The Justice Department issued the following statement.
Six former Mississippi law enforcement officers were sentenced this week for torturing and abusing two Black men in Rankin County, Mississippi.
Senior District Judge Tom Lee sentenced the defendants to terms in prison ranging from 10 to 40 years.
- Christian Dedmon, 29, former Narcotics Investigator of the Rankin County Sheriff’s Office (RCSO), was sentenced to 40 years in prison.
- Brett McAlpin, 53, former RCSO Chief Investigator, was sentenced to 27.25 years in prison.
- Hunter Elward, 31, former RCSO Deputy, was sentenced to 20 years in prison.
- Jeffrey Middleton, 46, former RCSO Lieutenant, was sentenced to 17.5 years in prison.
- Daniel Opdyke, 28, former RCSO Deputy, was sentenced to 17.5 years in prison.
- Joshua Hartfield, 32, former Narcotics Investigator for the Richland Police Department, was sentenced to 10 years in prison.
“The depravity of the crimes committed by these defendants cannot be overstated, and they will now spend between 10 and 40 years in prison for their heinous attack on citizens they had sworn to protect,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “These defendants kicked in the door of a home where two Black men were residing, handcuffed and arrested them without probable cause, called them racial slurs, and punched, kicked, tased, and assaulted them. After one of the defendants fired his gun in the mouth of one of the victims, breaking his jaw, the defendants gathered outside to come up with a cover story as the victim lay bleeding on the floor. Officers who violate constitutional rights will be held accountable by the Justice Department for their crimes that harm individual victims and betray the trust of entire communities. I am grateful to the Department’s Civil Rights Division, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Mississippi, the FBI Jackson Field Office, and our state partners for their outstanding work bringing these defendants to justice.”
“It is hard to imagine a more atrocious set of civil rights violations than those carried out by the defendants in this case,” said FBI Director Christopher Wray. “But it is also hard to imagine more important work than investigating those crimes and seeking justice for the victims. As the result of the bureau’s color-of-law investigation, which we worked in collaboration with our federal and state partners, all six pleaded guilty last August and will serve lengthy sentences for their crimes.”
“By holding these officers accountable, we are sending a clear message that law enforcement abuse of Black people, or any American, will not be tolerated in our country,” said Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “These six white law enforcement officers sought to dehumanize two innocent Black men through cruel, violent, and lawless abuse. The defendants didn’t count on the victims’ courage to come forward and tell the truth or the justice system to hold them accountable. The court imposed severe sentences reflecting the defendants’ savagery, including the longest federal sentence in recent years for a civil rights police misconduct case. Justice demands accountability, especially when the defendants’ actions not only scarred the victims physically and emotionally, but also harmed the entire community, stripping away their sense of security, corroding trust and respect for the police.”
“We expect our law enforcement officers to take seriously their oath to be our protectors, but these defendants instead chose to be predators on a hate-fueled power trip,” said U.S. Attorney Todd Gee for the Southern District of Mississippi. “Rather than serving Mississippi, the defendants treated it as a place where they could assault, intimidate, torture, and frame their victims at will. These violations of civil rights should serve as a reminder that we still have a lot of work to do in Mississippi and this nation to ensure that law enforcement officers are properly hired, trained, equipped, supervised, and held accountable for their actions.”
“We hold positions of trust and serve as stewards of authority for the community. Color of law violations are harmful to the victims, to the American people, and to the law enforcement community across the globe,” said Acting Special Agent in Charge Maher Dimachkie of the FBI Jackson Field Office. “These six individuals violated their oaths and disgraced other law enforcement officers that carry their duties with pride and honor. We will continue to execute our duties to the highest level of ethical and moral values. We will continue to work with our community partners to rebuild and strengthen the partnership and trust in law enforcement. The FBI remains steadfast in aggressively investigating and bringing those who misuse their authority to justice.”
“The six officers who committed these heinous acts caused more than physical harm to these two individual victims; they severed the vital trust between law enforcement and the people they pledge to protect,” said Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch. “This abuse of power will not be tolerated. I am proud of this joint effort and shared commitment across agencies to pursue truth and justice for these victims. It is my hope and prayer that we can help these victims on their healing journey, and we can restore confidence in our criminal justice system.”
“The sentencing of the six former officers who violated their oath of office proves the effectiveness of collaboration between state and federal law enforcement agencies and prosecutors,” said Commissioner Sean Tindell of the Mississippi Department of Public Safety. “As we move forward, we should all work together creating new policies and oversights to help prevent these types of incidents in the future. Thank you to all parties involved for their diligent work in ensuring that justice was served for the victims.”
