In her last phone call with her son Matthew Loflin, Belinda L. Maley told him she was working as hard as possible to get him out of the Chatham County Detention Center in Georgia. “I’m doing everything I can to get you out and so I can see you,” she promised her son. But Loflin, who was diagnosed with cardiomyopathy, told Maley she needed to hurry. “I’m coughing up blood, my feet are swollen. It hurts,” he told his mother through sobs. “I’m gonna die in here.” Loflin, incarcerated on a non-violent drug offense, died soon after their call. When Maley saw her son again, he was handcuffed to a hospital bed, unconscious, while she authorized ending his life support. Maley’s
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