Vomit covered Deyonta Green’s face and blood had pooled in his skull by the time Anoka County jail staff finally intervened in a harrowing and untreated weeklong spiral of heroin withdrawals, according to a lawsuit filed this week.
The 58-page complaint is just the latest lawsuit to take aim at MEnD Correctional Care, an embattled for-profit private health care provider based in Sartell that had been used by other Minnesota counties to provide jail services.
According to the suit, contracted medical staffers in the Anoka jail refused to give Green, 25, of Champlin, his prescribed medication to treat opioid withdrawals. He informed the jail during his intake that he had a Suboxone prescription and had just ingested heroin earlier on the day of his February 2022 arrest.
Green instead endured sleeplessness, diarrhea and vomiting while asking repeatedly for the medication. By the time he was rushed out of the jail for emergency medical intervention after a fall, he had multiple brain bleeds, skull fractures and acute kidney failure, among other maladies.
Anoka County contracted with MEnD in 2020 despite knowing, according to Green’s attorneys, that the company was a “deliberately indifferent medical ‘provider,’” and remained in the contract despite “glaring and persisting deficiencies” that included insufficient staffing at the jail.
Kathryn Bennett, an attorney representing Green, wrote in her complaint that MEnD staff carried out “wholly inadequate well-being checks on individuals suffering from known and severe opioid withdrawal.” Bennett accused MEnD of having a cost-savings model that leaned on lesser qualified assistants, nurses or health techs rather than physicians “as the boots on the ground” at the jails where it contracted to provide services.
Tierney Peters, a spokesperson for the Anoka County Sheriff’s Office, said Friday that authorities were “reviewing the complaint and other relevant information with our attorney’s office and will issue a response to the complaint at the appropriate time.”
Peters added: “The Anoka County Sheriff’s Office continues to take the responsibility of caring for those legally confined to jail very seriously and remains committed to helping inmates leave the facility in a healthier condition than when they enter.”