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'STRUCK' | Hundreds of inmates punched in head in Harris County Jail

KHOU 11 Investigates finds officers punch inmates four times a week in the Harris County Jail. They rarely get punished.

Tina Macías, Jeremy Rogalski, Jennifer Cobb

Adobe Stock

Published: 2:59 PM CST December 3, 2024
Updated: 6:26 PM CST December 7, 2024

It’s a warm morning in Houston and Elton Spicer wipes his bald head with a cloth. He’s elbow deep in an antique oven, scrubbing away years of grime.

“They say it’s a dirty job. Somebody gotta do it,” Spicer said. “In the past, I took it for granted. Now I start to appreciate it more... Keep you out of trouble. It’s worth it.”

These days, the 37 year old is trying to stay out of trouble and cleaning up his life, along with   old stoves at his uncle’s appliance restoration shop.   He’s worked there on and off since high school, in between stints at the Harris County jail.

That’s where he found himself a couple of years ago on a robbery charge. Harris County detention officers repeatedly punched Spicer in the face but were never disciplined for their behavior. It’s one of 810 questionable incidents KHOU11 Investigates identified over four years where detention officers struck inmates in the head but were rarely punished.  The lack of accountability contributes to a “toxic and dangerous” culture where unjustified head punches are considered “business as usual,” according to national experts on use of force in jails.

Spicer’s 2022 jail beating began when a commotion in the hallway lead him and a group of inmates to their cellblock window. There, they watched as eight detention officers punched an inmate, tackled him to the ground and continued hitting him on the floor, jail video shows.

“So, we was all at the door just looking, you know, looking, and you know I said something about, ‘say man, hey man, you know, let up off of him, let him make it,’” Spicer said. “And you know, that’s when they told me to get back,’ shut up, you want some too?’”

Officers entered Spicer’s cellblock a short time later, prompting Spicer to take off his shirt. He said he did so fearing officers would deploy oleoresin capsicum, or “pepper” spray. But in use of force reports, detention officers took it a different way, writing inmates were “removing their shirts and getting ready to fight any officer that entered the cellblock.”

Officers began handcuffing inmates inside the cell block, jail surveillance video shows. One approached Spicer and the two can be seen on video talking, but there’s no audio. The officer wrote in his use of force report that he told Spicer to put his arms behind his back.

“I’m telling him I don’t want no problems. I’m chilling out. I go to walk off, I put my hands in the air,” Spicer said.

The officer began to grab Spicer’s arm when another approached him and appeared to grab Spicer’s throat, causing him to struggle some. A third and fourth officer moved toward him and a fifth landed a blindside blow to Spicer’s head, sending the 270-pound inmate to the floor.

“He felt the need to just take off on me for no reason. I wasn’t even a threat to him. Why did he punch me?” Spicer said.

For the next minute, officers sprayed, kicked and punched Spicer several times, according to the video and the use of force report.

Then, Spicer was dragged into the hallway with blood and pepper spray covering his face. He said he still has loose teeth because of what happened.

“I think it’s ridiculous. Like, if you don’t have no reason to punch somebody in the head, what you doing that for?” Spicer said. “You’re not supposed to treat no human being like dogs.”

Spicer’s jail beating video would usually be confidential under the Texas Public Information Act, and like many aspects of the Harris County jail, cloaked in secrecy. But it was one of several videos found filed in court filings. Other recordings were released through leaks.

KHOU 11 Investigates spent a year trying to lift that veil of secrecy, gathering videos and fighting for written use of force reports from the Harris County Sheriff’s Office. It initially released 1,700 reports, but months later, its former legal director provided hundreds more that it said were initially under investigation or under review. Ultimately, the department provided 3,359 reports from January 2020 through December 2023.

Nearly a quarter, 24%, were for head punches that Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez agreed were not warranted and experts said go against best practices.

“I’ve got to say that I was pretty horrified by so much of what I saw,” said Michele Deitch, a distinguished senior lecturer at the University of Texas, where she directs the Prison and Jail Innovation Lab.

That policy resource center focuses on the safe and humane treatment of people in custody. Deitch has spent years there researching and writing best practices and standards for use of force. She was one of two experts hired by KHOU to review use of force reports.

“Head strikes should be employed extremely rarely, extremely rarely, only when there's an imminent risk of seriously, serious bodily harm or injury. They should really be thought of closer to a form of deadly force,” Deitch said.

Deitch said head strikes can cause concussions, broken bones, brain trauma, eye injuries and more.

“It could cause people permanent injury. And there are plenty of cases where around the country where people have died from head strikes.”

Even with those risks, head punches for things that didn’t pose a risk of serious bodily injury happened four times a week, a KHOU 11 Investigation found. They include inmates struck more than 10 times, struck while already on the ground, and inmates struck for refusing orders, slapping hands, making verbal threats, throwing food, spitting, pushing or lunging. Or, in Ana Cervantes’ case, grabbing a detention officer.

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