Deputy Dumps Man out of Wheelchair to Check Disability

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Deputy Dumps Man out of Wheelchair to Check Disability

Postby Shuftin » 13 Feb 2008, Wed 1:48 am

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Deputy Charlette Marshall-Jones

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TAMPA, Florida -- A sheriff's deputy who was videotaped dumping a paralyzed man from a wheelchair onto a jailhouse floor has been charged with abuse of a disabled person, a sheriff's official said.

Hillsborough County Deputy Charlette Marshall-Jones, 44, turned herself in and was booked into the Orient Road Jail early Saturday, jail records show.

She was charged with one count of felony abuse of a disabled person and released after posting $3,500 bail.

Surveillance footage from January 29 shows Marshall-Jones dumping Brian Sterner out of his wheelchair and searching him on the floor after he was brought in on a warrant for a traffic violation.

Sterner, 32, said when he was taken into a booking room and told to stand up, the deputy grew agitated when he told her that he could not. Video Watch what happened on tape »

Marshall-Jones was suspended without pay, and three other deputies were placed on administrative leave pending an investigation.

If convicted, she could be sent to prison for five years.

An attorney for Marshall-Jones listed in jail records did not immediately return a phone message.

Marshall-Jones also could not be reached by phone for comment Friday night. A telephone number listed in her name has been disconnected.
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Sterner, who can drive a car but has not been able to walk since a 1994 wrestling accident, was arrested at his Riverview home and taken to the Orient Road Jail on a charge of fleeing and attempting to elude a police officer, according to records.

He had called for charges to be filed against Marshall-Jones.


http://edition.cnn.com/2008/CRIME/02/16 ... storyemail
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Postby WaTcHeR » 23 Feb 2008, Sat 2:42 pm

TAMPA - As outrage spread nationwide over a Hillsborough County jail inmate being tossed from his wheelchair onto the floor, the detention deputy at the center of the controversy has been getting nonstop phone calls, many racist in nature.

"It's not even just in Florida," said Beverly Crecy, the roommate of suspended Deputy Charlette Marshall-Jones.

"These calls are from out of state,'' she said, with tears in her eyes. "People calling her 'n-----' and 'fat' and all kinds of stuff. Seven o'clock in the morning and all through the night."

Wednesday, three days after video of the wheelchair incident began blasting across news Web sites and YouTube, quadriplegic Brian Sterner made the national TV rounds with his Largo lawyer; the Hillsborough State Attorney's Office joined the Sheriff's Office review; and one of the four suspended deputies went on the defense.

Sterner started the morning on the "Today" show. He told host Meredith Vieira he wanted a criminal investigation, action from Gov. Charlie Crist's office and possibly a response from the federal government.

"It's not about one deputy," said Sterner, 32, who flew to New York for the show. He said he wanted more attention paid to the "ridiculous down-pressing of people across the world.

"It's not about race. It's not about a wheelchair," he said. "It can happen to anybody, anytime."

Sterner also said he wanted a personal apology from Hillsborough County Sheriff David Gee for the way he was treated at the jail.

By mid-afternoon, Gee issued one.

In a written statement, Gee said he was "personally embarrassed" by the "horrific treatment" Sterner received.

Back on the set of "Today," Sterner sat next to lawyer John Trevena. He said neither he nor his doctor have seen any X-rays since the Jan. 29 fall. Sterner, who is paralyzed from the chest down, said his right side has felt "strange" since the fall.

"I very well could've broken something and I wouldn't even know it," he said.

Jail officials said X-rays taken at a jail medical facility two days after Sterner's fall showed no broken ribs. "Today" host Vieira said the Sheriff's Office declined to be interviewed for the show.

The Hillsborough State Attorney's Office announced it would review the Oct. 25 arrest for fleeing an officer during a traffic stop. This case ultimately resulted in Sterner being booked at the Orient Road Jail in January, when the incident occurred.

The Sheriff's Office is also consulting with prosecutors during its investigation of the four suspended deputies, Assistant State Attorney Pam Bondi said.

