Los Angeles Times

Deputies held in jail assaults

Alameda County officers let an inmate repeatedly attack others, sheriff says.

- By Alene Tchekmedyi­an alene.tchekmedyi­an@latimes.com

Alameda County officers let an inmate repeatedly attack others, sheriff says.

An inmate walked through the hallway of a maximum security unit of the Santa Rita Jail, authoritie­s said, carrying a plastic bottle filled with feces and urine.

In seconds, he had squeezed the bottle, spraying its contents through the cracks of a door into a cell housing another inmate.

He did the same thing several times to different inmates during the summer and fall of last year.

Authoritie­s say four Alameda County sheriff ’s deputies knew about and even facilitate­d the “gassing” attacks.

Those deputies — Justin Linn, 23; Erik McDermott, 27; Sarah Krause, 26; and Stephen Sarcos, 30 — were arrested Thursday on suspicion of assault under the color of authority, according to the Alameda County Sheriff ’s Office.

All were freed after posting bail.

A lengthy investigat­ion began after jail employees told supervisor­s in January about the abuse allegation­s. The four deputies were pulled from duty soon after.

Sarcos resigned during the investigat­ion. The rest remain on unpaid leave, Sgt. Ray Kelly said.

Authoritie­s interviewe­d more than 40 people, including sheriff ’s office employees and inmates in the county jail and various state prisons.

Krause and Sarcos are accused of involvemen­t in one attack, and authoritie­s allege that Linn and McDermott were complicit in several. Linn and McDermott also are accused of intimidati­ng witnesses to keep them from speaking to investigat­ors.

The inmate who staged the attacks was not identified. It’s unclear whether he will be charged.

It’s also unclear whether the deputies orchestrat­ed the attacks to punish inmates or whether they stood by idly during the assaults.

Prosecutor­s are looking at whether the inmate who staged the attacks was under duress or feared retaliatio­n if he didn’t comply with the jail deputies, Kelly said.

“There was a reason they had concocted to do each and every incident,” Kelly said. “The reason why? We don’t know.”

Sheriff Gregory Ahern called the allegation­s “egregious and shocking.”

“We have sought charges against the four individual­s and they must now answer to these allegation­s,” he said in a statement. “The actions of these four individual­s do not reflect the dedication and profession­alism of the 1,600 employees who work at the Alameda County Sheriff ’s Office.”

The case prompted agency officials to review internal policies.

“A lot of the mechanisms in place to alert supervisor­s to this criminal behavior worked,” said Kelly, who credited the employees who came forward.

A plan is in the works, he said, to install video cameras “everywhere we can put them within the facility.”

 ?? Alameda County Sherrif’s Office ?? Stephen Sarcos, 30.
Alameda County Sherrif’s Office Stephen Sarcos, 30.
 ??  ?? Sarah Krause, 26.
Sarah Krause, 26.
 ??  ?? Justin Linn, 23.
Justin Linn, 23.
 ??  ?? Erik McDermott, 27.
Erik McDermott, 27.

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