AKRON, Ohio - The fiancee of the man who died one day after he was involved in an altercation with sheriff's deputies at the Summit County Jail said Friday that officials should be held accountable for his death.

Family members have not yet received an account of the events that preceded the death of Anthony Jones, who the Summit County Sheriff's Office said was involved in a fight with deputies Sept. 1. The 36-year-old man lost consciousness during the fight, and he died the next day at a local hospital.

The Summit County Medical Examiner's Office have not yet determined what killed Jones.

The Summit County Sheriff's Office has not responded to requests to release the names of the deputies involved in the altercation. The deputies were placed on paid leave pending the outcome of the investigation, the sheriff's office said.

Jones' fiancee, Brittany Houston, said family members are frustrated because they do not know what happened.

"I'm feeling very lost right now. I'm feeling bewildered," Houston said Friday at her home in Akron. "I don't have any idea how I'm supposed to feel normal again."

Family members are also angry because they believe no inmate should die while in custody, Houston said.

"I believe all those involved in [Jones'] death should be held accountable to the fullest extent of the law," she said. "Nothing short of that would be justice."

Jones was arrested Aug. 8 and charged with discharging a firearm at a habitation, having weapons while under disability, tampering with evidence and lesser offenses, records show. He was in custody on $25,000 bond.

Jones was accused of shooting at a home on Stroman Avenue near South Arlington Street in Akron. Several shots hit a neighbor's house, but no one was hurt, police said.

Houston said Jones had mental-health issues that might have contributed to his arrest and the altercation in jail. She declined to specify what issues, but said Jones was getting treatment.

Houston and Jones were together more than 20 years and were married twice before, but his mental-health issues led to the end of those marriages, Houston said. Jones' treatment helped them get back together, though, and they planned to wed again this fall, she said.

The couple lived together with their 14- and 5-year-old children and referred to each other as husband and wife, Houston said.

The sheriff's office said there is no video of the incident involving Jones and the deputies, who each suffered minor injuries.

A Summit County Medical Examiner's report said Jones had one visible wound on his chest after he died. Houston, who saw Jones while he was unconscious at the hospital, said she observed more serious injuries; a spokesman for the medical examiner's office declined to comment on that claim.

The Stark County Sheriff's Office, which is investigating the incident, has not released any other information.

Houston said family members are hopeful the investigation will be thorough, and that the results of that investigation will force officials to make changes that will prevent any future deaths in the jail.

"This is a situation that should never happened to another family," she said. "No one should have to endure losing a loved one this way."

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