MADISON, Wis. — The former warden at a maximum security Wisconsin prison where multiple inmates have died over the last year pleaded not guilty Tuesday to a misconduct charge as legislators intensified their scrutiny of the state's troubled corrections system.
Five inmates have died at Waupun Correctional Institution since June 2023. The latest, Christopher McDonald, was found dead at the facility Monday morning, according to the Dodge County Sheriff's Office.
Investigators believe McDonald killed himself. Online court records indicate a judge sentenced him to two 999-year sentences in 1993 for being a party to homicide.
Prosecutors charged former Waupun Correctional Institute Warden Randall Hepp with felony misconduct in office in June in connection with the deaths of an inmate who died of a stroke in October and another inmate who died in February of malnutrition and dehydration.
Hepp pleaded not guilty during an arraignment in Dodge County Circuit Court on Tuesday afternoon, according to online records. His attorney, Robert Webb, declined to comment.
Eight other Waupun staff members have been charged with inmate abuse and misconduct in connection with the two deaths. Hepp quit his job days before he was charged.
The other two inmates died by suicide and a drug overdose, respectively. No one has been charged in connection with those deaths, but federal investigators are looking into a suspected smuggling ring at Waupun and a federal lawsuit inmates filed in October alleging inhumane conditions at the prison is still pending.
The compounding problems at Waupun are only part of the Department of Corrections' troubles. While Hepp was entering his plea Tuesday, the state Senate's judiciary committee was grilling top agency leaders about a counselor's death at the state's youth prison.