A federal grand jury in Little Rock, Arkansas, returned a
two-count indictment against Eric Scott Kindley, 49, a former prison transport
officer, for crimes related to his sexual assault of a woman in his custody,
and using his firearm in furtherance of the assault.
Count One of the indictment charges Kindley with committing
civil rights offenses that resulted in bodily injury and includes the use of a
dangerous weapon, kidnapping, and aggravated sexual abuse. Count Two charges
Kindley with knowingly possessing a firearm in furtherance of these crimes of
violence.
Kindley was indicted on June 29, 2017, in Phoenix, Arizona,
for committing similar offenses related to sexual assaults he committed on a
different woman in his custody, and as in this indictment, possessing his
firearm in furtherance of those assaults.
These indictments stem from Kindley’s arrest in Stockton,
California, on June 1, 2017, in connection with a criminal complaint filed in
the District of Arizona. According to arrest paperwork, Kindley operated Group
6, LLC doing business as Special Operations Group, a company that local jails
throughout the country hire to transport individuals who have been arrested on
out-of-state warrants. The probable cause affidavit associated with the
criminal complaint alleged that from January through May of this year, Kindley
engaged in sexual misconduct in his Dodge Caravan with three different female
prisoners during three different transports. The transports were from
California to Arizona, Alabama to Arizona, and Mississippi to New Mexico. In
each instance, the victim was handcuffed and restrained, and taken to secluded
locations where Kindley sexually assaulted her. All the while, Kindley
threatened each victim with his firearm and warned her that he will get away
with his conduct because no one will believe her.
Following Kindley’s arrest in the Eastern District of
California, the court ordered that Kindley be detained and transported to the
District of Arizona, where he remains in custody.
This investigation remains ongoing. Anyone with additional
information is encouraged to call the Phoenix Division of the FBI at (623)
466-1999, or can email the Criminal Section of the Civil Rights Division at the
U.S. Department of Justice at Prisoner.Transfer@usdoj.gov.
Kindley faces a maximum of life in prison if convicted of
the crimes charged, and a mandatory minimum of five years in prison for
possession of the firearm in this indictment. If he is convicted of possession
of a firearm in both indictments, he faces a mandatory minimum of twenty-five
years in prison.
An indictment is merely a formal accusation of criminal
conduct, and Kindley is presumed innocent unless proven guilty.
This case is being investigated by the Phoenix Division of
the FBI and is being prosecuted by Special Litigation Counsel Fara Gold and
Trial Attorney Maura White of the Criminal Section of the Civil Rights Division
of the U.S. Department of Justice.
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