The Justice Department announced today that U.S. District
Court Judge Myron H. Thompson sentenced four former corrections officers of the
Alabama Department of Corrections – Michael Smith, Matthew Davidson, Joseph
Sanders and Scottie Glenn – in connection with the beating death of former
inmate Rocrast Mack. Smith, 39, who was
convicted by a federal jury on June 25, 2013, of seven counts of civil rights
violations and obstruction of justice, was sentenced to 30 years
imprisonment. Davidson, 45, who pled
guilty to two civil rights violations and an obstruction of justice violation,
was sentenced to seven years. Sanders,
32, who pled guilty to an obstruction of justice violation, was sentenced to
five years. Glenn, 30, who pled guilty
to a civil rights violation and a conspiracy violation, was sentenced to five
years.
The incident occurred at Ventress Correctional Facility in
Clayton, Ala., on Aug. 4, 2010, and at the time of the incident Smith was a
lieutenant with supervisory authority over other officers on his shift. According to the evidence presented at trial,
Smith assaulted Mack in an office in the prison, repeatedly striking him with a
baton, stomping on him and kicking him.
The evidence also showed that Smith assaulted Mack again several minutes
later in the medical unit by repeatedly stomping on Mack’s head. Mack died the following morning in a
Montgomery, Ala., hospital.
“These defendants
each played a role in the vicious and fatal beating of Mr. Mack, and then they
lied to authorities to conceal their culpability,” said Acting Assistant
Attorney General for the Department’s Civil Rights Division Jocelyn
Samuels. “Their actions run completely
counter to the responsibilities and trust given to law enforcement
officers. The Justice Department will
continue to vigorously prosecute those officers who commit such heinous
criminal acts, and I hope that these sentencings help bring some measure of
closure to the Mack family.”
“The majority of our corrections officers are dedicated to
protecting and serving the public,” said U.S. Attorney for the Middle District
of Alabama George L. Beck Jr. “These
correctional officers were not so dedicated.
These correctional officers savagely beat, stomped, and tortured a
restrained man and then lied to protect themselves. There is no excuse for such behavior. Correctional officers walk a tough line, but
they cannot cross that line into the criminal element. I hope that these sentences bring some sense
of justice to the victim’s family and reinforce the notion that no one is above
the law.”
This case was investigated by the Mobile, Ala., Division of
the FBI in partnership with the Alabama Bureau of Investigation, and was
prosecuted by Trial Attorney Patricia Sumner of the department’s Civil Rights
Division and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jerusha Adams of the U.S. Attorney’s
Office for the Middle District of Alabama.
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