Free James Kimball |
Kimball was a prisoner at Coleman/Low Federal prison in Coleman, Florida between December 1999 and January 2001.
Kimball made an accounting; personally took statements; reviewed records of selected prisoners that were picked to be medically tortured; some paralyzed while others died.
Kimball and his associates hold the documents of these events. This was such an accounting.
Note: While Kimball was at Coleman/Low Federal Prison the BOP had appointed two people as medical doctors; Dr. Davila and Dr. Blanco De Leon along with 4 Physician Assistants (PA's). None of the BOP medical doctors or PAs were licensed to practice medicine in any state within the United States.
Hamilton had radical abdominal surgery on April 19, 2001, which is a serious major operation. Hamilton spent 6 days in the hospital and was given proper pain medication to alleviate his pain from the surgery. Upon return to Coleman, Hamilton was given only Tylenol III for his excruciating pain, which did not address his pain. Because of the pain he was in, Medical placed Hamilton in solitary confinement and refused to give him stronger pain medication. The following day he was released from solitary, still with excruciating pain, not given a wheel chair, and assigned into a second story unit.
This writer, James Kimball, saw Hamilton the day of his release from solitary and he could hardly walk or move, but he got to his second story housing unit. The next day, this writer saw Hamilton in the cafeteria in such pain from walking to the cafeteria to eat he could no longer get up from his chair. This writer got a guard to call medical and helped Hamilton out of the cafeteria and into an electric vehicle which took him to medical. At this point, Hamilton was incoherent because of the pain. Medical gave Hamilton a wheel chair, but refused to give him any further pain medication, only Tylenol III, which did not subdue his serious pain.
Mrs. Howard, Hamilton’s unit manager, helped Hamilton a good deal throughout his ordeal and did change Hamilton’s unit to the first floor, but has no control over medical.
Medical stopped Hamilton’s Tylenol III medication after the third day and as of May 5, 2001 he is still in pain. Hamilton has stitches on the inside and some sort of clamp on the outside and no one in medical has even checked his incision since he has been back at Coleman, now going on 10 days. Coleman medical has also refused to give Hamilton alcohol or even hydrogen peroxide to keep his large incision clean and sterile.