JASPER, Ala. â Megan Dunn, who has struggled with addiction since her teens, points to the moment her life went âdeeply downhill.â
After dropping out of high school, she gave birth at age 19 to a son she named Preston. Six weeks later, Dunn said, he died of sudden infant death syndrome.
âFrom then on, I went into this, like, PTSD, depression,â said Dunn, now 28.
Shortly after the babyâs death, Dunn said, she started using pain pills again. Eventually, she said, she was arrested on charges related to her illicit drug use, such as trespassing. She said she has had more than 30 stays in Walker Countyâs jail, a brick building in downtown Jasper. And each time, Dunn said, she was forced into drug withdrawal in her cell without medical care.
âI was literally praying to God to end me,â Dunn said about the pain and despair she felt.
People with drug addictions fill U.S. jails and are often left to endure withdrawal in concrete cells rather than in medical facilities. Thatâs especially true in Alabama, which has some of the toughest drug laws in the country. More than 5,000 people were arrested in Alabama on drug charges in 2021, and more than 90% of those were for possessing drugs rather than selling them, according to
Dunn survived her stay in a holding cell in Walker Countyâs jail thatâs known, she said, as the âdrunk tank,â a concrete room that lacks water, a bed, or a toilet. Others have not.

In January, Anthony Mitchell, 33, allegedly froze to death after spending 14 days in the tank, according his family filed in February against Sheriff Nick Smith, his deputies, and other jail employees.
Mitchell had âspiraled into worsening drug addiction,â the lawsuit said, and his cousin called 911 to send an ambulance to his home because Mitchell âappeared to be having a mental breakdown.â Instead, sheriffâs deputies arrived and then a SWAT team, the lawsuit said. On Facebook, the sheriffâs office posted that âMitchell brandished a handgunâ and, from the scene, a deputy published a photo of his arrest, the suit said.
In jail, Mitchell was âdenied access to medical treatment,â the suit said, citing video footage from the jail, and he died in custody. His death has sparked a debate in Walker County about the treatment by law enforcement of people with addiction and mental illness.
Crime and Punishment: âPeople Are Scared to Say âI Need Helpââ
Walker County, nestled in northwestern Alabamaâs Appalachian foothills and dotted with coal mines, has one of the nationâs . The county was among the communities that pharmaceutical companies in the 2000s. Addiction rates soared. Over time, people moved on to illicit drugs.
Walker County Sheriff Nick Smith, first elected in 2018, in last yearâs election, in which he was unopposed, by saying heâd âconfronted the drug epidemic head onâ by âtaking criminals off the streets and putting them in jail where they belong.â
He also touted his drug arrests in a paid political announcement published in 2021 in the Daily Mountain Eagle, a newspaper in Jasper. He has deployed resources to boost the number of narcotics officers from two to five, and his staff has made about 2,500 drug arrests to date, Smith told Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News.
Smith also said that his office helps people with addiction. It gives people a list of treatment resources when theyâre released, he said, and has doubled medical supervision in the jail from eight to 16 hours a day.
Drug possession and distribution, Smith said, are crimes heâs tasked with enforcing. âWe are going to do our job,â he said. With so many people addicted to illegal drugs in Walker County, the power of the sheriffâs office and threat of arrest loom large.

âPeople are scared to say âI need help,ââ said Kayse Brown, who added that she faced down her own addiction and then became a certified peer support specialist to help others.
According to the lawsuit, a sheriffâs deputy allegedly told Mitchellâs cousin words to the effect of: âWeâre going to detox him and then weâll see how much of his brain is left.â No one checked his vitals or gave him the medication he needed, the lawsuit said. Within days, Mitchell was without a mat or blanket and âhad to lie naked on the bare concrete floor,â the suit said.
When Mitchell arrived at Walker Baptist Medical Center two weeks after his arrest, his internal body temperature was 72 degrees Fahrenheit, the lawsuit said. Thatâs more than 20 degrees below what is considered â,â according to the Mayo Clinic.
In , Smith and other defendants said that Mitchell was a âdrug addictâ who was âarrested in a psychotic and delusional state.â Court records show they donât dispute what doctors reported about Mitchellâs condition in the medical records. But they deny most of the lawsuitâs other claims, including any liability for Mitchellâs death. They asked that the lawsuit be halted while the FBI and the state of Alabama consider filing criminal charges in the case, according to court records. A in June.
After Mitchellâs death, community activists called for Smithâs resignation, circulating a petition that has more than 4,000 signatures. Ryan Cagle, a pastor who started the petition, said the sheriffâs office doesnât see addiction as a chronic condition. Instead, Cagle said, its officials shame people who use drugs by posting their mug shots and arrest details on Facebook.