"We don't just see something on TV and go out and make an arrest," she said. "We let the Sheriff's Office complete their internal affairs investigation first. That's how it's done in every case."

Trevena said he's optimistic the Sheriff's Office will try to settle the matter out of court.

"Given the sheriff's contrition in this case I don't expect to litigate it at all," he said.

Late Wednesday, the leader of the Florida Civil Rights Association, a statewide advocacy group with more than 1,500 members, filed a complaint with U.S. Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey. In a release, president J. Willie David III said the organization's action was necessary to "assure the public, especially people with disabilities, their civil rights will be protected by federal officials at the highest level."

Three other deputies were placed on paid administrative leave pending an investigation. One of those deputies is Steve Dickey, 45. Dickey, who has served as president of the Hillsborough Sheriff's Office detention chapter of the West Central Florida Police Benevolent Association, said he didn't see what happened to Sterner.

"All I can tell you is that I was not there when the incident took place. I wasn't in the area. I wasn't there. I wasn't in that part of the jail," he said. "If you've seen the full video, then you see that."

Dickey does not appear in the frames of the video where Sterner is expelled from the wheelchair. A thick-framed man with a crew cut, he comes into view as deputies put Sterner back into the wheelchair.

Dickey, who just started his 27th year with the Hillsborough Sheriff's Office, said he couldn't go into more detail.

"I am not trying to be difficult with this at all, but you have to remember that this is an investigation," he said. "You have to remember that I have a job I have to keep."

Outside Marshall-Jones' home, Crecy tearfully defended her roommate.

"She does her job and she's passionate about her job and for them to sully her name the way that they're doing is not right," Crecy said. "And I'm not going to give you or anybody else anything that is going to further hurt her. She doesn't deserve this."

http://www.theledger.com/article/200802 ... 40513/1004
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Postby KC » 08 Mar 2008, Sat 8:37 pm

TAMPA - A woman who said she was beaten by a deputy at the Orient Road Jail has filed a federal lawsuit.

After seeing what happened to Brian Sterner, the wheelchair-bound quadriplegic, dumped from his chair at the same jail facility, Marcella Pourmoghani is speaking out.

In an exclusive with Bay News 9, Pourmoghani said she was not surprised when she saw the video involving Sterner.

"Unprovoked, just as what happened to myself," she said after watching the wheelchair incident.

Pourmoghani said she was beaten by a female deputy in November 2006 while being booked on charges stemming from a driving with a suspended license arrest. That incident also was captured on video, surfacing last year.

"I could not breathe from the blood pouring from my mouth and my face,' Pourmoghani said. "And she had her knee on the base of my skull."

Pourmoghani said she was beaten so severely that she had to be taken from the jail to a hospital. At that time, Pourmoghani also was charged with battery on a law enforcement officer. But the state attorney's office dropped the charge after seeing the video.

On Friday, Pourmoghani's attorney filed a lawsuit in federal court. She's suing Hillsborough County, the sheriff's office and all the deputies seen on the video.

Because of the lawsuit, the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office won't comment on the case. But last August, when the video first surfaced, a jail supervisor defended the deputy.

"She was trying to take her into an escort position, when the woman resisted the force necessary escalated,' said Major Robert Lucas with the sheriff's office. "The inmate did wrap herself around her leg. The deputy indicated she was fearful she was going to get bit."

Pourmoghani's attorney countered by saying if jail supervisors stopped defending actions like this a year ago, then they would not again be under scrutiny for the wheelchair incident.

"Instead of circling the wagons with this preposterous defense,' attorney Virlyn Moore said. "They would have done something to correct the situation that they have their in that jail then this situation with this other gentlemen would never have happened."

Pourmoghani said she wants to make sure nothing like this happens to anyone else.

"It will make me very happy that they will never be able to do it somebody else."


http://www.baynews9.com/content/40/2008 ... s%20office
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Postby KC » 08 Mar 2008, Sat 8:57 pm

A video that was used to convict a man of attacking deputies now is being used against the Hillsborough County Sheriff's Office.

