Key facts
- A new lawsuit accuses Texas authorities of cruel and unusual punishment leading to inmate Jason Wilson's death in a hot cell.
- Over 85,000 Texas inmates are housed in facilities without air conditioning, where temperatures can exceed 115F.
- A separate federal lawsuit seeks to compel the state to install air conditioning in all prisons within three years.
- The estimated cost to air condition all Texas prisons is $1.3 billion, a sum within the state's financial capacity.
- Advocates claim prison authorities are downplaying the severity of the heat crisis to avoid accountability and funding.
Mounting legal pressure is being applied to Texas to address the severe heat crisis within its state prisons, where inmates are suffering and dying in un-airconditioned cells. The Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) is facing a new wrongful death lawsuit from the family of Jason Wilson, who died in July 2024 in a solitary confinement cell at the Coffield unit. The lawsuit alleges that the state inflicted cruel and unusual punishment through deliberate indifference to Wilson's suffering in extreme heat, compounded by a lack of cool water, regular showers, and adequate wellness checks.
This legal challenge comes as a federal court in Austin is expected to rule within months on a separate lawsuit filed by advocacy groups demanding the state install air conditioning in all its prisons over the next three years. Currently, over 85,000 of Texas's 141,000 prisoners are housed in cells without air conditioning, where temperatures can regularly exceed 115F, with recorded highs reaching 149F. Inmates have resorted to desperate measures to cool off, such as lying in toilet water.
The TDCJ acknowledged three heat-related deaths in 2023, including that of Patrick Womack, who was found with a core body temperature of 106.9F. Temperature logs from the Coffield unit show extreme heat, with the day before Wilson's death recording 107F. Communications from inmates describe dire conditions, including lack of water and electricity, exacerbated by understaffing. Jason Wilson, who had co-morbidities, was supposed to receive intensive wellness checks, but the officer responsible for the final check cited heat and understaffing.
Jason Wilson's father, Ronnie Wilson, stated that his son did not receive a death sentence and should not have suffered such extreme conditions. The lawsuit seeks punitive damages and systemic change. The TDCJ declined to comment due to pending litigation. Climatologists project further warming in Texas, intensifying the crisis. The estimated $1.3 billion cost for air conditioning all prisons is within reach of the state's $27 billion rainy day fund, but requires a two-thirds legislative vote. Lawyers argue that authorities are failing to articulate the crisis's severity to secure the necessary funding, continuing to tolerate unconstitutional conditions.