Forum City Council County Commissioners

Other Newsworthy Comments

Contact us

 

Illustrative Images- Images can be enlarged to the maximum size by clicking the View @ 100% prompt below image.

 

 

 

 

 

Star News photograph of Steven Scarbro, friend of Rummer for over 30 years. Scarbro holds up Rummer's broken glasses that were left behind at the New Hanver County Jail. Something caused those glasses to break prior to Rummer being transported to Raleigh.

 

 

"Mr. Rummer

"was reportedly assaulted by police officers in Wilmington,"

according to a report on an autopsy conducted by the state Office of the Chief Medical Examiner and obtained by the Star-News. The narrative apparently refers to sheriff's deputies. Wilmington Police Chief John Cease said this week his department had no involvement in the matter." Ken Little, Star News reporter

Star News April 25, 2003

 

View @ 100%

 

 

Inmates of the County Jail are by-and-large unable to afford bail. Many are not yet convicted of any crime. Some are only incarcerated for a few hours. Some are awaiting trial for years. Mr. Rummer failed to perform the 24 hours of community service his DWI conviction and sentencing required of him. He was taken to the jail. 4 days later he is rushed to the hospital. Two days after that he was taken off life support.


References on County Liability

 

 

 

5 term ex-Sheriff, Joseph McQueen, knew of the horrendous conditions and the overcrowding prior to the NCLPS threat. Even his own family was awarded a half a million dollars due to his nephew's death while an inmate in the jail. He knew first hand of the liability the County had and failed to act responsibly.

Jail Conditions

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

View @ 100%

The not yet opened New Hanover County Detention Center. 47+ million dollar facility. Projected inmate population in 2004 at capacity. Already a need for expansion.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

District Attorney John Carriker issued a Press Release on June 2nd. This was his statement regarding the investigation into the death of Gary Rummer.

To go to the his Press Release click here

 

DEATH REPORT

The Death of Inmate Report, a document that is to be filed with the State within 5 days of an inmate's death was filed 5 months late. It is a criminal offense to file the report later than 5 days.

To see a copy of the report click here

 

 

 

A June 4th, editorial in the Wilmington Star News made a good case for the release of the investigative SBI Report.

Go to editorial by clicking here

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

EMAIL LINKS

District Attorney's Office

County Attorney's Office

 

Commissioners

Chairman Ted Davis

Bobby Greer

Julia Boseman

Bill Caster

Nancy Pritchett

 

Why did Gary Eugene Rummer Die?- Marc Benson CCJR Executive Director

On January 16, 2003, the sheets were pulled up over the broken and bruised head, neck and body of a man who had been admitted to Raleigh’s Wake Medical Center after being transported to Raleigh by two deputies of the New Hanover County Sheriff’s Department. Gary Rummer was a man slight in stature, barely 130 pounds. He was soft spoken because a birth defect that had left him with a hair-lip, caused by a cleft palate. This made his speech somewhat difficult to understand and had caused Gary some embarrassment throughout his 50 years of life. His friends of the past 30 years, Steven and Hilarie Scarbro, say he is one of the gentlest people they have ever been acquainted with. Yet Gary Eugene Rummer died from a violent altercation while in custody of the New Hanover County Jail.


Last year on a Friday evening, Mr. Rummer had a couple of beers prior to driving home. He was stopped and arrested for driving while intoxicated. His blood alcohol level was tested by a certified technician utilizing a breath testing machine and Gary’s blood alcohol concentration was registered a .08, this being just at the bubble of the legal limit to drive. He was placed in the New Hanover County jail that night and had to stay put until he could appear in court on Monday morning. Monday, the Scarbros bailed Rummer out of jail. Later he returned back to court for trial and then received his sentence for DWI. Part of the sentencing was for Mr. Rummer to complete 24 hours of community service.


Mr. Rummer failed to meet the courts requirement to give 24 hours of his time for community service. On January 10th he was rearrested and brought to jail. Sometime around noon on the 14th, Rummer was transported to Central Prison hospital in Raleigh for “medical safe keeping”, one hundred and twenty miles away. He was unconscious during the entire trip. For some reason, immediately after the deputies delivered Mr. Rummer to Central Prison, he was rushed by ambulance to the Wake Medical Center’s emergency room. Two days later, on the 16th, his friends the Scarbro’s, signed the papers necessary to remove Mr. Rummer from the life support ventilator and stood by him till his last breath of air was released into the sad, silent room.


Speculations flew since the release of the autopsy report in April. Prior to the release of the autopsy report, the Sheriff’s Department called his death an accident with insinuations that his death was related to an alcohol related illness. Gary Rummer’s autopsy report showed something entirely different though. It showed a broken neck, severe brain damage and hemorrhaging, and several bruises on and around various places of his body. Suspiciously, the report also stated he died from injuries suffered from an altercation with a law enforcement officer.


Almost 3 weeks after Mr. Rummer’s death, on February 4th, the SBI was called in to investigate the death. This was the exact same date that the District Attorney’s Office was first notified of his death by the Sheriff’s Office. The report has been completed and delivered to the DA’s Office and soon after, a press conference was held Monday, June 2nd to absolve the deputy jailer, and all others, of any criminal wrong-doing.


