Los Angeles Times

Former guards are charged in inmate’s death

Prosecutor­s allege a cover- up of man’s fatal fall in a Sacramento County prison in 2016.

- By Richard Winton

Two former state prison guards have been charged with attempting to cover up how an inmate died inside California State Prison Sacramento in 2016, and one of them is accused of depriving the inmate of his civil rights.

Arturo Pacheco, 38, and Ashley Marie Aurich, 31, were charged in connection with an incident in September 2016 that resulted in the death of a 65- year- old inmate who fell while his hands were handcuffed behind his back as he was being escorted by the pair.

Federal prosecutor­s, in an indictment unsealed Thursday, accused Pacheco of bending down and pulling the inmate’s legs backward on Sept. 15, 2016, causing the handcuffed man to “immediatel­y fall forward violently with his head and upper torso striking the concrete f loor.” The unidentif ied inmate died two days later of his injuries, according to court documents.

Pacheco was indicted by a federal grand jury on two counts of willfully depriving the inmate of his rights under the color of law and two counts of falsifying records in a federal investigat­ion.

Aurich was charged separately with one count of falsifying records in a federal investigat­ion.

The indictment did not reveal the inmate’s identity, and the California Department of Correction­s and Re

habilitati­on did not issue a news release about the incident at the time, as is the practice with such deaths. Pacheco and Aurich were both fired in June 2018.

“The department conducted a thorough investigat­ion into this incident in collaborat­ion with the Federal Bureau of Investigat­ion. After substantia­ting allegation­s of misconduct and dishonesty, the officers involved were promptly dismissed from the department,” Dana Simas, a spokeswoma­n for the correction­s department, said in a statement.

According to the indictment, the two guards were escorting the inmate from a cell in Building A6 to a new cell in Building A7. They entered a rotunda in the second building when the inmate “stopped walking,” the indictment said. At that point, Pacheco responded by releasing his grip on the inmate’s left arm, then wrapped his arms around the inmate’s legs and pulled them back, causing the violent fall, according to court documents. At least three correction­al officials were present at the time, and the inmate was taken to a hospital.

Federal prosecutor­s allege Pacheco and Aurich then began to conduct a cover- up, f iling incident reports “intentiona­lly concealing the presence” of one of the other three guards and falsely reporting that the inmate “spun to his left and lunged forward,” breaking Pacheco’s grip, according to the indictment. Aurich also stated in a report that Pacheco had not “used immediate force” against the inmate, the indictment said.

“Pacheco abused his position of authority to harm an inmate,” U. S. Atty. McGregor Scott said in a statement. “Instead of upholding and enforcing the law, he went on to conceal his actions and asked others to assist him.”

Pacheco is also charged in a second incident in which he is accused of filing another false report stemming from his use of state- issued pepper spray on an inmate May 19, 2016. Prosecutor­s allege Pacheco sprayed the 54year- old inmate in the face even though the inmate was cooperatin­g with the correction­al officer’s orders.

Pacheco reported he confronted an inmate who had a piece of glass in his hand and ordered him to drop it, turn around and prepare to be handcuffed, the indictment stated.

“In order to stop [ Victim 1] from self- harming himself and causing serious bodily injury or death to himself, I used immediate force, utilizing an approximat­e 3- second burst from my MK- 9 OC pepper spray,” Pacheco wrote in an incident report, according to the indictment.

But the indictment alleged that the inmate did not have a piece of glass and that Pacheco ordered him to come closer and open his eyes before spraying him in the face.

“Pacheco falsified and made the foregoing false entry in a record knowing that Victim 1 had not been holding glass at the time,” the indictment stated. “And, in truth and in fact, Pacheco falsified and made the foregoing false entry in a record knowing that Pacheco did not order Victim 1 to submit to handcuffs before spraying him with pepper spray.”

Pacheco faces up to 10 years in prison and a $ 250,000 f ine if convicted on the deprivatio­n of rights charges. Both former correction­al officers face up to 20 years in prison and a $ 250,000 f ine if convicted on the falsifying records counts.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States