NEW DETAILS: Lebanon Correctional inmate who dies involved in use of force incident

2 prison workers on administrative leave.
Two prison workers, including a nurse, are on administrative leave following the Nov. 29, 2025, death of an inmate at the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction's Lebanon Correctional Institution. STAFF FILE

Credit: Greg Lynch

Credit: Greg Lynch

Two prison workers, including a nurse, are on administrative leave following the Nov. 29, 2025, death of an inmate at the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction's Lebanon Correctional Institution. STAFF FILE

An inmate who died last weekend was involved in a use of force incident with corrections officers at Lebanon Correctional Institution.

Laselle Allen, 38, of Toledo was identified as the inmate, who was pronounced dead at 9:38 a.m. Nov. 29 at Atrium Medical Center in Middletown, said JoEllen Smith, communications chief for the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation & Correction.

“A correction officer and an RN have been placed on administrative leave pending the investigation into this matter,” she said.

The Ohio State Highway Patrol is investigating the death, which is an active and open investigation, said Sgt. Tyler Ross of the patrol’s public affairs unit.

An incident report indicated that Allen was involved in an altercation with his cellmate, and that “subsequently, responding officers were involved in a use of force with the inmate.”

Laselle Allen

Credit: Ohio Department of Rehabilitation & Correction

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Credit: Ohio Department of Rehabilitation & Correction

Allen was taken to the prison infirmary, where he became unresponsive and was taken to the hospital.

Allen’s cause of death is under investigation but may take some time to determine, said Warren County Coroner Dr. Russell Uptegrove.

An autopsy performed at the Montgomery County Coroner’s Office found mild injuries, such as contusions and abrasions, he said.

“Preliminary information is that there was not sufficient identifiable trauma at the time of the autopsy to come up with a reasonable cause of death at that point,” said Uptegrove, who added that Allen was relatively healthy without any significant medical conditions or illness.

“In this particular case because of the lack of the physical findings … we’re waiting for the toxicology results to make some sort of determination," he said. “There is a significant possibility this is drug-related.”

One issue is that jails and prisons across the country, including the Lebanon Correctional and Warren Correctional institutions in Warren County, have been seeing deaths linked to synthetic cannabinoids, called “tune,” Uptegrove said.

Cocaine, methamphetamine, and these synthetic drugs can lead to a fatal cardiac arrhythmia, which would not be seen at autopsy.

Routine coroner’s laboratory testing does not have the ability to identify most of these synthetic substances. In such cases, following initial testing the samples must be sent to a costly reference lab, which is a specialized lab with advanced technology that performs complex, unusual tests.

Allen, who had been incarcerated since late December, was serving a one-and-a-half-year sentence for felony convictions in Lucas County for aggravated assault and attempted discharge of a firearm at a habitation or school. His expected release/parole eligibility date was Jan. 6, according to the ODRC website.

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