Sonoma sheriff denies beating allegations
A sergeant with the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office has enthusiastically denied the claims contained in a federal lawsuit.
A sergeant with the Sonoma County Sheriff's Office has enthusiastically denied the claims contained in a federal lawsuit.
A sergeant with the Sonoma County Sheriff’s Office has enthusiastically denied the claims contained in a federal lawsuit alleging that correctional deputies beat more than 20 Sonoma County Jail inmates during an incident in May.
According to a statement released Monday evening by Sgt. Cecile Focha, those allegations have no basis.
“The correctional deputies were responding to the actions of a seemingly coordinated mass disturbance by inmates housed in administrative segregation.”
The collective actions of those inmates were threatening the safety and security of staff and other inmates, according to Focha.
The 14-page complaint filed today in U.S. District Court in San Francisco names two plaintiffs, Marquis Martinez and Daniel Banks, out of 20 young men whom the deputies allegedly “systematically and sadistically attacked” on May 28 in the Main Adult Detention Facility in Santa Rosa, according to the complaint filed by attorneys Izaak Schwaiger, John Scott and Lizabeth de Vries.
The complaint states Martinez had a panic attack when he heard the correctional deputies beating several inmates in the module.
Jail staff repeatedly beat Martinez, and Banks tried to avoid an assault by laying face down on a mattress to show submission, but he and the other inmates were attacked, the complaint states:
“An uninterrupted stream of nearly identical attacks occurred up and down the housing unit over the span of over five hours under the direction and supervision of Sgt. Brian Galloway, Lt. Mazen Awad and other supervisory staff. … For five-and-a-half-hours, the jail was filled with screams, cries of pain, and the sound of inmates begging the deputies to stop.”
Schwaiger said he received more than 20 letters from inmates following the beatings and he called the alleged beatings “gut-wrenching” and “beyond the pale.” Schwaiger said jail staff videotaped a large portion of the beatings, and the videos are in the possession of Sonoma County Sheriff Steve Freitas, who also is named as a defendant.
Schwaiger said in a statement:
“This is like a horror movie, and we have reason to believe this was not an isolated incident.”
Schwaiger has scheduled a news conference on the lawsuit for 11 a.m. this morning at his law office in Santa Rosa.
Freitas did not return a call for comment on the suit late Monday morning.
Focha referred further inquiries to the County Counsel’s office, citing pending litigation.
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