Mom jailed over truancy died from heart failure

WASHINGTON– A mother of seven who was jailed because her sons skipped school and then was found dead in her cell, died of natural causes, a coroner has ruled.

The Berks County coroner’s office released its findings on 55-year-old Eileen DiNino on Thursday. An autopsy revealed that DiNino’s high blood pressure contributed to heart failure and that fluid in her lungs also was a factor.

DiNino, of Reading, 60 miles northwest of Philadelphia, was found dead in her jail cell on June 7, halfway through a two-day sentence. She had been jailed for failing to pay about $2,000 in truancy fines and court costs accrued since 1999 in cases involving several of her children, most recently her boys at a vocational high school.

The judge who sentenced DiNino said days after her death he had reluctantly sent her to jail after she failed to pay the money.

District Judge Dean R. Patton, who described DiNino as “a lost soul,” complained about a broken system that punishes impoverished parents and questioned laws criminalizing such lapses as truancy or failing to pay trash bills.

“This lady didn’t need to be there,” said the judge, who acknowledged losing sleep over her jail cell death. “We don’t do debtors prisons anymore. That went out 100 years ago.”

According to the website ReadingEagle.com in Berks County, DiNino was well- loved by her family and friends and her loss is leaving “a hole” in their lives.

“We’ve had people dropping by the house every day bringing us food and other things,” said son Mike Tobias, 28. “Mom would feed and clothe us before herself. She was like that with everyone else, too. I had to make sure she was eating enough. “You’d be hard-pressed to find someone who didn’t like my mom, who had bad things to say about her.”

According to ReadingEagle.com, Reading District Judge Wally Scott, who handles Reading school truancy cases, said he interviewed DiNino and found that she was indigent and first dismissed the cases against her because there was clear evidence she could never pay them.

More than 1,600 people, mostly women, have been jailed in Berks County over truancy fines since 2000.

Attorney Richard Guida, who handled truancy cases, including DiNino’s, as a Reading School District solicitor for more than a decade, said the cases show “kind of a slice of inner-city life.”

“The people home taking care of the children are mothers,” he said. “Many times, they’re overwhelmed, and some of these kids are no angels.”

The truancy fines might be $75 or less, but the debt can add up over court costs and fees. DiNino’s court file shows a laundry list of court fees for one case alone: $8 for a judicial computer project, $60 for Berks County constables, $10 for postage. And she had been cited dozens of times over the years.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

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