Our current Florida legislature under one party rule, proposes to eliminate police review board. Governor DeSANTIS should veto this bill. If not, will it face a court challenge?
Veteran Missisippi investigative reporter Jerry Mitchell sharing a well-deserved byline on this story. Remands me of a now-ironic quote from Sheriff DAVID SHOAR, who legally changed his name from "HOAR" in 1994. In a 2016 debate with Debra Maynard, SHOAR said he "rejects the false narrative" that "cops need to be watched." The Roman satirist Juvenal asked, "who guards the guardians?" For years the answer in SJSO was No One. Grateful that our leaders listened, and we now have body-warn cameras and dashboard cameras for deputies. Every jurisdiction needs them, to protect people from bad cops and to protect cops from false accusations.
From The New York Times:
Goon Squad Officer Is Sentenced to 20 Years in Mississippi Torture Cases
Six officers pleaded guilty last year to assaulting two Black men and shooting one of them in the mouth during a raid on their home.
Nate Rosenfield, Jerry Mitchell and
Brian Howey and Nate Rosenfield are examining the power of sheriffs’ offices in Mississippi as part of The Times’s Local Investigations Fellowship. Jerry Mitchell is an investigative reporter who has examined civil rights-era cold murder cases in the state for more than 30 years.
Two former law enforcement officers who were part of a self-styled “Goon Squad” that tortured, sexually assaulted and beat residents of a Mississippi county were given hefty prison sentences on Tuesday for brutally attacking two Black men last year.
A federal judge ordered Hunter Elward, who shot one of the victims in the mouth, to serve 20 years in prison. Jeffrey Middleton, a former lieutenant who supervised the Goon Squad, was sentenced to nearly 18 years.
Mr. Elward broke down in tears as he turned to face Eddie Parker, 36, and Michael Jenkins, 33, and apologized for what he had done to them.
“I hate that I was involved in this,” he said. “I hate what’s happened to them.”
As Mr. Elward left the podium, Mr. Parker stood up and said that he forgave him.
Outside the courtroom, Mr. Jenkins, the man Mr. Elward shot in the face during what was described as a mock execution, said that he did not forgive Mr. Elward. “If he wouldn’t have gotten caught, he would still be doing the same thing,” Mr. Jenkins said.
Four other officers will face sentencing this week in the federal courthouse in Jackson. All of them pleaded guilty this summer to federal civil rights offenses related to their brutal treatment of Mr. Parker, Mr. Jenkins and a white man, Alan Schmidt, who was assaulted in a separate incident in December 2022.
So far, charges against officers in Rankin County have been narrowly focused on these two incidents, but residents in impoverished pockets of the county say that the sheriff’s department has routinely targeted them with similar levels of violence.
Last November, The New York Times and Mississippi Today published an investigation revealing that for nearly two decades, deputies in the Rankin County sheriff’s department, many of whom called themselves the Goon Squad, would barge into homes in the middle of the night, handcuff people and torture them for information or confessions.
In pursuit of drug arrests, the deputies rammed a stick down one man’s throat until he vomited, dripped molten metal onto another man’s skin and held people down and beat them until they were bloody and bruised, according to dozens of people who said they had witnessed or experienced the raids.
Many of those who said they had experienced violence filed lawsuits or formal complaints detailing their encounters. A few said they had contacted Sheriff Bryan Bailey of Rankin County directly, only to be ignored.
Sheriff Bailey, who has denied knowledge of the incidents, has faced calls to resign from local activists and the N.A.A.C.P. He has said that he will not step down.
The sheriff’s department in Rankin County, a suburban area just outside Jackson, came to national attention last year after five Rankin County deputies and a Richland police detective raided the home of Mr. Parker and his friend, Mr. Jenkins, following a tip about suspicious activity.
The officers handcuffed the men and tortured them by shocking them repeatedly with Tasers, beating them and sexually assaulting them with a sex toy. Mr. Elward put his gun into Mr. Jenkins’s mouth and shot him, shattering his jaw and nearly killing him.
“They tried to take my manhood away from me,” Mr. Jenkins said in a statement to the court on Tuesday morning. “I don’t ever think I’ll be the person I was.”
The officers destroyed evidence and, to justify the shooting, falsely claimed that Mr. Jenkins had pointed a BB gun at them, federal prosecutors said.
During the hearing on Tuesday, Mr. Elward said that he had witnessed brutal conduct by other deputies throughout his seven years at the department, which his lawyer, Joe Hollomon, said was “the culture of Rankin County sheriff’s department.”
During Mr. Middleton’s portion of the hearing, a federal prosecutor revealed that deputies under his supervision had carried commemorative coins printed with the words “Goon Squad.” Early versions of the coin had an image of a confederate flag on one side and a noose on the other, said the prosecutor, Erin Chalk.
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