Four Missouri prison guards were charged Friday with murder, and a fifth with involuntary manslaughter, in the December death of a Black man who died after the officers pepper-sprayed him and covered his face while in custody at a correctional facility, according to a complaint filed Friday. The guards at the Jefferson City Correctional Center on Dec. 8 pepper-sprayed Othel Moore Jr., 38, placed a mask over his face that inhibited his ability to breathe, and left him in a position that caused him to suffocate. An attorney for Moore's family, Andrew Stroth, has said Moore had blood coming out of his ears and nose and that several inmates heard Moore screaming that he couldn't breathe, per the AP. "There's a system, pattern, and practice of racist and unconstitutional abuse in the Missouri Department of Corrections, and especially within the Jefferson City Correction[al] Center," Stroth said.
Stroth added: "It's George Floyd 3.0 in a prison." The complaint charges Justin Leggins, Jacob Case, Aaron Brown, and Gregory Varner each with one count of second-degree murder and with one count of being an accessory to second-degree assault. A fifth guard, Bryanne Bradshaw, is charged with one count of accessory to involuntary manslaughter. The charging document says Leggins and Case pepper-sprayed Moore in the face, while Brown placed a mask over his face, inhibiting Moore's ability to breathe. The complaint says Varner and Bradshaw left Moore in a position that caused his asphyxiation. The Missouri Department of Corrections released a statement Friday saying Moore died in a restraint system designed to prevent injury to himself and others, and that the department has discontinued using that system.
The corrections department also said after the criminal investigation and its own internal review that 10 people involved in the incident "are no longer employed by the department or its contractors." The department said it "will not tolerate behaviors or conditions that endanger the well-being of Missourians working or living in our facilities" and that it has "begun implementing body-worn cameras in restrictive-housing units at maximum-security facilities ... to bolster both security and accountability." Lawyers for Moore's mother and sister on Friday planned to file a civil lawsuit against the officers and the Department of Corrections. The officers were part of what's called the Corrections Emergency Response Team, per the suit. The Moore family's lawyers call the team "a group that uses coercive measures to brutalize, intimidate, and threaten inmates."
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