Last year, the six defendants pleaded guilty to a criminal information charging them with a total of 13 felony offenses, including 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 court documents and the plea hearings, the defendants admitted that on Jan. 24, 2023, Dedmon sent a group message to Middleton, Elward, and Opdyke, three members of the “Goon Squad,” orchestrating a “mission” to forcibly enter a home in Braxton, Rankin County, Mississippi, where two Black men, M.J. and E.P., were residing. “The Goon Squad” is a group of RCSO officers who were known for using excessive force and not reporting it. Dedmon warned the officers that there might be surveillance cameras at the house, and told them “no bad mugshots”, meaning that the officers should use excessive force, but they should make sure not to leave any marks that would be captured in a mugshot.
Upon arrival at the home, the defendants kicked in the door and entered the home without a warrant or any exigent circumstances. The defendants handcuffed and arrested the men without probable cause to believe they had committed any crime, called them racial slurs, and warned them to stay out of Rankin County. Dedmon fired his gun twice to intimidate the men. Further, the defendants punched and kicked the men; tased them 17 times; held them down and poured liquids on their faces, forcing them to involuntarily ingest these liquids; threw eggs at them and assaulted them with a dildo. McAlpin, the senior officer on the scene, failed to intervene to stop the torture or abuse and stole property while the incident occurred.
At the conclusion of the incident, Elward surreptitiously removed a bullet from the chamber of his gun, forced the gun into M.J.’s mouth, and pulled the trigger. The unloaded gun clicked but did not fire. Elward racked the slide, intending to dry-fire a second time. When Elward pulled the trigger, the gun discharged. The bullet lacerated M.J.’s tongue, broke his jaw, and exited out of his neck.
As M.J. was bleeding on the floor, the defendants did not provide medical aid, but instead gathered outside the home to devise a false cover story and took steps to corroborate it by planting a BB gun on M.J.; destroying surveillance video, a spent shell casing, and taser cartridges; submitting fraudulent drug evidence to the crime lab; filing false reports; charging M.J. with crimes he did not commit; making false statements to investigators; and pressuring witnesses to stick to the cover story.
For several of the defendants, the incident with M.J. and E.P. was not their first-time abusing Rankin County residents. During a separate incident on Dec. 4, 2022, Dedmon beat and tased a white man and fired a gun near his head to coerce a confession, while Elward and Opdyke failed to intervene. Dedmon then sexually assaulted the man. In connection with that incident, Dedmon, Elward, and Opdyke each also pleaded guilty to a criminal information charging them with three additional federal felony offenses, including deprivation of rights under color of law and discharge of a firearm in furtherance of a crime of violence.
The FBI Jackson Field Office investigated the federal case. The Mississippi Bureau of Investigation investigated the state case.
Special Litigation Counsel Christopher J. Perras and Trial Attorney Daniel Grunert of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division; Criminal Chief Erin O. Chalk and Assistant U.S. Attorney Glenda R. Haynes for the Southern District of Mississippi; and Mississippi Deputy Attorney General Mary Helen Wall, who was deputized as a Special Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Mississippi for the federal matter, prosecuted the case.
40 comments:
Anyone read Baileys weak ass statement?? Lame
Some afterthoughts:
Kept up with the case but can’t remember, was MBI called the night of the shooting? I don’t remember hearing they were , which is strange to me since it is their crime scene once an officer involved shooting occurs ?
I still find it strange , Bailey shows up at the scene (acknowledged at his press conference) and a man who is shot in the mouth is in “his” jail and on one asks any hard questions on what happened or put 2 +2 together? Hmmm…..
Last thought , he called for radio silence that night which is extremely rare , why ? What did he know ?
Thanks for the coverage KF
"hate-fueled power trip" ???? Take a look at the "Bold New City" for that...
These thug former officers seem to have gotten their jollies perpetrating sexual acts on citizens. Let's see how this works out for them over the next decades.
In forty years, when they are all released, they will continue to act like they did.
They were charged.
They were arrested.
They had access to a trial (even though they pled guilty).
They were sentenced.
They are in jail.
The justice system worked for the two black guys and I predict the largest monetary settlement since the tobacco lawsuits is in the works.
The criminals are being punished and the victims are being made whole.
Let's move on.
Like so many have said. This is weird with the sexual stuff. You might expect extrotion, revenge, murder, drug sales, etc from a crooked cop but flopping your johnson in their face?????? crazy. I hope they all rot in jail. People like them are giving reason for hating good law enforcement.
Well let’s not be to hasty , “sealed memorandums” was mentioned in A story by the NYT.
The Richland cop got a comparative wrist-slap.
