Why Is Karl Taylor Dead Our prisons are our mental wards
n the morning of April 13, 2015, a guard at Sullivan Correctional Facility, a New York State maximumsecurity prison nestled deep in the woods of the western Catskills, ordered a prisoner named Karl Taylor to clean his cell. By all accounts, the cell, in the prisons E North housing blocka special unit for inmates classified as mentally illwas a rancid mess, strewn with papers and clothes, and soaked with shampoo and other liquids. Taylor, however, had balked for weeks at cleaning it. He insisted that as part of an ongoing campaign of harassment, guards had trashed his cell and stolen his belongings while he was being held in a mentalhealth observation unit in a separate wing of the 550inmate in partnership with The had been in prison since 1995, serving a minimum sentence of 27 years for a rape conviction in his hometown of Troy, New York. After his arrival in state custody, he was diagnosed with delusional disorder and paranoid personality disorder. By 2015, he had alrea
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