Inmate Attacked By Dog and Deputy
It was Dec. 6, 2012, when correctional officers were conducting a contraband sweep at Iberia Parish Jail. Marcus Robicheaux and the other inmates were standing with their hands on his head and his nose pressed against the wall of the recreation yard.
Suddenly, one deputy pulled Robicheaux from the wall and threw him to the ground. The deputy’s dog then attacked Robicheaux, biting his legs, arms, and torso. Then the deputy joined in, stomping and kicking the prone inmate. The whole three-minute incident was captured on video from the jail’s surveillance cameras.
“I couldn’t do nothing but scream,” recalled Robicheaux, who says he doesn’t know why he was singled out. “The inmates couldn’t do anything to help me.”
Deputy David Prejean Fired
The deputy in the video, David Prejean, filed a report on the incident shortly after it happened. However, his written account clashes with what the video depicts.
Iberia Parish Sheriff Louis Ackal said Prejean was fired in January. Officials finally viewed the footage, more than two years after the incident occurred. A federal grand jury has subpoenaed the tape as part of an investigation into the abuse of inmates at the jail.
Sources with knowledge of the probes told The Advocate that federal authorities also are investigating other alleged episodes of abuse at the jail.
The investigation into the attack on Robicheaux is at least the third federal probe into the Sheriff’s Office the FBI has opened in the last three years. The FBI declined to comment for this story, as did the U.S. attorney for the Western District of Louisiana, which includes Iberia Parish. Ackal said he has not watched the video himself, nor does he plan to. But his top aide, Richard Hazelwood, has seen it and said there was “no justification whatsoever” for the attack caught on the tape.
“Once we became aware of it, and the extent of the issue, immediate action was taken,” Hazelwood said.
According to records, Robicheaux was in jail awaiting trial on several drug charges. An incident report drafted by Prejean describes Robicheaux as resisting his commands to “stop looking” at him, then ignoring further commands to lie down on the ground so he could be handcuffed. He also wrote that Robicheaux cursed at him to another inmate.
Captured on Surveillance Video
The video, which has no sound, shows Prejean crossing the jail’s recreation yard and pulling Robicheaux to the ground.
“He grabbed me and slammed me down on the ground,” Robicheaux said in an interview last fall. “He picked me out. Why? I don’t know. I still ask myself that to this day.”
Robicheaux said Prejean ordered him to stay still. A second officer, seen in the video, also threatened him, he said. “The other officer said that if I moved, he’d have his dog attack me too,” he said.
The identity of that officer is unclear. Maj. Ryan Turner, spokesman for the Sheriff’s Office, said officials are still gathering information on the incident and cannot yet identify the officers pictured in the video.
Making Excuses
Prejean’s report on the incident said that in addition to ignoring commands, Robicheaux “rocked up” and tried to strike the police dog “with his right hand.”
The video does not show Robicheaux “rocking up” or trying to hit the dog.
“In a quick reaction, I gave Robicheaux a leg strike to Robicheaux’s left side and attempted to roll Robicheaux onto his stomach and into a prone position so he could be handcuffed,” Prejean wrote. The video shows that Robicheaux remains on his stomach as the officer strikes him with fists, knees, and feet.
There are two separate occasions when the dog attacks Robicheaux in the video. He is attacked once early in the footage and once later.
The Advocate showed the video to a senior law enforcement official who previously worked for the Iberia Parish Sheriff’s Office. Based on his experience, he said, it seems that in the initial dog attack, it’s more likely that Prejean lost control of the dog than that he ordered the dog to attack.
“It looked more like the dog was trying to protect the handler,” said the former official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity.
But he was most troubled by what happened after the dog’s initial attack.
“Once this inmate was down on the ground,” he said, “I don’t know of any policy anywhere that would allow that (kicking). That’s uncalled for. It’s the battery.”
Robicheaux’s Abuse and Injuries
The extent of Robicheaux’s injuries from the attack is unclear. Prejean’s report notes that he was taken to the jail’s medical unit after he was handcuffed and escorted from the yard. In an interview last fall, while he was incarcerated in the Lafayette Parish Correctional Center, Robicheaux held up his forearms to show off scars he says are from dog bites.
Robicheaux told The Advocate he spent at least four months in solitary confinement after the incident. In 2013, he filed a lawsuit over the attack. Like many civil complaints filed by inmates who represent themselves, it went nowhere. However, it did prompt a response from the Sheriff’s Office.
Robicheaux’s attack is also at the center of a civil suit former Warden Wesley Hayes filed against the Sheriff’s Office last fall in the 16th Judicial District. In the suit, Hayes alleges he was fired from his post for attempting to report misconduct and corruption in the Sheriff’s Office.
Cover Up?
In documents filed in the case, Hayes contends he submitted a report of the incident, as well as the footage, to at least two high-ranking officers in the Sheriff’s Office — but not Ackal — and that they took no action.
Ackal told The Advocate he only learned about the video recently. Ackal claims he was not informed of the incident at the time. “He works directly for me,” Ackal said of Hayes. “He should have sent it to me.”
During an interview, The Advocate asked Ackal to view the footage. The sheriff declined, citing pending litigation and the federal investigation.
Clayton Burgess, a Lafayette-based attorney representing Hayes in his whistleblower suit, said his client submitted the video through the proper chain of command. The video had been retained in the jail since the day of the incident. “He followed the chain of command, and the evidence in the record verifies that’s what he did,” Burgess said.
He added that the evidence filed in the former warden’s case against the Sheriff’s Office, which includes the video and a memo Hayes drafted about the incident, “speaks for itself.”
Last year, Robicheaux pled guilty to possession with intent to distribute cocaine. He was sentenced to five years probation with credit for time served.
History of Misconduct and Abuse
Prejean is named in at least three pending civil suits aimed against the Iberia Parish Sheriff’s Office. The suits all claim deputies used excessive force. Two of the suits stem from a single incident. Involving officers attempting to disperse residents celebrating the 2013 Sugar Cane Festival.
Last month, a former deputy, Cody Laperouse, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor federal civil rights charge for using excessive force against a handcuffed man in the same incident.
According to Ackal, Prejean had never faced any internal investigation before he was terminated in January.
Prejean could not be reached for comment.
Federal authorities are also still investigating the death of Victor White. The 22-year-old man died from a gunshot wound he received while handcuffed in the back of a Sheriff’s Office patrol car last year. His death, ruled a suicide by the Iberia Parish Coroner’s Office, prompted the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Louisiana to investigate the case. That probe is ongoing.
It is unclear how many other incidents in the jail beyond the attack on Robicheaux authorities are investigating. Sources with knowledge of the case told The Advocate that investigators have deposed at least one other former inmate regarding a separate incident.
Ackal Making Improvements?
Ackal oversees about 300 employees, including corrections staff. When he took office in 2008, he said, the jail was in a sorry state, physically and otherwise. Inmates suffered from staph infections. The locks didn’t work. Ackal said he has made numerous improvements to the jail and the force he oversees. This includes the purchase early this year of 100 body cameras and the prosecution of many deputies for smuggling contraband.
“My objective here is this,” he said. “This should be a professional law enforcement agency. Public safety is No. 1. When I leave, hopefully, the people of this parish know the officers who work here, all of the employees, will never let it go back down to where it was when I took it.”
Staff writers Jim Mustian and Richard Burgess contributed to this story.
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