TOLEDO CORRECTIONAL

Deputy warden fired from local prison

Official: Move not related to recent facility homicide

10/9/2013
BY TAYLOR DUNGJEN
BLADE STAFF WRITER
Sheldon
Sheldon

The firing of a high-ranking prison official is “not a direct result” of a recent homicide at the facility, officials said.

Toledo Correctional Institution Deputy Warden Alan Chapman was fired Wednesday as “part of our ongoing effort to find the right people for the right positions,” said JoEllen Smith, a spokesman for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction.

Mr. Chapman, 49, started working at the North Toledo prison on April 21, according to his personnel file.

The file, on Wednesday evening, did not contain information about his termination.

Mr. Chapman is being replaced by John Coleman, who is expected to start work at the prison today, Ms. Smith said.

Mr. Coleman was, most recently, working at the department's Columbus headquarters in the Operations Support Center.

The new deputy warden was not available for an interview. Ms. Smith also said that the Toledo warden, Ed Sheldon, is not giving interviews

Mr. Chapman, who, before coming to Toledo, was the warden at Avon Park Correctional Institution in Avon Park, Fla., did not return a message seeking comment.

Ms. Smith said the termination “opened the position for an experienced, security-oriented person.”

Toledo Correctional, from 2010 through 2012, saw a 113 percent increase in inmate-on-inmate assaults and a 74 percent increase in inmate-on-staff assaults, according to a harsh report from the state's Correctional Institution Inspection Committee, released in September.

Mr. Coleman, who has worked in the corrections department since 1991, has served in several capacities including warden at the Allen/​Oakwood Correctional Facility from October, 2010 until April, 2013.

On Sunday, inmate Michael Dodson, 38, was assaulted by his cellmate. He was taken to Mercy St. Vincent Medical Center where he was pronounced dead on Monday.

An autopsy concluded that he received injuries to his head and neck during an assault, said Dr. James Patrick, Lucas County coroner. A weapon was not used, Dr. Patrick said.

Dodson was convicted in Seneca County for attempted murder and aggravated robbery and was serving a 40-year sentence. He was the fourth inmate in less than 13 months to have died after an inmate-on-inmate assault at the Toledo prison.

Contact Taylor Dungjen at tdungjen@theblade.com, or 419-724-6054, or on Twitter @taylordungjen.