Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Trial begins for guards accused of violating rights

- LINDA SATTER

Opening statements in the federal trial of two former juvenile detention center officers accused of violating the civil rights of teenagers they oversaw in Batesville are set to begin at 9:15 a.m. today in the Little Rock courtroom of U.S. District Judge Billy Roy Wilson.

On Monday afternoon, attorneys seated a jury of nine men and one woman, all from the Batesville division of the Eastern District of Arkansas, to hear the case against Will Ray, 27, and Thomas Farris, 48, each of whom face two charges. The trial is expected to last about a week.

Ray and Farris are jointly charged with conspiring to violate the civil rights of juveniles at the White River Juvenile Detention Center between June 2012 and July 2014. Each man is also charged with one count of aiding and abetting the commission of a civil rights violation.

Ray’s individual charge accuses him of helping Lt. Dennis Fuller assault a 14-yearold boy known as G.D., who was heavily medicated and had fallen asleep in his cell. Prosecutor­s say the assault occurred on Nov. 6, 2013, when Ray walked into the boy’s cell as he slept and sat on his bunk, waking him, then grabbed him and turned him toward the lieutenant, holding him while Fuller sprayed him directly in the face with pepper spray. The boy dropped to the floor as Fuller sprayed him a second time, according to prosecutor­s, who said that Farris and a fourth officer were also in the boy’s cell at the time.

Fuller, 41, pleaded guilty to a civil rights conspiracy charge in April 2017, admitting to pepper-spraying the boy and then letting him “cook,” instead of immediatel­y decontamin­ating him, and then falsifying a report to say that the boy was sprayed because he fought Ray. Fuller is expected to testify.

Farris is accused of helping assault another detainee known as J.H., who was 17 years old, on Nov. 21, 2013, by spraying him in the face with pepper spray while the boy leaned up against his bunk on the back wall of his cell. Prosecutor­s say Farris and Ray took the boy to the ground and left him in the cell to “cook” for two minutes.

The men’s captain, Peggy Kendrick, also pleaded guilty in April 2017 to charges of civil rights conspiracy, depriving inmates of their constituti­onal rights and obstructin­g justice. She is also expected to testify about several matters, including that she falsified a report about the spraying of J.H., which she witnessed, to say that he “took an aggressive stance” and refused to follow an instructio­n.

According to the government’s trial brief, Ray, Farris, Fuller, Kendrick and Jason Benton, 43, another former guard who has pleaded guilty to depriving a 15-year-old boy of his rights by pepper-spraying him without cause, conspired to punish juveniles at White River by pepper-spraying them when they weren’t physically resisting or posing any threat.

The burning sensation from the spray can linger for up to 40 minutes, and officers were taught to minimize its effect by escorting juveniles to a shower to decontamin­ate themselves as soon as they stopped resisting, according to the brief by attorney Samantha Trepel of the U.S. Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division.

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