Injected Without Consent: Inside Williamson County’s Sheriff’s Office Medical Black Box
injected without consent Williamson County describes a custodial medical event involving an undocumented large-volume injection during pretrial detention. This record outlines what occurred, what was claimed, and what remains missing.
By LeRoy Nellis
I was not sentenced.
I was not convicted.
I was a pretrial detainee.
In early 2024, I was injected with approximately 50 cubic centimeters of an unknown substance.
No consent.
No explanation.
No medical record produced.
This is the core of the issue: a medical act without documentation.
Injected Without Consent Williamson County — Timeline Context
During the same period, publicly available CDC data showed an infectious disease outbreak affecting Williamson and Travis Counties.
I am not assigning a diagnosis.
But the overlap of timing, location, and exposure raises legitimate questions.
Questions that require records—not explanations.
Related timeline: injected without consent Williamson County timeline
The Insulin Claim
After the fact, the County stated the injection was insulin.
If true, that raises more risk—not less.
A 50cc insulin injection would be medically extreme and require strict controls.
- Physician authorization
- Dosage calculation
- Blood glucose monitoring
- Continuous observation
None of those records have been produced.
Without documentation, the explanation has no evidentiary weight.
External reference: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Medical Impact
Following the injection, I experienced rapid deterioration:
- Systemic inflammation
- Neurological disruption
- Vision impairment
- Ongoing complications
Requests for records were delayed or denied.
Requests for independent evaluation were resisted.
A high-risk medical event without documentation should trigger investigation.
It triggered silence.
The Medical Black Box
This is the pattern: medical actions occur inside custody without transparency.
Across jail systems:
- Medical care is outsourced
- Documentation is limited
- Oversight is delayed
When records are missing, accountability is impossible.
That is what makes it a black box.
What Must Be Produced
- Full medical records
- Medication logs and inventory
- Physician orders
- Monitoring documentation
- Incident reports
And independent review.
If a detainee can be injected without records, the risk is systemic.
Sunlight is the minimum standard.