Jail conditions have historically been horrendous. Spilling over with scores of people awaiting trial. Most of these people are too poor to “bond out” and some of them are too dangerous to be let out. But we have to keep them somewhere until they can have their day in court. Those that end up convicted or plea to a lesser charge may be given a prison term, some will be released with time already served (meaning that for those inmates, they spent their prison time in a county jail situation rather than a tougher state prison facility). Others are released on probation with a suspended prison sentence, which means, that if they fail the conditions of their probation, they will end up serving time in prison.


Our jail was initially designed to hold 125 inmates. An addition in 1990 gave the jail 83 new beds, bringing the total to 209. Today the daily population is over 300. It has been as high as 400 in the very recent past. I can remember seeing juvenile inmates sleeping on the floor chained to the wall in hallways because there was no place for them to stay safely. Young inmates often fall victim to physical as well as sexual assaults by other, more seasoned, criminal inmates. If I had a picture to show you of the conditions I saw back in the 90’s you would think it was some poor third world country’s jail, not ours. New Hanover County is one of the wealthiest areas of the State and certainly has the money, education, and community participation to have a model jail system, yet we don’t even come close.


We all knew back in the early 90’s that, not only was the overcrowding dangerous to the inmates, but to the deputies working there as well. Sadly, the then Sheriff Joe McQueen, and the County Commissioners, failed to act on the overcrowding problem. When it became obvious that overcrowding could be a deadly situation for both the inmates as well as the jailers, no one acted. That is until 1998 when an organization representing prisoners’ rights made a serious threat. Michael Hamden, a lawyer with the not-for-profit advocates right’s agency, NC Prisoners’ Legal Services, threatened suit if the County would not keep the inmate population below 262 inmates. The Sheriff’s department has since been shuttling inmates back and forth all over the state at a cost of over $125,000 a month trying to keep the NCPLS lawsuit at bay.


The new jail is now way behind schedule. One time scheduled to open in the fall of 2001, it now looks like it won’t be in operation until March of 2004. Cost overruns are being adjusted with creative accounting procedures to show only a slight increase, to our taxpayers, in the projected $48 million budget. The delays, the bickering, the poor planning, and the lack of vision, by Sheriff McQueen and the County, to initiate this new jail sooner, caused problems that couldn’t be overcome easily and without great expense. We should now be looking at situations already facing the new, yet to be finished, jail. We are projecting overcrowding issues even before we cut the ribbon on the new jail. We have sold off spaces to the Federal Government for their inmates to be held for trial, we have the returning inmates who have been kept in the western part of the State, there are inmates that require special needs, inmates that have to be segregated, and most noteworthy of all, we have a growing crime problem which stuffs more and more inmates into our jail. That’s right, it is because our crime problem is so bad that we have so many people in jail awaiting trial. It stands to reason that the less crime we have committed here, the less numbers of people we would have to incarcerate. Some would have you believe that it is the 2% annual increase in population that causes our jail to overcrowd. But it is not the population, it is a crime rate that is more than 50% over the State’s norm that fills our courts and our jails, not only costing us our valuable tax money but it effects the safety and security of our families and our neighborhoods.


So who is at fault, who is it that caused Gary Rummer’s death? I would say, based on my own preliminary investigation, that it was the deputy who, (the District Attorney excused from any criminal indictments) at the very least, lacked the proper training and who, using poor judgment, wrestled with Mr. Rummer causing mortal injury. I can also find fault with the medical personnel who examined Mr. Rummer and tragically misdiagnosed his injuries. We may never truly know who is at fault or if there is any proof to anything, one way or another, since the SBI report is locked up in the District Attorney’s Office and not available for outside interpretation. But why did Rummer die? That question is a bit more complex, but a brief answer, by me, as to why he died, would be this:


Gary Eugene Rummer died on January 16, 2003 because of the increasing crime rates, as much as 50% higher than anywhere else in this Country. This packs our already overcrowded jail system. Crimes associated with the illegal drug use and trafficking here in Wilmington have overcrowded our jails for years now. In my opinion, the responsibility of the jail’s problems, including the death of Mr. Rummer, falls squarely on the shoulders of those people who have consistently turned their back on this growing crime problem.


It is the incompetent leadership within the Sheriff’s Department that led to Mr. Rummer’s death. Crime is rampant, overcrowding has faced us for the past 10 years or more, this isn’t the first questionable death at our jail, and still no one is accountable. “ He died as a result of his lifestyle ma’am.” A direct quote by Ms. Scarbro describing what she was told by an official at the Sheriff’s Department, when she asked what happened to her good friend Gary Rummer. How outrageous.

How arrogant.

How irresponsible!


Death, rape and robberies take place inside our jail. This is the one, single place that safety and security should be paramount. Jail, any jail, is notoriously a bad place to end up and rightfully it should be, but it is something that can be controlled safely. Jails are controlled safely all over this country. Not here though. When they can’t even police their own jail you can imagine the problems policing the entire County. Just look at the overwhelming historical evidence pertaining to the negligence of the leadership and abuse of power within the Sheriff's Department.


