Two men held at the Cook County Jail died over the weekend, leaving relatives and jail watchdogs demanding to know what went wrong inside one of the country’s largest lockups. In separate incidents, one detainee was found unresponsive inside the jail’s residential treatment unit and later pronounced dead at a hospital, while another was discovered dead in a cell late Saturday. County and state officials say outside investigators will review both deaths as the medical examiner continues its testing.
Family Demands Answers After Jackson’s Death
The family of 35-year-old Shamire Jackson gathered outside the criminal courthouse on Monday, saying officials have yet to give them a credible account of how he died in custody. “Shamire entered Cook County Jail alive, and while under the full custody and care of the government, he suffered a sudden and catastrophic death,” Jackson’s attorney said, according to the Chicago Tribune.
According to sheriff’s spokespeople, deputies found Jackson unresponsive in the jail’s residential treatment unit, then took him to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead shortly before 8 a.m. Officials have not publicly detailed what preceded his collapse, a silence that has only intensified the family’s push for records and surveillance footage.
Arrest Records And The Charges He Faced
Court documents show Jackson was taken into custody on Nov. 24 after officers said he brandished a glass bottle of liquor and tried to enter another person’s vehicle. Records reviewed by the Chicago Tribune indicate he faced roughly 10 felony counts, and an arrest report stated that he “became irate and assaulted (an officer) followed by spitting in his face.” Prosecutors later added a charge of aggravated battery to a peace officer, according to that reporting.
Another Inmate Found Dead
Late Saturday, 41-year-old Lamont Johnson was found dead in his cell. Like Jackson, his cause of death had not yet been released by the medical examiner. Johnson had been in custody since November 2023 on charges tied to a September 2023 North Lawndale shooting that left one man dead and a woman injured, reporting from Yahoo News. Officials said Johnson showed no signs of trauma when he was discovered.
State Probe And Medical Review
The Cook County sheriff’s office has asked the Illinois State Police Public Integrity Task Force to investigate both deaths, while the Cook County medical examiner conducts autopsies and toxicology tests, according to officials. State police reviews are standard in custody deaths that raise questions about staff conduct or possible system failures, and investigators can take weeks to complete toxicology work and scene reviews before releasing findings.
For additional context, another recent death in the jail’s residential treatment unit prompted a separate state review and extensive local coverage in late November, a sequence that has advocates watching these latest cases closely.
A Larger Pattern Of Scrutiny
Advocates and watchdog reporters say the two new deaths fit into a longer pattern of concern over oversight, medical care, and staffing at the sprawling Cook County facility. Investigative reporting has documented multiple in-custody deaths and recurring gaps in supervision in recent years, according to Injustice Watch…