing.

鈥淒r. Shaw also elected not to transfer Congious to a medical facility or afford her around-the-clock care, monitoring, and supervision to mitigate against the pregnancy risks due to her psychological condition,鈥 O鈥機onnor wrote.

Congious gave birth alone in her cell. She banged on the door for help but no one answered, her attorney alleges. The Tarrant County Sheriff's Office, which runs the jail, has maintained Congious did not make a sound while giving birth.

When jailers discovered Congious and her baby 鈥淭ragically, the baby girl was not breathing by that point and had only a faint heartbeat due to the umbilical cord wrapped around her tiny neck,鈥 O鈥機onnor wrote.

The county dropped Congious鈥 charges shortly after her daughter Zenorah's death.

鈥淪hockingly, at no point during her five months of incarceration did Congious receive a legal hearing,鈥 O鈥機onnor wrote in his ruling.

Congious spent time in inpatient mental health care after she was released from jail, according to O鈥機onnor.

In April, she went back to jail for probation violations but was released shortly after. Congious鈥 mother told 四虎影院 her daughter has two baby dolls to ease the anxiety she鈥檚 suffered since losing Zenorah.

Got a tip? Email Miranda Suarez at msuarez@kera.org.

四虎影院 is made possible through the generosity of our members. If you find this reporting valuable, consider today. Thank you.

Miranda Suarez is 四虎影院鈥檚 Tarrant County accountability reporter. Before coming to North Texas, she was the Lee Ester News Fellow at Wisconsin Public Radio, where she covered statewide news from the capital city of Madison. Miranda is originally from Massachusetts and started her public radio career at WBUR in Boston.