Tarrant County sheriff defends jail amid concerns over number of in-custody deaths

The jail in Tarrant County has seen 60 in-custody deaths since 2018.

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Tarrant County Sheriff Bill Waybourn defended the conditions inside the stateโ€™s third-largest jail during a panel Q&A this week.

Waybourn said with space for 4,600 beds, the jail in Tarrant County is often at, or near, that capacity - adding the jail is often the front door for many who come into contact with law enforcement with substance addiction.

โ€œYouโ€™ve heard some talk about being a large mental health facility,โ€ Waybourn said. โ€œIt is.โ€

But the talk that brought more than 100 to an Arlington sub-courthouse was around the 60 in-custody deaths at the jail since 2018.

Waybourn defended the jail as part of a panel put together Thursday night by Tarrant County Precinct 2 Commissioner Alisa L. Simmons.

โ€œWeโ€™re the largest, cleanest, safest jail in Texas,โ€ Waybourn said.

Waybourn says 54 of the in-custody deaths happened at a medical facility with inmates dying of natural causes.

But the sheriff has also drawn criticism for a program sending 500 inmates over the last two years to a private prison in Garza County near Lubbock, the sight of one of in-custody death.

State Representative Chris Turner, a Democrat from Arlington questioned whether the sheriffโ€™s department involvement in investigating election fraud and assisting immigration enforcement has distracted from what he called the sheriffโ€™s core mission, โ€œrunning the jail well.โ€

โ€œDo you agree that 60 deaths in 7 years is too many to have in the Tarrant County jail?โ€ Turner asked Waybourn at the forum.

โ€œI promise you, I donโ€™t want to have one,โ€ Waybourn responded.

Waybourn, who seeks his third, 4-year term as sheriff in November, says he welcomes public input and eyes on the jail.

โ€œWeโ€™d love to give you a tour and show you whatโ€™s going on in Tarrant County Jail,โ€ Waybourn told the audience at the forum.

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