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Hospital Restraint of Inmate Who Repeated “I Can’t Breathe” 23 Times Leads to Homicide Ruling

A person in a hospital bed talks to another standing person in a small hospital room with medical equipment and cabinets.
A person in a hospital bed talks to another standing person in a small hospital room with medical equipment and cabinets.

A disturbing new case out of Cleveland has raised serious questions about how law enforcement and medical personnel handle detainees with complex health needs. At the center of this story is 39-year-old inmate Tasha Grant, who told hospital and jail staff a total of 23 times that she couldn’t breathe. Instead of receiving proper assessment and monitoring, Grant was handcuffed to a hospital bed and later died. Her death has been ruled a homicide by the Cuyahoga County Medical Examiner, and independent experts point to a chain of errors in restraint and care.

Failure to Monitor and Respond

Grant was brought to a local hospital from the county jail after complaining of chest pain, while incarcerated in the custody of the Cuyahoga County Sheriff’s Department. Although Grant repeatedly voiced that she was unable to breathe, the officers and hospital staff dismissed her words. One officer told her, “You’re yelling, so you can breathe.” Video footage and expert review indicate she was restrained, placed face-down and left without vital-sign monitoring, despite hospital policy warnings that extended prone restraint can impair breathing.

Medical and Restraint Protocol Breakdown

According to the medical examiner’s autopsy, the use of force during restraint likely contributed to Grant’s death. Two medical-forensic consultants concluded that failure to monitor respiratory and oxygen saturation rates, combined with sedative medication administered while she was pinned down, created a lethal scenario. Hospital and jail policies typically require that individuals in custody be rolled off their stomach within minutes to prevent airway obstruction, but in Grant’s case this did not occur.

Investigation and Accountability

A special prosecutor has been brought in to review the incident for possible criminal charges. Community advocates and Grant’s family have demanded the case be turned over to an independent agency—demands that were rejected by the sheriff’s department. Meanwhile, her estate released a statement calling the death “tragic and completely unnecessary,” noting that Grant was undergoing a mental‐health crisis and that restraint rather than treatment caused her death.


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