Editor’s note: Part of a series of stories about people, places and events that made news in the Grand Traverse region in 2012.
TRAVERSE CITY — More than nine months have passed since Danny Whitney Jr., died at age 21 in the Grand Traverse County Jail from a methadone overdose.
The jail has not changed any of its policies toward inmates since then, but Brenda Strait, Whitney’s mother, hopes a lawsuit will persuade them to reconsider.
“The reason I got an attorney is this should never, ever happen again. If they are under observation, they should be under observation,” she said.
Whitney died in an observation cell about seven hours after being booked into jail on March 2.
Whitney told jail staff he had taken four tablets of methadone and one Xanax prior to his arrest. Yet Dr. Stephen Cohle, a forensic pathologist, reported it would have taken 20 to 40 tablets to reach the level of methadone found in Whitney’s system.
Grand Traverse County Sheriff Tom Bensley said it’s hard to help people when they’re not truthful.
“On three separate occasions, he told three different people that he had taken four methadone pills. He was not real honest,” Bensley said. “We followed our policies and procedures. We did the right thing; we had the odds stacked against us.”
Bensley added that the jail staff follows the recommendations of the medical staff, which are contract employees.
Strait believes that the potentially fatal combination of Xanax and methadone should have prompted the jail staff to have taken her son to the hospital or at least monitored him much more closely.
“As a nurse wouldn’t you wake him up every hour to see if he was breathing?” she said.
She contends a share of the responsibility also lies with Dr. James Leete, who prescribed methadone and alprazolam (Xanax) to Whitney, who had battled drug addiction.
“Shame on that doctor. He should never have given it to him with his addiction history,” said Strait.
Two unrelated allegations were filed against Leete in July with the Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs’ Bureau of Health Care, said Carole Engle, bureau director.
Engle said the investigation is ongoing and declined to release details of the allegations.
Leete is no longer practicing at his former office, but Engle said he still retains his license. Leete couldn’t be reached for comment.
Whitney, who had been living in a transition house and was due for release the next day, arrived at the jail at about 4 p.m. for a community corrections violation. He was found dead at about 11 p.m.
Bensley said a nurse physically evaluated him and a corrections officer observed him through the cell’s glass window.
A jail nurse relayed Whitney’s vital signs, behavior and consumption of methadone to an off-site doctor, who told her to let him “sleep it off.” The medical staff is contracted through Correctional Healthcare Companies.
An inmate who shared the cell said Whitney was “snoring very loudly and all the time when all of a sudden he stopped snoring.”
Strait said she assumed her son was using methadone to help reduce his drug addiction.
Although an effective pain medication, methadone doesn’t flush out of the body quickly or predictably, said Terry Baumann, manager of pharmacy at Munson Medical Center and a specialist in pain control.
Using Xanax with methadone increases the potential to cause more sedation or to stop breathing completely, he said.
“And yes, it would increase the potential for dying,” Baumann said.
Soon after her son’s death, Strait contacted Andrew Abood, a Lansing-based attorney, to file a lawsuit. Abood sent a letter to sheriff’s officials in September, followed by an extensive Freedom of Information Act request in November, said Undersheriff Nate Alger.
Abood said his firm is considering a civil rights suit against the sheriff’s office, and a negligence or malpractice case against the jail’s advising doctor.
Meanwhile, Strait deeply mourns her son.
“Do you know the saddest part? I’ll never see him get married, I didn’t get a grandchild. It’s very sad. He would have been a great father someday,” she said.
Newsmakers 2012
Newsmakers: Jail policies unchanged since overdose death
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The Top 10 Stories of 2012
A dam breach, weird, disruptive weather and a busy year at Traverse City public schools dominated Record-Eagle headlines in 2012. The following earned places among 2012's Top 10 local news stories, based on a poll of newspaper staff.
Continued ... -
Newsmakers: Luedtke tragedy still a mystery
Benzie County's most compelling mystery in recent years isn't much closer to being solved.
Continued ... -
Newsmakers: Fallout from Traverse City church official's decision is still being felt
First Congregational Church officials' decision to omit a Muslim prayer from a musical event prompted heated local debate about patriotism, religious freedom and tolerance.
Continued ... -
Newsmakers: Impact of fatal crash still being felt in area
Wendy Sak and Julie Davis are still missed by family and friends
Continued ... -
Newsmakers: Many popping off over fireworks rules
The law unleashed a firestorm of summertime revelry and complaints of litter and noise. The booms, zings and hisses kept people up at all hours, made babies cry, and distressed veterans who suffer from post traumatic stress disorder.
Continued ... - Monday, December 24, 2012
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Newsmakers: Woes at downtown TC bars
Things seem to have quieted down around the Union Street bars, police said. But it’s not clear whether the decrease in boisterous behavior is the result of increased diligence on the part of bar owners or simply the onset of winter.
Continued ... - Sunday, December 23, 2012
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Newsmakers: Abused horse doing just fine
A horse known as Lil' Bit was at death's door when she arrived at Horse North Rescue in Kingsley in January.
Continued ... - Friday, December 21, 2012
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Newsmakers: Septage plant problems bring price hike
The on-again, off-again proposed special assessment to pay for the Grand Traverse County septage treatment plant finished the year decidedly off-again.
Continued ... - Thursday, December 20, 2012
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Newsmakers: Four robberies shook GT
A robber who barged into the Northwestern Bank branch in Kingsley created bad memories that aren't easy to shake.
Continued ... - Wednesday, December 19, 2012
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Newsmakers: Grand Traverse replaces 2 managers
A health administrator from the Upper Peninsula and the director of a nonprofit group in Midland replaced embattled managers at Grand Traverse County's Health Department and Road Commission in 2012.
Continued ... - Tuesday, December 18, 2012
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Newsmakers: Leelanau Commission on Aging revamped
A makeover at the Leelanau County Commission on Aging continues with an agency name change and disbanding of the COA's advisory board.
Continued ... - Monday, December 17, 2012
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Newsmakers: New officials face big problem
New administrators were hired in Grand Traverse and Leelanau counties in 2012, and both face one of the most pressing problems for governments throughout Michigan: What to do about unfunded pension liabilities for public employees.
Continued ... - Sunday, December 16, 2012
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Newsmakers: TCAPS adds training after sex crime
Traverse City Area Public Schools officials cringed in disappointment when news of a sexual encounter between a female teacher and an underage male student surfaced in January, Superintendent Stephen Cousins acknowledged.
Continued ... - Saturday, December 15, 2012
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Newsmakers: Clean-up plans uncertain for depot
Plans to cleanse Leelanau County's most polluted site remain uncertain as company officials determine what to do with a former fuel depot.
Continued ... - Friday, December 14, 2012
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Newsmakers: St. Vincent at new location
The new Society of St. Vincent de Paul thrift shop appears cleaner and brighter than the nonprofit's old location a short distance away.
Continued ...
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The Top 10 Stories of 2012



