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Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

MN Jail Nurse Refuses To Treat Inmate, Who Dies… Finally Charged!

Hidden Killers With Tony Brueski | True Crime News & Commentary

True Crime Today

True Crime, News, News Commentary

3791 Ratings

🗓️ 19 March 2025

⏱️ 14 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

MN Jail Nurse Refuses To Treat Inmate, Who Dies… Finally Charged!
A Minnesota jail nurse is now facing second-degree manslaughter and felony criminal neglect charges nearly six years after an inmate under her care died—an incident that led to a $2.6 million settlement and inspired a new state law to prevent similar tragedies.

According to the criminal complaint, 27-year-old Hardel Sherrell was booked into the Beltrami County Jail on August 24, 2018. Despite high blood pressure and a history of respiratory failure, his initial condition appeared stable. Three days later, Sherrell began experiencing chest pain and tingling in his left hand. He received an electrocardiogram (EKG) and painkillers, and he reported that he had stopped taking his blood pressure medication months earlier.

Over the following days, Sherrell’s health deteriorated further. He frequently fell out of his bunk and complained of numbness in his legs. On August 31, he was observed lying on a mat, unable to move; his mouth drooped, and his speech was slurred. A jail doctor suspected Guillain-Barré Syndrome, a rare autoimmune disorder. Hospital tests, however, led an emergency room physician to diagnose him with “malingering and weakness” before sending him back to the jail.


When 37-year-old nurse Michelle Rose Skroch—then employed by MEnD Correctional Care, LLC—came on duty September 1, she was briefed about Sherrell’s rapidly worsening condition. Prosecutors allege she simply stood at his cell door, refused to conduct any standard medical assessment, and told Sherrell he could walk if he wanted to. When he begged for help, she allegedly stated she “would not bargain with him.”

Across two days, Skroch is accused of never taking Sherrell’s vital signs, even as he struggled to eat, drink, or go to the bathroom unassisted. The complaint further states she told a jail doctor that Sherrell was improving, despite video footage apparently showing him taking rapid, shallow breaths. She purportedly told correctional officers he was “perfectly fine.”

Around 4:46 p.m. on September 2, officers discovered Sherrell unresponsive; he was pronounced dead shortly thereafter. An autopsy showed he died from pneumonia and cerebral edema (brain swelling), with a separate pathologist concluding the cause of death was complications from Guillain-Barré Syndrome.


A correctional health expert reviewing the case stated that Skroch failed to perform the “most basic nursing care,” labeling the lack of vital sign checks on a critically ill patient a “tremendous breach” of duty. Medical experts believe Sherrell likely would have survived had he received proper treatment.

Sherrell’s mother filed a lawsuit against the county and MEnD, resulting in a $2.6 million settlement. In response to the case, Minnesota lawmakers passed the “Hardel Sherrell Act,” granting the Department of Corrections greater oversight of county jails.

Skroch, whose nursing license has been revoked, was arrested Friday and charged with second-degree manslaughter (culpable negligence) and two counts of felony criminal neglect. She is scheduled to appear in court on April 11.
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Transcript

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0:00.0

This is Hidden Killers with Tony Brewski.

0:05.0

This is a case that really makes you question how people in positions of power can get things so horrifically wrong.

0:19.0

Picture this, it's August of 2018.

0:23.6

27-year-old Hardell Cheryl finds himself and the Belchrami.

0:32.2

I think Beltrami.

0:34.3

I think that's how we say it.

0:35.3

Beltrami County Jail in Minnesota.

0:38.0

Now being locked up is already a rough situation,

0:41.8

but Chappelle wasn't just any inmate.

0:44.4

He had a history of respiratory issues and high blood pressure,

0:48.7

meaning the need for at least some level of medical attention.

0:53.6

At first, though, he seemed stable. He wasn't showing any

0:57.3

major red flags when he was booked. Well, that did not last long. Just three days in,

1:01.7

he started feeling serious chest pains and tingling in his left hand. Classic warning signs

1:07.1

that something is not right. The jail medical team does an EKG gives him some pain meds,

1:13.3

and he casually mentions that he stopped taking his blood pressure medication months ago.

1:20.8

Not ideal, but again, nothing that screams immediate medical emergency at this point.

1:25.6

But here's where things take a turn for the worst.

1:29.5

Over the next few days, Chalelle's condition nosedives.

1:33.0

He keeps falling out of his bunk.

1:35.4

Not normal.

1:36.5

He's complaining about numbness in his legs.

...

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