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Six Former Mississippi Officers Plead Guilty to Civil Rights Charges in Assault on 2 Black Men

Six Former Mississippi Officers Plead Guilty to Civil Rights Charges in Assault on 2 Black Men

The authorities said that the two men had been stripped naked, beaten and shocked with Tasers. A sex toy was forced into both men’s mouths, and one also was shot in the mouth during a “mock execution,” federal prosecutors said.

The brick building in Mississippi that houses the Rankin County Sheriff’s Office. Two S.U.V.s are parked outside.
Five members of the Rankin County Sheriff’s Office were among the six law enforcement officers charged with federal civil rights violations in connection with a raid on a Mississippi home where two Black men were staying.Credit…Google Maps

Six white former law enforcement officers in Mississippi pleaded guilty on Thursday to federal civil rights offenses several months after they raided a home where two Black men were stripped naked, beaten and shocked with Tasers, prosecutors said on Thursday.

A sex toy was forced into both men’s mouths, and one of them also was shot in the mouth during a botched “mock execution,” federal prosecutors said. After the assault, the officers tried to cover up the attack and plant evidence, prosecutors said.

In federal court in Jackson, Miss., the six former officers pleaded guilty to federal felony offenses that included civil rights conspiracy, deprivation of rights under color of law, discharge of a firearm during a crime of violence, conspiracy to obstruct justice and obstruction of justice, according to Mississippi Attorney General’s Office, which also announced state charges against the officers.

The former officers include five members of the Rankin County Sheriff’s Office and a member of the Richland Police Department, which is also in Rankin County, in central Mississippi near Jackson, the state capital. Three of the officers called themselves members of the “the goon squad,” because of their “willingness to use excessive force and not to report it,” a federal complaint states.

The Richland Police Department and the Rankin County Sheriff’s Office did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Thursday afternoon.

The two Black men were identified only by their initials, M.J. and E.P., in federal court documents. But they had previously been identified as Michael Corey Jenkins and Eddie Terrell Parker in a federal lawsuit that they filed in June that accused six Rankin County officers of beating them over the course of nearly two hours.

According to federal prosecutors, Mr. Jenkins and Mr. Parker had been staying at a ranch-style home in Braxton, Miss., that was owned by a white woman who was a longtime friend of Mr. Parker’s.

On Jan. 24, one of the Rankin County sheriff’s investigators received a complaint from his white neighbor that “several” Black men were staying at the house and that the neighbor had observed “suspicious behavior” there, the complaint states.

The investigator contacted another member of the sheriff’s office, Christian Lee Dedmon, who reached out to members of “the goon squad,” the complaint states.

“Are y’all available for a mission?” Mr. Dedmon texted them, the complaint states.

That night, the six officers raided the home without a warrant, as several of them kicked in the back door and a carport door, the complaint states.

The officers handcuffed Mr. Jenkins and Mr. Parker and repeatedly shocked them with Tasers, the complaint states. Mr. Parker was also kicked in the ribs. Mr. Dedmon “demanded to know where the drugs were” and fired a shot into the back of the house, the complaint states. Mr. Parker replied that there were no drugs.

The officers hurled racial slurs at the men, accused them of “taking advantage” of the white woman who owned the house and told them to “go back to Jackson or to ‘their side’ of the Pearl River, areas with higher concentrations of Black residents,” the complaint states.

In the house, one of the deputies put a sex toy onto the end of a BB gun, forced it into Mr. Parker’s mouth and tried to force it into Mr. Jenkins’s mouth, according to the complaint. While the men were handcuffed, they were held down while milk, alcohol and chocolate syrup were poured onto their faces and into their mouths, the complaint states.

The men were then ordered to strip naked and to shower off to wash away evidence of the abuse before they were taken to jail, the complaint states.

After they had showered, the men were beaten with a wooden kitchen tool and a metal sword. The officers repeatedly jolted the men with Tasers again.

One of the deputies then subjected Mr. Jenkins to what federal prosecutors described as a mock execution, the complaint states. That deputy, Hunter Thomas Elward, forced Mr. Jenkins onto his knees, stuck an unloaded gun into his mouth and pulled the trigger, the complaint states.

He then racked the slide, intending to “dry-fire” the gun a second time, the complaint states. But when Mr. Elward put the gun back into Mr. Jenkins’s mouth and pulled the trigger, he fired a bullet that lacerated Mr. Jenkins’s tongue, broke his jaw and exited through his neck, the complaint states.

Lawyers for Mr. Dedmon and Mr. Elward did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Thursday.

Melvin Jenkins, Mr. Jenkins’s father, said that he was glad that the former officers had been charged.

“I’m so glad that justice was carried out, and maybe this will help other families,” Mr. Jenkins said in an interview on Thursday.

“I know it won’t put an end to it,” he added, but “maybe another family won’t have to bury their child or go through what we went through.”

Mr. Jenkins said that while his son’s physical condition was slowly improving, he still had “a long way to go.”

Source: https://www.nytimes.com/2023/08/03/us/mississippi-officers-charged-civil-rights.html