Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Wilson was the administrator and senior corrections officer at the White County Jail
from November 2002 to September 2004. He was convicted at trial of subjecting an
inmate to cruel and unusual punishment by confining the inmate in a small holding
cell amid human waste. This included requiring the inmate to be physically
restrained continuously even while in his cell, 12 or more hours in a strait jacket
each day, for a period of approximately three weeks in May 2004, a violation of
federal civil rights laws.
“This defendant violated the public’s trust and broke faith with the proud history of
integrity and professionalism in law enforcement,” said Wan J. Kim, Assistant
Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division. “This
prosecution demonstrates the Justice Department’s commitment to aggressively
pursuing law enforcement officials who willfully abuse those entrusted to their
custody.”
“When inmates are confined to correctional institutions, those charged with their
security are expected to abide by the Constitution and the rule of law in carrying out
their duties,” said Craig Morford, U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of
Tennessee. “When an officer violates those duties by illegally abusing a prisoner, it
is our duty to prosecute that officer in order to punish that illegal conduct, to deter
others from engaging in similar conduct, and to preserve the public trust that honest,
law-abiding officers deserve. We take seriously our duty to preserve the civil rights
of all people, and remain committed to our long history of vigorously prosecuting
civil rights offenses,” said Morford.
The Civil Rights Division is committed to the vigorous enforcement of every federal
criminal civil rights statute, such as those laws that prohibit the willful use of
excessive force or other acts of misconduct by law enforcement officials. The
Division has compiled a significant record on criminal civil rights prosecutions.
During the past six years, the Department of Justice has convicted nearly 50% more
defendants for official misconduct than during the preceding six years.
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