Linda Franks blows into a plastic noisemaker at the perimeter of Louisiana’s East Baton Rouge Parish Prison during a protest with other members of the reform coalition. Her son, Lamar Johnson, died while in custody at the prison in 2015. Photos: William Widmer for LEVEL

Why Do Detainees Keep Dying in This Baton Rouge Jail?

In one decade, 45 people died in East Baton Rouge Parish Prison. Most were charged with nonviolent misdemeanors. Most didn’t have their day in court. Most were Black. How did the system fail them?

Renée Bacher
Published in
20 min readJun 30, 2021

--

Update 6/7/22: Level has a new home. You can read this article and other new articles by visiting LEVELMAN.com.

Lamar Johnson was driving to pick up his grandmother from dialysis in May of 2015 when a Baker, Louisiana, police officer pulled him over because his car windows were tinted. Four days later, a guard found the 27-year-old hanging in his cell at the East Baton Rouge Parish Prison.

Years before Covid-19 ravaged correctional facilities across the United States, the East Baton Rouge Parish Prison (EBRPP) experienced its own prolonged wave of death. From 2009 to 2019, 45 prisoners died in the jail’s custody, which is nearly double the national average. Most of the deceased had been arrested for nonviolent crimes and had not had their day in court.

EBRPP is a dilapidated, overcrowded facility that was built in 1965. Detainees there have spoken of bedbugs, spider bites, and rats in the stew. Residents of the parish rejected a tax to build a new jail…

--

--

Renée Bacher
LEVEL
Writer for

Renée Bacher is a Louisiana-based journalist who has written for the New York Times Magazine, The Washington Post Magazine and many other publications.