Tarrant County Sheriff Bill Waybourn is set to answer questions about jail conditions and deaths at a public forum in Arlington Thursday night, as he runs for his third term in office.
At least 60 people have died in Tarrant County custody since Waybourn took office in 2017, including one person who died at a private prison near Lubbock, which Tarrant County pays to use.
The sheriff鈥檚 main job is operating county jails. These deaths and other incidents, like the beating of an incarcerated man and the death of a baby born unattended in a cell, have sparked multiple lawsuits, which have cost the county more than $1 million in settlements. Two jailers accused of falsifying checks on an incarcerated man who later died face criminal prosecution.
Democratic County Commissioner Alisa Simmons organized the panel, which will meet Thursday night from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at the Tarrant County Sub-Courthouse, 700 E. Abram St. in Arlington. She wants to address the rising jail population, mental illness in the jail, and the deaths.
鈥淲e're going to give people an opportunity to hear about those things, [and] ask questions about those areas of the county jail that concern them,鈥 Simmons said.
Other participants in the panel will include, according to Simmons鈥 office:
- J. Greg Shugart, Tarrant County Criminal Courts Administrator
- Tamla Ray, Tarrant County magistrate judge
- Deborah Nekhom, Tarrant County Criminal Court No. 4 judge
- Krish Gundu, head of the , a statewide advocacy organization
- Pamela Young, organizer with , a local activist group
- Katherine Godby, chairwoman of the Justice Network, a local activist group
Members of the Justice Network are some of the most frequent commenters at Tarrant County Commissioners Court meetings, often bringing concerns about the jail.
Waybourn is a Republican, running unopposed in his party鈥檚 primary. The Democrats running to replace him are and . They鈥檒l face off in the primaries on March 5, before Tarrant County voters make their final pick for sheriff in the general election on Nov. 5.
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