I'm guessing this was not the first time he 'went along for the ride'. He was not just contacted out of the blue. He can attend high school graduation ceremonies.
Well, this sure knocked Ivana out of the news cycle.
Those two men will be living large in Reunion in 3, 2, 1...
How about a shout out to KF for his "gavel-to-gavel" coverage.
6:13 PM, it is hard to move on when the leader of the goons is still in charge.
6:13 I completely agree with you; however, in this current day and age in the US, there's WAY too much money to be made / too much leverage to be gained by making sure we do NOT move on from this!
Pardon me, but “‘move on”?!! What about all the tainted evidence behind a bunch of questionable convictions? What about the fact that the horrible man who hired and promoted these despicable criminals is still…Sheriff? What about all the people who did not do their jobs? Get busy, Rankin County, you’ve got mountains of crap to clean up.
7:02
6:13 here
Agree 100% about a review of all cases in which these officers had any involvement.
Bryan Bailey is still Sheriff because he was elected by the voters.
Lots of people don't do their jobs. Don't expect much and you won't be disappointed.
Rankin County's mess is no bigger than any other political entity. You just may not know it.
K Fish you done good!
My bet is the jury is still out with Bailey and the Feds are not finished! He makes all Rankin County LEO’s ashamed. There are many fine deputies and this happened on his watch. Make him accountable before we lose the good ones!
Bryan Bailey; Bryan Bailey; Bryan Bailey! Let us keep repeating this man until there is accountability. Taxpayers of Rankin County, you are about to be 9n the financial hook for tens, and tens, of millions of dollars. If not hundreds.
It's time to take this seriously. This is real.
LEO pre-employment background investigations in Stankin Rankin consist the following questions:
Is he a good ol' boy? Yes
You know his kin folk? Yes
He don't hang out with them colored folk, does he? No
Hired
You do have to wonder how many times they went on a “mission “. You only get this blatant after you have done it many times. Thankfully it finally caught up to them.
@ "The criminals are being punished and the victims are being made whole."
Well, you're sorta kinda half right.
Rankin County can't point a finger at Jackson any longer. Their problems are just as bad as Jackson in their own way.
After the pending lawsuit, Rankin County could become uninsurable. After that, the county could spiral into financial oblivion. Bryan Bailey will have single handily destroyed our community. Great job pal, what a disgrace!
Pay attention boot lickers, you are about to find out why it’s not good to mess with the 4th amendment.
Back in the day, the High Sheriff was in charge and ran the county.
Those days are long gone. And the Feds might choose to put an end to Bailey's days while they're at it.
Let's not forget that Jim Hood's office had credible evidence to remove Bailey from office and possibly even imprison him yet buried the case. The Rankin DA handed him the evidence.
Reckon any of them is rolling over on the bosses?
Same as it ever was in Mississippi. Glad to be gone.
Rankin County Sherrif's Department. What's your emergency!
I'm home alone, and someone just kicked in my door! Send help now, PLEASE!
Calm down, mam. No need to get excited. Just get his badge number, and we will arrest him when he shows up for work in the morning.
Mississippi will always be a racist STATE until all the racist people die out in the "SIP" it she will always be racist. SUCH DISAPPOINTMENT, I guess the folks of Mississippi will never learn.
KF -- thanks for relaying all of this to us. Your work is very much appreciated!
543
Yes MBI was called that night by Sheriff Bailey. As for the subject going to jail. The victim who was shot did not go to jail he went to the hospital.
Bryan Bailey will be the Sheriff of Rankin County for the next 4 years. You folks can cry and cry but that will not change. If the Feds had anything on Bailey he would be in jail. They investigated and looks like they did not find any connection with the so called Goon Squad.
Sheriff notified MBI that night. I just checked the press release and I received it at 1:49 AM January 25.
@6:37 She's a member of the poon not goon squad.
9:44 am. Pay attention prior to your scoffery. "So called Goon Squad" is so called because they named themselves this, even had scwag with logos. There was kind of a lot of attention to that fact elicited in one of their allocutions.
Racism will never die out in MS or any other state 8:55.
People like The Goons and people like Chokwe and Rukia will always hate people that dont look like them. Its human nature to varying degrees in all of us.
Its a fool errand and lip service at best to think otherwise.
Good play on words, 9:48 - RCSO has the Goon Squad, and MPH has the Poon Squad. Love it.
Is there still people living in Rankin county that will call the sheriff's office if someone broke into their home? Would you rather have some thug threaten you with a gun than have a sheriff's car pull into your driveway?
It is time to lock and load. Protect yourself and your family from the thugs and the sheriff's department.
I see face tattoos in the future for the whole squad.
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