Crime & Safety
Naperville Woman Found Dead in Texas Jail Cell Was Depressed
A video has surfaced where Sandra Bland speaks about her depression.

Sandra Bland, the 28-year-old Naperville woman found dead in a Texas jail cell, allegedly recorded a video saying she was depressed, according to ABC 7.
The video is reported to have been filmed about five months ago and posted online.
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“I’m suffering from something that some of you all may be dealing with right now. It’s a little bit of depression as well as PTSD,” Bland, 28, of Naperville, stated on camera.
Waller County District Attorney Elton Mathis said it would be extremely relevant if Bland had been suffering from mental illness.
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“That self-diagnosis is certainly something that we are going to look at and consider with a motive for a suicide,” Mathis told ABC 7.
Justice of the Peace Charles Karisch pronounced Bland dead at the jail cell and noticed a mark around her neck. He thinks he may have seen a plastic bag hanging in the cell and believes that’s what Bland used to kill herself.
Each cell reportedly has a garbage can with a plastic bag in it. That practice will now be under review.
Bland was found dead in a Texas jail cell around 9 a.m. Monday, July 13. On Friday, July 10, she was pulled over for failing to signal a lane change. That’s when she allegedly kicked an officer and was arrested.
Bland’s death has been ruled a suicide by the Harris County medical examiner and the FBI and the Texas Rangers are stepping in to investigate her death.
Mathis told the Chicago Sun-Times he had no reason to think Bland didn’t kill herself and added that the Texas Rangers would conduct a thorough investigation.
“If I receive information that there’s something nefarious going on, or foul play, we will certainly get to the bottom of that,” he said. “I understand there’s some disbelief among some friends and family that she would do this to herself. That’s why it’s very important that the Texas Rangers be allowed to conduct a thorough investigation.”
Mathis did state that he thought it was strange for someone who had “everything going for her” to take her own life.
Bland had accepted a job at Prairie View A&M in Prairie View, where Bland had graduated from in 2009.
Bland’s friend LaVaughn Mosley told KPRC Houston the idea that Bland killed herself is ridiculous.
“Anyone who knows Sandy Bland knows she has a thirst for life,” Mosley told KPRC. “She was planning for the future, and she came here to start that future, so to say she killed herself is totally absurd.”
It’s also come to light that Waller County Sheriff Glenn Smith, who made the first public comments about Bland’s death, was suspended for documented cases of racism in 2007 when he was chief of police in Hempstead, Texas, according reports in the Houston Chronicle.
After his suspension, he was subsequently fired from his position when more allegations of racist conduct came in.
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