CELINA, Tenn. (WTVF) — Women arrested in Clay County, Tennessee don't get a jail cell, they get chained to chair.

The county's jail so old, it has no room for women.

The sheriff confirms women arrested in the county are shackled to chairs in a hallway and given a cot where they sleep.

Shauna Scott was arrested in Clay County on a probation violation in February.

"Even though you've done something wrong, it's not right to treat people like animals," Scott said.

"If you're female and you get arrested in this county you can bet you are going to be sleeping on the floor shackled to a chair," Scott continued.

NewsChannel 5 Investigates obtained a picture which shows how Scott spent her days and nights in the jail.

Deputies chained her leg to a bolted down chair in a narrow hallway of the jail.

She says another woman was beside her.

"It's awful to have bodies, they were laying on these itty bitty mats, shackled to whatever they could shackle you to," Scott said.

"It's not right to have to beg to go to the bathroom and eat your meals on the floor," Scott said.

Mackenzie Melton was pregnant when she spent six days chained to a chair last month.

"I could either lay in the cot or sit in the chair that I was shackled to. I couldn't go any farther," Melton said.

When she developed a nose bleed, the county called her grandmother, who was shocked when she saw her pregnant granddaughter and another woman in the hallway.

"We rescue dogs, why are we treating humans in this manner?" said Jeanne Key.

She and Mackenzie worried about the baby.

"It was very stressful so just being in that much of a stressful situation, I was scared of having a miscarriage," Melton said.

Clay County Sheriff Brandon Boone showed us the hallway where up to three women at a time spend days and nights shackled to chairs.

"We are forced with putting the females in the floor until we can find further housing for them," Sheriff Boone said.

He said the 55-year-old jail has just 14 beds which are overcrowded with men.

State law requires separating men and women, so women get the hallway.

NewsChannel 5 Investigates asked, "Would you want your daughter to be kept that way?"

Sheriff Boone responded, "No I would not. I don't hold it against anyone that feels ill-will towards me or the county."

The county tries to transfer women to surrounding jails which is all the sheriff says he can do unless Clay County builds a new jail.

But many surrounding counties are full or they refuse inmates.

"No facility will take a pregnant female. So we knew at that point we were out of luck as far as getting her housed in another facility," Sheriff Boone said.

Attorney Richard Brooks said if the county won't build a new jail, it should be closed.

"Why hadn't someone come up here and shut this thing down?" Brooks asked.

Inspection reports from the Tennessee Corrections Institute (TCI) repeatedly state "Female inmates being housed in the hallway corridor and were secured with restraints (leg irons)."

TCI cannot close a jail.

"We will be judged by how we treat our prisoners, so that's what is happening over there. They just don't care," Brooks said.

The County has so little money that its 911 dispatchers are the jail's only two corrections officers.

And if a male inmate is suicidal, he's chained in the hallway because there's no place else to put him.

The sheriff says mentally ill inmates have stayed in the hallway for days until a bed opens at the nearest state mental hospital.

"We cannot continue this process. We've got to do something about this facility," Sheriff Boone said, and he added the county has talked about building a new jail since at least 1986.

Clay County hopes to get a federal loan to build a new jail, but that could take years.

That means more women will feel like Shauna Scott.

"For someone that's supposed to be in the law, someone that you're supposed to look up to, to have them look down on you like you're a piece of trash and treat you like trash, it's not right," Scott said.

The county transferred MacKenzie Melton to a treatment facility after six days.

The state has certified the Clay County Jail because it has a Plan of Action to build a new jail.

However the county does not have an approved plan to pay for it.

The state also says overcrowding cannot be the reason that prevents certification.

The Tennessee Corrections Institute has found that Clay County's jail is overcrowded.