We have to remember that almost everyone in the jail is awaiting their first trial. Technically, most of the inmates are people suspected of committing a crime, men and women innocent, until proven guilty. Some of these inmates will have spent months in jail awaiting trial, only to be found not guilty later in court. Not every inmate is a criminal. Not every inmate is even facing a prison sentence. Yet all of these inmates are not safe. The deputies guarding the inmates are not safe. We are not safe. Our friends, our neighbors, our loved ones are not safe, just ask the family and friends of Mr. Rummer or Gerald Blackledge, a family member of ex-Sheriff McQueen. Blackledge also died in custody of the New Hanover County Jail after being picked up for a probation violation. The Blackledge family, like the many other victimized families, settled a hefty lawsuit against the County because of the exact same incompetence that caused the death of Mr. Gary Eugene Rummer.


I call upon Chairman Davis and the County Board of Commissioners to immediately make a public statement regarding the death of Mr. Rummer and report to the citizens how corrective measures are in place to avoid further mistreatment. Some of the incarcerated at our county jail may be innocent people. Some are good people who have fallen temporarily under some bad circumstances. Someone is responsible for the safety of all these inmates. We deserve to know that there is absolutely no effort to cover this matter up by anyone inside the Sheriff’s office. Our community’s trust is at stake, the longer the Board of Commissioners waits to comment, the more pain we will all suffer.


The arrogance of our officials, as evident by their lack of public concern, troubles me deeply. In my 23 years of law enforcement and through my many years as an advocate for the victims of crime I have never seen such disregard for genuine accountability. It is not just the death of Mr. Rummer, it is the awful handling of personnel issues and outrageous acts of run amuck police officers that concern not only me, but many of our responsible citizens.


I voice my opinion to encourage others to do the same. Join with me, organize within your churches, your places of business and become a communal voice of concern. Justice can be served if we speak out loud enough. We must hold our elected officials accountable, it encourages the honesty and integrity we hope for on election day.


Marc Benson
Executive Director
Citizens Commission for Judicious Reform
www.JudiciousReform.com

Print friendly version of above - Print

Respond to the above- Go to the Forum

Follow-up

* * * * *
Friday, May 2, 2003, the SBI supposedly released its findings of their investigation, of the Rummer death, to the District's Attorney's office. Numerous attempts to obtain a comment from the DA's office and various other officials were unsuccessful. We will do our best to get official comments regarding the report and post it here on this site.

* * * * *
May 5th, the District Attorney sent back the report to the SBI requesting more information. No word when the corrected report will be delivered. The Star News May 6th edition states the following:

Saying he needs more information, District Attorney John Carriker on Monday refused to release the results of a state investigation into the death of New Hanover County jail inmate Gary Rummer.
Mr. Carriker said he has asked the State Bureau of Investigation to broaden its look into Mr. Rummer's death.
"I've requested the SBI to do some additional things," he said. "The investigation is not over yet."

* * * * *
May 29th, the District Attorney told the Star News that he has yet to see the report from the SBI. (see Star News May 29 article ) The SBI spokesperson, Noelle Taylor, is quoted as saying "He has been informed verbally about what will be contained in all that, but he may not have actually seen all the paperwork itself," Ms. Taylor said. "The report is completed. It is done from the SBI's point of view."

We certainly understand the DA's office wanting to examine all aspects of the report. However, we feel strongly, that it is important to keep the community informed. Many community members have relatives and loved ones in the jail and are concerned for their safety. We also have a Sheriff's Department that needs to come forward with the truth, so that those good men and women, wearing a badge, feel safe and protected from the reactions of a fearful community as they go about their job. If the sheriff fails to tell the truth, he will lose the trust of our community. Trust is key in an efficient and effective law-enforcement campaign to protect our families and our neighbors.

* * * * *

On June the 2nd, the District Attorney announced his conclusion that the SBI report did not prove any criminal wrong doing in circumstances surrounding the death of Gary Rummer.

On June the 3rd the Sheriff's Office began their own internal investigation. "We'll just try and determine whether our internal rules and policies were followed," Chief Deputy Sheriff Tom Parker said Tuesday. "We don't anticipate any problems."

That quote is from an article by the Star News June 4, 2003.

* * * * *

Sunday, June 9th's Star News reports an inmate's account of Gary Rummer's last waking moments in the New Hanover County's Jail.

"Tyrone Delgado's version of the events that resulted in Mr. Rummer's death differs radically from a State Bureau of Investigation report that finds Deputy Billy Ray Hudson did not act intentionally in causing a fatal head injury to the 50-year-old inmate." from the Ken Little article in the Star News.


The entire article can be found by clicking here.

 


There has been quite a number of call-ins to the WAAV-AM radio local programs (8AM -10AM and from 5PM - 7PM) from concerned citizens about this. We at CCJR suggest listening in at 980 on your AM radio to get current up to date information.

CCJR contact Administrator@JudiciousReform.com


<< PreviousNext >>

 

©2003 CCJR • Contact us

ForumBack to IndexAdvertising SupportLinks