Police not liable for lady’s death
Decided officers took proper steps

By ROBIN SHANNON
Published/Last Modified on Friday, November 28, 2008 12:11 PM CST


Staff Reporter

LAPLACE – An investigation into the death of a LaPlace woman who was in the custody of the St. John Sheriff’s Office determined that there was no negligence on the part of Sheriff’s Office employees, said a spokesman for the department.

Maj. Mike Tregre, public information officer for the Sheriff’s Office, said deputies followed all the proper steps while dealing with Cabrina Williams, 42, who was arrested Sept. 7 and passed away Sept. 9 after suffering a cardiac arrest while in Sheriff’s Office custody.

Cabrina Williams

“We’ve determined it was an unfortunate medical event,” said Tregre. “There were no signs that any of our officers did anything wrong.”

Tregre said deputies walked Williams from the jail to a patrol car to be taken to River Parishes Hospital for a medical evaluation following her arrest for disturbing the peace. Williams had been arrested two days before after her husband called police to report that she was exhibiting “uncontrollable behavior.”

Once in the car, deputies noticed that Williams appeared to be falling asleep, but she then became unresponsive. She was given CPR and taken by ambulance to the hospital, where she was pronounced dead. Tregre said Williams had not been eating and she had become dehydrated.

An autopsy on Williams concluded that blood clots in both lungs contributed to her cardiac arrest St. John Coroner Christy Montegut said. There were no signs of any other conditions. Family members said that Williams suffered from an unspecified mental illness and said the Sheriff’s Office was not properly equipped to handle a person with her type of problems.

According to a report on Williams’ arrest, when the responding female deputy arrived at the home, in the 2400 block of Virginian Colony Drive, she entered a bedroom and found Williams lying on a bed. Williams then physically attacked the deputy and had to be restrained. The deputy suffered minor injuries, but was not taken to the hospital.

The report said the deputy called for additional support and those deputies entered the home, handcuffed Williams, her husband Ralph and their 22-year-old son. Tregre said the two men were not charged and only handcuffed until deputies could figure out what was going on during the incident.

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The following are comments from the readers. In no way do they represent the view of .

GET REAL wrote on Nov 28, 2008 12:42 PM:

" Obviously; the family, the caretakers, and those responsible for the well-being
of this person are the ones responsible.
They are the ones who should have sought medical assistance before the police became involved.
They are the ones who should be charged with negligence and be held responsible
for this unnecessary death.
The blame is squarely on their heads and they need to be prosecuted as such. "

WRONG MOVE wrote on Nov 28, 2008 1:05 PM:

" The person calling the police should have called for medical assistance instead. He knew the history of the subject. Maybe he thought the police response was free as opposed to medical response which may have cost him money. "

NEWS FLASH wrote on Nov 29, 2008 8:25 PM:

" Chronic obesity and hypertension claim life while members of family refuse to
seek medical intervention. "

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