Three sickened, two charged in prison incident
ELKINS – A man and woman have been charged with felonies following an incident in a Randolph County prison in which an inmate, a correctional officer and a nurse all had to be transported to a local hospital.
Jason Mark Sadler, 35, of Huntington, has been charged with inmate possession of a controlled substance, rendering correctional facility less secure/injury to another, and conspiracy to commit a felony. He is being held on a $50,000 cash-only bond, set by Randolph County Magistrate Tracy M. Harper.
Gretchen Marie McIntosh, 45, of Huntington, is charged with delivery of a controlled substance to an inmate, and conspiracy to commit a felony. She is being held in the Tygart Valley Regional Jail on a $30,000 cash-only bond.
According to the criminal complaint, prepared by Trooper Thomas J. Sclimenti, of the Elkins Detachment of the West Virginia State Police, on Sept. 27, McIntosh allegedly “place(d) something in Sadler’s hand during a hug” during a supervised visit at Huttonsville Correctional Center, where Sadler is an inmate.
A correctional officer then saw Sadler “place something in his shoe” and performed a strip search of Sadler and another inmate, the complaint states. Sadler “then placed something in his mouth and then began vomiting shortly after.”
Sadler “attempted to smear the substance into his vomit on the floor while (correctional officers) attempted to restrain him,” according to the complaint. From Sadler’s “mouth and vomit, (correctional officers) recovered chewed paper consistent with controlled substance.”
Sadler then “became unresponsive, and was administered narcan by facility staff,” the complaint reads. Sadler was then transported to a hospital for treatment.
An HCC correctional officer “located foil with residue within Sadler’s cell, and upon attempting to inspect said foil … became sick and began vomiting, turned red, began sweating and became lightheaded,” according to the complaint. The correctional officer was also transported to the hospital for treatment.
An HCC nurse “began exhibiting similar symptoms subsequent to providing medical treatment” to Sadler, “requiring her to be transported to the hospital,” the complaint states.
The complaint reads that Sadler had previously made phone calls to McIntosh “about the last stuff she brought being thrown away, and she would be paid enough for half the trailer by the time she got back.” After the vomiting incident, Sadler reportedly called McIntosh, saying “he had suboxone in his hair and tried to swallow it, she was banned and they have it all on camera.”
The complaint also states that “the inmates in this cell had been acting suspicious prior to the day’s incidents, acting intoxicated and having packed Mr. Sadler’s belonging prior to his medical emergency.”



