Home / Crime and Justice / Jail Deaths Spark Calls for Oversight
Jail Deaths Spark Calls for Oversight
7 Feb
Summary
- Two Indigenous women died in Okanogan County jail within three months.
- Jail used unproven 'opiate withdrawal protocol' instead of FDA-approved meds.
- Lack of state oversight highlights risks in Washington jails.

Two Indigenous women, LaCrisha Cate and Amber Marchand, died in the Okanogan County jail within a three-month period in 2023, exposing critical failures in care. Marchand died by suicide after experiencing untreated opioid withdrawal symptoms for five days, according to a lawsuit. Cate was found unresponsive in a shower after hours of lying in vomit, with her death certificate listing polysubstance abuse and cardiac arrest as causes.
Records indicate that Okanogan County received state grants for providing FDA-approved medications for opioid use disorder but instead implemented a de facto protocol using Gatorade and other non-specific medications. Medical experts state this method is not proven effective for withdrawal. These deaths are fueling demands for statewide standards and oversight of jails in Washington, a state with the fourth-highest rate of jail deaths nationally and one of twelve states lacking enforceable oversight.




