Lanny Harris, a former sergeant at Roxbury Correctional Institution
(RCI) in Hagerstown, Md., and Philip Mayo, a former correctional officer
at RCI, were sentenced today for conspiring with other RCI officers on
March 8-9, 2008, to assault an inmate at the prison, identified as K.D.
Both Mayo and Harris previously pleaded guilty to conspiring to assault
K.D. during the midnight shift (11 p.m. to 7 a.m.). Mayo and Harris
cooperated with authorities during the federal investigation and
testified for the prosecution at the trial of former RCI officer James
Kalbflesh, who was convicted for his role in the assaults on K.D. and
the subsequent coverup. U.S. District Judge James K. Bredar sentenced
Harris and Mayo to each serve 30 months in prison.
During their testimony at Kalbflesh’s trial and in court documents filed
in connection with their respective guilty pleas, Harris and Mayo each
admitted that they met with other officers at RCI during the midnight
shift and agreed to assault K.D. in retaliation for a prior incident
involving K.D. and another officer. Harris, Mayo and two other
correctional officers entered K.D.’s cell in order to assault the
inmate, and the officers then went through with their plan and assaulted
K.D.
“Every person in America has the right to be free from cruel and unusual
punishment,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil
Rights Division Jocelyn Samuels. “To ensure that this right is
protected, the Justice Department will continue to vigorously prosecute
correctional officers who violate the rights of inmates.”
To date, 16 current or former officers at RCI have been convicted in
connection with a series of assaults that K.D. suffered on March 8-9,
2008. There are 12 former RCI officers still awaiting sentencing before
Judge Bredar, and two who were convicted in state court have already
been sentenced.
The case was investigated by the FBI’s Frederick Resident Agency and
prosecuted by Special Litigation Counsel Forrest Christian and Trial
Attorney Sanjay Patel of the Civil Rights Division, with the help of
Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Cunningham for the District of Maryland.
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