Dayton Daily News

Ga. sheriff reopens case of teenager’s gym mat death

- By Russ Bynum

A Georgia sheriff has reopened an investigat­ion into the 2013 death of a teenager whose body was found inside a rolled-up gym mat at his high school, saying he’s reviewing 17 boxes of evidence collected by federal agents that his office recently obtained from the U.S. Justice Department.

Fellow students found the body of Kendrick Johnson, 17 in the gymnasium at Lowndes High School in Valdosta on Jan. 11, 2013. Lowndes County sheriff ’s investigat­ors concluded soon after that Johnson died in a freak accident, stuck upside down and unable to breathe while trying to retrieve a shoe that fell inside the upright mat.

Johnson’s parents have insisted from the beginning that he was slain, and have long accused law enforcemen­t and school officials of covering up the crime.

Lowndes County Sheriff Ashley Paulk, who wasn’t in office during the original investigat­ion of Johnson’ s death, said in a phone interview Wednesday that he agreed to start a new investigat­ion after the Johnson family helped his office obtain the Justice Department’s files on its 2 1/2year investigat­ion into Johnson’s death.

“People ask me was it an accident or a murder, and I say I can’t give you an opinion until I see every bit of evidence that we have,” Paulk said. He called the Justice Department’s case file “a good piece of the puzzle that was missing.”

Federal authoritie­s ultimately provided no answers in 2016 when they closed their investigat­ion into whether Johnson’s civil rights were violated. The Justice Department said they “found insufficie­nt evidence to support federal criminal charges.”

Marcus Coleman, an Atlanta civil rights activist, has worked with Johnson’s parents, Kenneth and Jaquelyn Johnson, to get the case reopened. He said the family is “cautiously optimistic” that Paulk will give the case a fair and thorough review.

“They’ve been through eight years of hell. They’ve had a lot of letdowns,” Coleman said. “Now that it’s back in the hands of the sheriff ’s department, we’re literally back to square one.”

Johnson’s parents have long accused two fellow students of attacking their son and dumping his body in the rolled up mat. They filed civil lawsuits alleging a conspiracy to cover up the crime by law enforcemen­t officers, state medical examiners and school officials.

After the Johnson family dropped one of their lawsuits that named 39 defendants in 2017, Lowndes County Superior Court Judge Richard Porter wrote that Johnson’s parents “had no evidence to support their claims” of foul play.

One of the students accused by Johnson’s parents was away from school traveling to a sports tournament at the time Johnson died, according to the case file from the sheriff ’s initial investigat­ion. Authoritie­s said school security camera footage confirmed the second accused student was in another part of the building.

No one has ever been charged with any crimes in Johnson’s death.

Paulk said he’s personally leading the investigat­ion, which will compare the federal agents’ findings with evidence the sheriff ’s office gathered in 2013. He expects to spend at least six months on the case.

“There’s no reason to rush to judgment,” Paulk said. “It’s been eight years.”

 ?? RUSS BYNUM / AP ?? Kenneth and Jacquelyn Johnson stand next to a banner of their late son, Kendrick Johnson, whose body was found inside a rolled-up gym mat in 2013.
RUSS BYNUM / AP Kenneth and Jacquelyn Johnson stand next to a banner of their late son, Kendrick Johnson, whose body was found inside a rolled-up gym mat in 2013.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States