Nearly seven weeks after a woman died in the booking area of the Scioto County Jail, records and body camera footage reviewed by Scioto County Daily News point to something important:
So far, there is no evidence that anything suspicious or criminal occurred.
According to official logs and body camera video, the incident began when a deputy encountered a woman walking along the roadside in Franklin Furnace. A records check revealed she had active warrants, and she was taken into custody.
That kind of encounter, while tragic, is not unusual in Scioto County.
Thanks to the region’s ongoing addiction and homelessness crises, deputies routinely come across medically fragile individuals wandering roadways or living in makeshift camps. These are people already in distress — often without access to consistent medical care — and their presence on rural highways is a symptom of much larger systemic problems, not police action.
In this case, the deputy did what deputies regularly do: stopped to check on someone who appeared vulnerable.
During transport, the deputy noticed she appeared to be bleeding and asked what was wrong. The woman said she wasn’t sure and believed she might be on her period. She later mentioned hip pain, then abdominal discomfort as they arrived at the jail. The deputy calmly told her that medical staff were inside and could help.
The interaction on video is professional, patient, and low-key. There are no signs of force, hostility, or distress. Just minutes later, the woman was brought into the booking area.
She died shortly afterward.
Two SCDN staff members reviewed the entire 53 minutes of body camera footage provided by county attorneys. The video ends when the cruiser pulls into the sally port — moments before she entered booking. What happens after that has not been released.
Here’s what is clear from the records provided:
- The woman was located during a routine roadside encounter.
- She had outstanding warrants.
- She was transported without incident.
- She complained of pain and requested medical help.
- She was told medical personnel were available inside the jail.
- She died shortly after arrival during booking.
There is currently no indication of assault, abuse, or misconduct by deputies.
In fact, it’s worth stating plainly: had she not been picked up, there is a very real possibility this woman could have died alone on the side of the road.
Instead, she was in a patrol vehicle, speaking with an officer, and taken to a facility where medical help was available.
So the larger question becomes:
If this was a medical emergency — why hasn’t the Sheriff’s Office simply said so?
Why not issue a straightforward statement:
An inmate experienced a medical emergency during booking and later passed away.
That level of transparency would go a long way toward easing public concern.
Instead, nearly 47 days later, the public is still waiting for booking-area surveillance footage. County attorneys say the video is “being downloaded and processed.” No body camera footage from the booking officer has been released. Welfare-check logs provided do not match the date of the incident and appear unrelated, which makes sense if the woman never entered a housing unit.
The lack of clarity is what’s fueling speculation — not the facts.
County attorneys have cited investigatory exemptions under Ohio public records law. However, the Ohio Supreme Court ruled in State ex rel. Myers v. Meyers that routine incident reports and contemporaneous officer narratives are not automatically exempt simply because an investigation exists. The court emphasized that Ohio’s Public Records Act must be interpreted in favor of disclosure.
This matters — especially locally.
Scioto County residents still remember controversies from the previous administration, including the jail death of Kevin Bailey. Those events eroded trust, making transparency now more important than ever.
At this point, nothing released suggests wrongdoing.
But silence creates suspicion.
If this was truly a tragic medical event — and all available evidence points that way — then openness is the answer. A clear press release, timely video disclosure, and basic documentation would help reassure a community that has already endured too many unanswered questions.
Right now, the facts don’t point to foul play.
They point to a system that still struggles with transparency.
And that’s the real story.
