Stanley Wilson Jr.’s mom heads vigil to protest in-custody deaths

In a brutal part of the paradox, deaths inside the contract were placed in Los Angeles at the forefront of the 2023 case in which the Ministry of District mayor or provincial hospitals did not acknowledge that a prisoner was in custody when he died.
Stanley Wilson JuniorA graduate of Stanford and the former defense of the US Football Association died with Detroit Lyons, either before or while he was transferred from the Twin Twin Towns Towers Facility to the State State Hospital in Noruk on February 1, 2023.
The Ministry of Sharif says that Wilson died in the hospital. The hospital says he had already died when he arrived. No one will take responsibility. What we know is that he was very cured. The surveillance cameras were not working. His body was bruising.
Frozed from the lack of answers, my father Wilson An illegal lawsuit filed Against the Ministry of Sharif, the Ministry of State Hospitals and the Los Angeles Province in September, it seeks $ 45 million. Last month, they amended their complaints, and they renovated it in the Los Angeles Supreme Court after a federal judge spent that the case was the issue of California.
The trial is scheduled to start on September 8. “In light of the slow trader of discovery, perhaps this date will not stick,” said John Carptter, a lawyer who represents Wilson’s parents, Polan Lucas and Stanley Wilson, the father on Wednesday.
What does the sad father do in a meantime? Lucas organizes protests and other events to increase awareness of death in the contract. Written legislators. She, as a carpenter, is “the embodiment of the mother’s strength. Mothers, boy, boy, cannot be stopped.”
Lucas, who holds a PhD in Public Policy from Virginia Commonwealth University and three degrees of Harvard, lives in Virginia, where she holds the position of president and executive director of PathyWays Inc. It is a company that trains adolescents and young people who want to become leaders in public policy, public administration and international affairs.
But the weekend on Mother’s Day will be in Los Angeles, where it clouds the grass in front of the central prison of men with other parents whose children died during the reservation. It is called protest Stand with mothers It will start with a gathering at 3 pm on Saturday and conclude a “spiritual event” at 10:30 am on Sunday after spending the night.
This is the second year in a row in which the event took place. About ten parents are transformed and Lucas expects more this year.
“We write as mothers who carry the unimaginable pain in losing our children while they are detention,” says a statement from the mothers. “As we approach the annual weekend of Mother’s Day on Mother’s Day – a time that carries both deep sadness and a strong feeling of solidarity – we were looking to honor the memories of our children together: with a gathering, and the service of Mother’s Day, all of which are being held in the building outside the prison where the lives of our children were taken.
“The symbolism of sleep on the ground – inside the eyes of the same buildings that our children took their last breath, but under the same sky who deprived our children from reaching his vision – is not just a gesture without influence. It is a work of remembrance, resistance and love that concerns us deeply.
“As mothers, this gathering is intended for our children. For our healing. And for the truth.”
Last year’s protest was peaceful despite the presence of honorable deputies in riot equipment who were expecting the protests in support of the Palestinians throughout La Lucas, they raised mothers’ concerns, as they spoke with the assistant of Sherjio Aluma’s honorable deputy.
“It was very nice and told us that they would return,” Lucas said. “We have grown overnight in the tents and said no one will get up. We have examined and asked if we wanted food and water.
“It was a great weekend, a nice time and we look forward to it again.”
Among the mothers who join Lucas, Terry Lowett, whose son, Galani, 27, died in 2021 while he was in solitary confinement in the Men’s Central Prison. The District Investigative Anatomy report said that the death of Lofit was “cross” and that he was suffering from fentanel and heroin in his system, noting that he had a bruise on his neck and his prostration on his arms, but “no external shock” or “life -threatening injuries.”
Terry Lowett has questions, the primary, how did her son reach the fentanel while he was in solitary confinement with interaction only with the guards? Civil rights lawyer Christian Contraras has submitted a claim against the boycott on behalf of the family in January 2022 – the first step towards a lawsuit – but Loftt said she did not follow her because she would need an autopsy an independent body and cannot tolerate.
She said, “I am looking for a protest and spend time with other mothers.” “It is comfortable. We all share frustrations and sorrow for our children who die under suspicious conditions, and we all need to continue to search for answers.”
Lucas can get rid of her unanswered questions about Stanley Wilson’s death. He found him an inappropriate judge for trial due to the deterioration of his mental health in November 2022, and he ordered him to treat at the Governmental Hospital of the Capital. However, he was not transferred until three months later, on the day he died.
The records of the Sharif section show that Wilson was on three antipsychotic drugs. Lucas claims that two of them should not be given together because it causes anxiety and can lead to pulmonary blockage, which was determined by Wilson’s anatomy is the cause of his death.
With a lawsuit remaining a trial, it is still devoted to ensuring that the voices of the fathers of the prisoners who died in the reservation are heard. Nineteen prisoners He died in reservation From the Los Angeles Sharif province so far in 2025.
“My life has adhered to the initiatives related to the life and death of Stanley that could enlighten and support others and save lives,” Lucas said. As mothers, we find a power in gathering and calling for our children.
“We are more than friends. We love each other. We, like mothers, solidarity.”