When Marchello McCaster was booked into the Ramsey County workhouse to serve 56 days on an assault conviction, he weighed 200 pounds and was healthy enough to play basketball with the other inmates.
But by the time he left in July 2008, McCaster had lost 44 pounds and was nearly dead from tuberculosis, Robert Bennett told jurors in a St. Paul federal courtroom Tuesday.
Bennett said the defendants -- three experienced public health nurses who worked at the jail -- stubbornly ignored his client's worsening symptoms as well as pleas from other inmates who sought help for him. McCaster was finally rushed to Regions Hospital in St. Paul after a guard demanded that a nurse evaluate him just two days before he was due for release. "He has a softball-sized hole in one lung, as well as a baseball-sized hole in the other," Bennett said.
McCaster's illness led to about 150 infections among inmates and jail staff. Public health nurses are trained to watch for signs of infectious diseases like tuberculosis, Bennett said, because in confined settings, "Everyone counts, or no one counts."
Related suit settled
Ramsey County settled an earlier class-action lawsuit related to the TB outbreak estimated to cost up to $20 million. McCaster separately filed suit against five nurses, the county and two administrators seeking $14 million in damages. The charges against all but three nurses were dropped or dismissed.
A jury of six women and two men must now decide whether the remaining defendants -- Mary Clausen, Julie Nelson and Pattie Vodinelich -- showed something akin to "criminal recklessness" for failing to seek medical help for McCaster, who was already infected when he arrived at the jail on April 17, 2008.
Clifford Greene, one of the defendants' attorneys, told the jurors that McCaster, 30, of St. Paul, never complained of symptoms indicating TB, and the nurses deny allegations that they were shown notes from other inmates that might have triggered a thorough medical evaluation.