The Tampa Tribune

$1.75 Million Ends Jail Death Lawsuit

By Todd Leskanic

The Tampa Tribune

Published June 28, 2006

DADE CITY - A woman whose ex-husband died after a 2002 stay in the Land 0 ' Lakes jail settled her lawsuit against the sheriffs office for nearly $2 million this month.

Keela Travis filed a federal lawsuit in 2004 on behalf of James Michael Chaney, the father of her two boys.

She contended that Chaney died after corrections officers and jail medical staff failed to properly treat his drug withdrawal symptoms. At the time, Chaney was high on gamma-hydroxybutyric acid, commonly known as GHB, the date rape drug.

The Pasco County Sheriff's Office is responsible for $1.28 million of the $1.75 million settlement, and the county will pay an additional $15.000. Insurance companies for doctors and nurses contracted to care for inmates will cover the remaining $450,000. Money left over after paying legal fees will go into a fund for Travis' sons, 10 and 11

Travis, who lives in Naples. won't receive any of it, said her attorney, E. Clay Parker of Orlando. "It's always been the objective of the mother and the estate to create a situation where the boys were the recipients of the settlement," he said.

Parker wouldn't say how much money the boys would receive. They will be paid in yearly installments for the rest of their lives after they turn 18. he said.

Thomas Poulton, the sheriff's office's Orlando-based attorney, said the fact that Travis had named nearly 30 defendants made going to trial a risky proposition.

Had a jury found any of the defendants guilty of a civil rights violation, the sheriffs office's insurance would have been liable for legal fees and court costs, which Poulton estimated would have been more than $1 million.

"We made a business decision," Poulton said. "Sometimes it's better to compromise on the claim for a lower settlement than it is to try it, spend the money and risk losing the attorney's fees on top of all that."

Chaney. 28. died Nov. 21, 2002, eight days after he was booked into the jail, arrested on charges of trafficking GHB.

When he arrived at the jail, Chaney told deputies he was addicted to the drug and had used ecstasy and GHB immediately before his arrest

Jail nurses failed to evaluate his condition and didn't provide him treatment, the lawsuit states. During his jail stay, he was forced into a cell and later thrown to the ground by a corrections officer.

Four days after Chaney's arrival, a deputy found him unconscious. He was taken to Spring Hill Regional Hospital and then to St. Joseph's Hospital, where he was pronounced brain dead. He died four days later

Contact Todd Leskanic at (352) 521-3156 or tleskanic@tampa

Find this article at:

http://www.tbo.comipascoiMGBCECTlZOE.html

TBO.com is Tampa Bay Online 2006 Media General, Inc. All rights reserved


Copyright 2006, Unauthorized reproduction prohibited.