Jeremy McCusker, a former correctional officer at Roxbury Correctional
Institution (RCI) in Hagerstown, Md., yesterday pleaded guilty to
assaulting an inmate and conspiring with other officers to cover up that
assault. McCusker is the sixth former RCI officer to enter a guilty
plea in federal court.
According to court documents filed in connection with his guilty plea,
McCusker admitted that, during the midnight shift on March 8-9, 2008,
he, Lanny Harris, Philip Mayo and two other RCI officers were involved
in an assault of an inmate, identified by the initials K.D. McCusker
acknowledged that he and other RCI officers assaulted K.D. in order to
punish him for striking an officer during a prior shift.
McCusker also admitted that he and other RCI officers discussed how they would cover up their involvement in the assault of K.D. McCusker admitted that he provided false and misleading information to federal and state authorities in an effort to cover up his involvement in the assault.
“Mr. McCusker has admitted that he and other correctional officers
assaulted an inmate in order to punish him and that they subsequently
conspired to cover up their criminal conduct,” said Roy L. Austin Jr.,
Deputy Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division. “The
Justice Department will continue to vigorously prosecute officers who
use their official position to both commit and cover up violations of
federal criminal law.”
McCusker faces a statutory maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.
Sentencing is set for Aug. 23, 2013, before U.S. District Judge James K.
Bredar.
In related cases before Judge Bredar, former RCI Correctional Officers
Ryan Lohr, Philip Mayo, Dustin Norris, Walter Steele, and Lanny Harris
each has entered a guilty plea. Nine other current or former RCI
officers still face federal charges in connection with the alleged
assault of K.D.
The investigation by the Frederick Resident Agency of the FBI is
ongoing. The case is being prosecuted by Special Litigation Counsel
Forrest Christian and Trial Attorney Sanjay Patel of the Civil Rights
Division of the Department of Justice, with the assistance of Michael
Cunningham of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Maryland.
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