âThe people who are elected, the people who have the power, they do not see people suffering under substance abuse as human or worthy of dignity,â said Cagle, who runs a food pantry. Cagleâs brother is married to Brown. His father dealt with addiction, and earlier this year he lost a 20-year-old cousin to an overdose.
Smith wouldnât comment on the Mitchell case because of the pending lawsuit and said that Dunnâs experiences happened before he took office. But, he said, âthe burden of mental health is put on every sheriff in Alabama.â The shortage of mental health treatment and lack of early intervention means people who need help land in jail instead. In one case, he said, a person with mental health disorders faced an 18-month waiting list for space to open at the secure medical facility in Tuscaloosa.
Systemic Change Is Not Easy
Walker Countyâs challenges are indicative of those faced across the country. People with addictions often end up incarcerated, and Stephen Taylor, a Birmingham-based doctor and president-elect of the American Society of Addiction Medicine, points to a failure of the public health system to create a sustainable and robust addiction care infrastructure.
âWe know what to do to treat addiction,â Taylor said in written testimony to a in May. But systemic change and disruption of the status quo is âexceptionally difficult,â he acknowledged.
Sources inside the system say that more than half of the people placed on the Alabama Department of Mental Healthâs waiting list for residential substance abuse treatment either die, drop off the list, or end up incarcerated, according to from the Alabama Appleseed Center for Law & Justice, an advocacy group that says the stateâs â.â
In Walker County, at least 2,800 people with a substance use disorder are not receiving treatment and existing treatment is limited, according to a September 2019 assessment conducted through a federally funded planning grant that helps rural communities respond to opioid overdoses.
Though treatment options are growing in the area, there are not enough to meet demand, some local recovery experts said. For example, the number of peer support specialists â those in recovery who are state-certified to help people before, during, and after treatment â increased to nine in 2022 from one in 2018, according to the Healing Network of Walker County, a group that organizes mental health and substance use-related resources in the county. A handful of providers offer medication-assisted treatment, including buprenorphine, which provides relief from severe symptoms of opioid withdrawal and, over time, reduces opioid cravings. A program now exists to help pregnant and parenting women experiencing addiction.
The need for more treatment services is especially acute in Alabama, one of 10 states that have not expanded Medicaid, which has provided insurance coverage to people with substance use disorders in other states.
âWe operate the whole addiction system in a crisis mode, as opposed to looking at it over the long term,â said Regina LaBelle, director of the Addiction and Public Policy Initiative at Georgetown University. Law enforcement officials with no health care training exercise almost total authority over the lives of inmates with addiction, and they are more likely to view substance abuse as a crime to be punished than a health crisis to be treated, say academic researchers, reform advocates, and formerly incarcerated people.
âRight now, our system is still so focused on punishing people,â said Leah Nelson, research director at Alabama Appleseed.
Dunn said she felt continually harassed by law enforcement officials because she was known to be a drug user. Because she once missed the jailâs 4:30 a.m. breakfast call, she said, she was put in the same âdrunk tankâ where Mitchell spent his final days.
Smith said that heâs exploring the idea of treating people with addiction in Walker Countyâs jail with medications, but that the final decision rests with the county commission. Even though some people in county leadership disagree with the idea of treating people at the jail, âweâre at the point where all options are on the table,â he said.
âThat is huge for Walker County,â said Nicole Walden, an associate commissioner at the Alabama Department of Mental Health. She has had initial conversations with the Walker County Sheriffâs Office about the idea. âThe stigma around substance use, in the South, it is a lot worse. Alabama is very much a law-and-order state.â
, and just 13% in the South, start people on medications to treat opioid use withdrawal, according to a U.S. Department of Justice report published in April. Only one Alabama jail currently offers medication-assisted treatment, Walden said.
Dunn checked into residential treatment outside the county about six times. Each time she relapsed. Eventually, after missing court dates and once trying to escape from jail, Dunn ended up in prison for nearly two years, where, she said, âdrugs were everywhere.â

The Long Road to Recovery
Nationally, for drug possession in 2020. U.S. courts and police departments tasked with treating addiction have mixed results.
âJails are not the most ideal place to treat them, but itâs the reality of where they end up,â said Andrew Klein, senior scientist for criminal justice at Advocates for Human Potential, a social services advocacy organization.
The Walker County Sheriffâs Office runs a program to help people find treatment. But itâs limited to those without an outstanding arrest warrant and with no more than two drug convictions, so few residents who are in need qualify. In its first two years, 20 people completed some sort of addiction treatment, according to the September 2019 assessment.
Nikki Warren benefited from the county drug court program, which requires participants to take drug tests and pay thousands of dollars in fees. Warren joined the program at the recommendation of a judge. She was arrested in 2018 after she blacked out when she mistakenly took fentanyl instead of heroin.
âI needed that wake-up call,â said Warren, who is now an outreach supervisor at Recovery Organization of Support Specialists. After completing the program, her charges were dismissed, she said.
Dunn said the drug court program was âtoo hard.â But she was released from prison 3½ years ago determined to change her life. She recalled thinking to herself, âDang, girl, all them years that I wasted.â
She spends time reading the Bible and singing, she said, but has struggled to find stable footing. She has lost several friends to overdoses, she said. Dunn said she would like to see a counselor but is uninsured. She relapsed for about a week this year, she said. She wants to work, perhaps at the front desk of a factory, but she goes to job interviews with a felony record and no high school diploma.
âHere I am â I quit school, my baby is dead,â Dunn said. She feels she is still being punished by the system. âIâm not perfect,â she said. But âthey donât give us a chance.â

Kara Nelson of Ńîšóĺú´ŤĂ˝Ňîl Health News contributed to this report.
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