Home National 2 Black men tortured by 6 White law enforcement officers speak before...

2 Black men tortured by 6 White law enforcement officers speak before sentencing hearing

0
From left, Michael Jenkins and Eddie Parker speak to CNN on August 4, 2023. (Photo: CNN via CNN Newsource)

(CNN) — Eddie Parker and Michael Jenkins said they were often not believed when they tried, for months, to tell people about the grueling violence and torture they endured at the hands of six White law enforcement officers one night last year, culminating in Jenkins being shot in the mouth.

Details from the January 24, 2023, incident eventually came to light after the two men – both of whom are Black – filed a federal civil rights lawsuit in June. Many of the claims were later borne out by federal prosecutors in August as the six former Mississippi officers pleaded guilty to a combined 13 felonies in connection with the torture and abuse of the two men.

Parker and Jenkins, along with their families and attorneys, are speaking at a news conference in Jackson on Monday afternoon, ahead of the federal sentencing proceedings of the former officers, whose actions both victims say was motivated by their own race. Some of the officers called themselves “The Goon Squad” because of their willingness to use excessive force and not report it, federal prosecutors said.

“The day of justice has finally come,” said Malik Shabazz, lead attorney for Parker and Jenkins. “We want the maximum sentence.”

“The nation is watching, police officers are watching. The families are watching. And they want justice,” Shabazz added.

Former Rankin County Sheriff’s deputies Hunter Elward, Brett McAlpin, Christian Dedmon, Daniel Opdyke, Jeffrey Middleton, as well as former Richland Police Department officer Joshua Hartfield, pleaded guilty in August to charges of conspiracy against rights, deprivation of rights under color of law, conspiracy to obstruct justice, and obstruction of justice related to the incident.

Parker and Jenkins are expected to testify in federal court this week.

During Monday’s news conference, Shabazz discussed what he called their “expectations of justice,” outlining the incident and reading from the court documents.

Speaking about the sentencing, Eddie Parker said, “Everything needs to be done right because everything has been done wrong.”

Michael Jenkins added, “It’s been very hard for me, for us, this past year. We’re looking forward to justice.”

Jenkins’ mother, Mary Jenkins, called for the strongest sentences possible. “I want them to receive the same consideration they gave my son when they broke into that house. I want them to receive the maximum sentences.”

Angela English with the NAACP also spoke at the news conference, urging the judge to apply the maximum sentences. “We can’t erase Mississippi’s past but we can move forward today and set a precedent that has never been set before,” English said, adding, “This is not 1964, it’s 2024.”

Shabazz told CNN his team met with the Justice Department on Friday ahead of the sentencing proceedings in Jackson before Southern District of Mississippi US District Court Judge Tom Lee of the Southern District of Mississippi.

“Kristen Clarke, US Assistant Attorney General for Civil Rights, has just reached out to Michael Jenkins, Eddie Parker and their families,” Shabazz told CNN on Friday. “AAG Clark expressed her commitment to civil rights and to eliminating racial intimidation under the color of law in Mississippi.”

“We are deeply appreciative of her department’s historic legal efforts,” he continued.

Federal prosecutors seek maximum sentences for ex-officers

Elward and Middleton will be sentenced on Tuesday; Dedmon and Opdyke on Wednesday; and Hartfield and McAlpin on Thursday. Federal prosecutors are seeking the maximum sentences for the officers.

Details about what the defense attorneys for the six men are seeking in their sentencing proceedings were not immediately available.

Elward faces the most serious of federal charges stemming from the January incident – discharge of a firearm during a crime of violence. He faces up to 30 years in prison, the federal charging document shows. McAlpin, Middleton, Dedmon, Opdyke and Hartfield each face up to 20 years in prison.

The incident occurred on January 24, 2023, in Braxton, Mississippi, just southeast of Jackson. In their lawsuit, Jenkins and Parker alleged the officers illegally entered their home and handcuffed, kicked, waterboarded and tased them and attempted to sexually assault them over nearly two hours, before one of the deputies put a gun in Jenkins’ mouth and shot him.

The deputies, “in their repeated use of racial slurs in the course of their violent acts, were oppressive and hateful against their African-American victims,” the lawsuit says. “Defendants were motivated on the basis of race and the color of the skin of the persons they assaulted.”

Three of the officers, Dedmon, Elward and Opdyke, also pleaded guilty in federal court to additional felonies related to a separate incident in December 2022, according to the Justice Department. If convicted on those charges, all three men could face up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine for deprivation of rights. Dedmon faces a maximum sentence of life in prison on the weapons charge.

The six former officers also pleaded guilty to state charges against them stemming from the same January 2023 incident. Each of the officers were charged with conspiracy to commit obstruction of justice, according to the Mississippi Attorney General’s Office.

Dedmon is charged with home invasion and Elward is charged with home invasion and aggravated assault. McAlpin, Middleton, Opdyke and Hartfield each face an additional charge of first-degree obstruction of justice. They await sentencing on the state charges.

The-CNN-Wire
™ & © 2024 Cable News Network, Inc., a Warner Bros. Discovery Company. All rights reserved.