James Boncher committed suicide in a cell of the Brown County (Wisconsin) jail, and this suit, brought by his estate under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, charges that the jail officials, and the County itself, were deliberately indifferent to the risk of Boncher’s suicide and so deprived him of his life without due process of law.
Bell v. Wolfish,
Boncher had been arrested after a domestic altercation. He had a long history of alcoholism and had attempted suicide at least three times, but this history was not known to the arresting officers or the personnel of the jail. Nor did they know that he had often told his ex-wife that he planned to kill himself in jail so that a lawsuit could bе filed on behalf of his children. Interviewed during the booking process, Boncher answered “yes” when asked whether he had mental or emotional *486 problems, and to the follow-up question whether he had ever attempted suicide answered, “Yeah, a couple days ago, but I am fíne now.” He said this in what the officers thought a joking manner — his entire manner since the arrest had been jovial and cooperative, and the officers thought him a “happy drunk”' — and when they followed up his answer by asking him whether he had any suicidal inclinations, he laughed and said he was “fine.” One officer said, “It seemed like he was joking around and that’s the impression that we got.” So they put him in a regular cell rather than the jail’s suicide-watch cell. He died within 45 minutes of being placed in the cell by hanging himself with a bedsheet.
The intake officеrs who decided that Boncher was not a suicide risk are not defendants. The claim is that the people running the jail, including the county sheriff, who is acknowledged tо be Brown County for purposes of this case because he had the final authority in the county’s governance structure for managing the jail,
McMillian v. Monroe County,
The risk is claimed to have been particularly acute here because therе had been five suicides in the Brown County jail in the five years preceding Boncher’s suicide. According to the plaintiffs’ expert, Lindsay Hayes, a criminologist who specializes in the study of jail suicide, this number of suicides was unusually high. He is a reputable criminologist, but in this case, as in two others we’ve discovered
(Thacker v. Franklin County,
No. 94APE01-01,
There was still another oversight— failure to allow for normal variance. It would not be sound to condemn a jail administrator if the rate of suicide in his population was within one or two standard deviations of the rate elsewhere, for so small a variance might well be due to chance, or at least to factors over which he had no control. Every statistical distribution has an upper tail, and there is no constitutional principle that whoever is unlucky enough to manage the prisons in the upper tail of the distribution of suicides must pay damages.
The deficiencies of Hayes’s deposition compel us to treat Brown County’s jail as one of average suicide risk and ask whether there is evidence from which it cаn be inferred that the jail management was deliberately indifferent to that risk. The plaintiffs emphasize the lack of training of the intake officers and the inadequаcy of the checklist that they used in interviewing newly booked-in prisoners to determine whether they are suicide risks. The officers had only the most general training in recognizing a suicide risk, and this made them heavily dependent on the form. The form is poor, because while it contains a box to check if the prisoner has mental or emotional problems, the only follow-up question is, has he ever attempted suicide? Missing is any recognition of the possibility that the inmate might be about to mаke his first attempt (presumably not all those jail suicides that we’ve mentioned are of previous attempters, though we have no information on the point) and that it might succeed. One would think at a minimum that the inmate who admitted to mental or emotional problems would be asked what they were. If he answered that he suffered from clinical depression, that would alert the officers to a possible suicide risk, since clinical depression is a significant risk factor for suicide.
All this said, wе don’t think it adds up to evidence of deliberate indifference, especially in light of the fact that the Brown County jail is conceded to have been in cоmpliance with the state’s minimum standards for suicide prevention by jails. (Not that violation of a state law would demonstrate a denial of due process, e.g.,
Novack ex rel. Turbin v. County of Wood,
The plaintiff is left to argue that the defendants exhibited deliberate indifference to suicide risk by failing to train the intake officers or adopt a better intake questionnaire. It is not clear what good the better training would have done, at least in this case; the basic judgment the intake officers had to make was whether Boncher was joking, and that is not a judgment likely to be much assisted by special training. Cf.
Estate of Novack ex rel. Turbin v. County of Wood, supra,
There was no constitutional violation, and so there is no occasion to consider the individual defendants’ defense of qualified immunity.
Estate of Phillips v. City of Milwaukee,
AFFIRMED.