The same attorney who represented a disabled inmate weeks ago in an abuse case against the sheriff's office said another handicapped inmate also was dumped from a wheelchair by deputies.

Former inmate Brian Sterner's treatment on Jan. 29 by detention Deputy Charlette Marshall-Jones resulted in her arrest on a felony of adult abuse and her resignation after 22 years with the agency.

The video of his treatment made its way around the globe, prompting outcries from the public and an apology from Sheriff David Gee.

Largo lawyer John Trevena wants the sheriff's office to open a second criminal investigation into the treatment received by Benjamin Rayburn, 32, who is serving a 10-year prison sentence.

This time, the sheriff's office is offering no apologies.

Sheriff's spokeswoman Debbie Carter issued the following written statement:

"The use of force was justified by inmate Rayburn's efforts to assault a deputy," Carter wrote. "Under normal circumstances he would have been placed in cuffs and leg irons before being strapped into the restraint chair.

"Rayburn's personal wheelchair was brought into Central Booking by the arresting officers when he was processed," Carter wrote. "Standard practice is to replace it with an issued chair when an inmate is placed in housing."

Rayburn was arrested Oct. 3, 2006, on charges of aggravated battery with a firearm, armed false imprisonment and a warrant for grand theft.

According to an incident report written by detention Deputy Bret Strohsack, Rayburn was put in a holding cell for a "cooling off period" after being disruptive in the medical area of the booking room.

Rayburn banged on the glass door with his fists, demanding to be let out, Strohsack wrote.

The deputy said he opened the cell door to tell Rayburn to calm down and that the inmate threatened to cut him with an object in his hand that later was determined to be a glass crack pipe.

Rayburn threw the pipe; it hit the Plexiglas door and shattered, Strohsack said. The pieces struck another deputy in the back of the head.

"I relocated Rayburn from his wheelchair to the holding cell floor," Strohsack wrote in the report.

Trevena said the video -- which was not immediately available -- contradicts the incident report.

"The video is very clear," Trevena said. "[Rayburn] may have been verbally combative but there was no physical provocation whatsoever."

Rayburn was left crawling on the floor for more than an hour, he said.

"If you look at the video, you can see he's the victim, not the perpetrator," Trevena said. "Even if he had attacked them, which is not shown in any way in the video, dumping him out [of] a wheelchair is not in any way appropriate."

Rayburn was arrested that day by Tampa police after being found in a drunken condition, according to published reports. Police said he shot a man in the back with a .32-caliber handgun after finding his girlfriend asleep with the man at Sailport Waterfront Suites, 2505 Rocky Point Drive. The victim recovered.

The video of him in the holding cell was used as evidence to convict Rayburn of the add-on charges of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer and battery on a law enforcement officer, Carter said.

"My client has a substantial criminal history, and I'm not alleging he's a saint," Trevena said. "But regardless of who the detainee is, no one should be mistreated."

Sterner, 32, a quadriplegic, was arrested on a traffic-related violation. He was dumped to the floor after Marshall-Jones told him to stand so that she could frisk him and he did not comply.

The massive media attention to Sterner's case prompted a flood of calls to Trevena's office by people who claimed mistreatment by the sheriff's office, he said.

However, filing their civil rights complaints would be nearly impossible without well-documented evidence, he said.

"We've been inundated with inquiries," he said. "But absent specific evidence, such as this video in this case, it is not possible to litigate their cases."


http://www2.tbo.com/content/2008/feb/27 ... s-breaking
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Postby Ancap » 09 Mar 2008, Sun 3:41 pm

Waive the trial.

I'll offer my services.

An able-bodied adult male.

One on one street fight with Ms. Marshall-Jones.
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Postby KC » 09 Apr 2010, Fri 8:19 pm

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Anyone know the name of this deputy? He's the one that needs to be put in a wheelchair.
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