Published by an old curmudgeon who came to America in 1936 as a refugee from Nazi Germany and proudly served in the U.S. Army during World War II. He is a former law enforcement officer and a retired professor of criminal justice who, in 1970, founded the Texas Narcotic Officers Association. BarkGrowlBite refuses to be politically correct.
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Thursday, April 28, 2022
SPITTING ON A CORRECTIONS OFFICER IS USUALLY BAD FOR ONE'S HEALTH ..... BUT THEY WERE SUPPOSED TO GUARD HIM, NOT BEAT HIM TO DEATH
3 South Florida Corrections Officers Facing Murder Charges in Inmate's Death
Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle and officials
with the Florida Department of Corrections and Florida Department of Law
Enforcement have scheduled a Friday afternoon news conference to
announce the charges
The three officers - identified as Ronald Connor, 24, Christopher
Rolon, 29, and Kirk Walton, 34 - face charges including second-degree
murder, conspiracy, aggravated battery of an elderly adult and cruel
treatment of a detainee, according to the Florida Department of Law
Enforcement.
Sources told NBC 6 a fourth corrections officer was expected to turn
himself in to face charges in the case, and FDLE officials said the
officer remains "at large."
Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle and officials
with the Florida Department of Corrections and Florida Department of Law
Enforcement have scheduled a Friday afternoon news conference to
announce the charges.
“In the past two and a half months, FDLE agents and analysts have
worked more than 1,700 hours on this investigation, conducting more than
45 interviews and writing 77 investigative reports so far," FDLE
Commissioner Rick Swearingen said in a statement. "I am proud of the
work our members have done on this case and our partnership with State
Attorney Rundle to ensure justice on behalf of the victim and his
family."
The charges stem from the Feb. 14 death of 60-year-old Ronald Gene
Ingram, who died during a transfer from Dade Correctional Institution,
the Miami Herald reported.
Ronald Gene Ingram
Department of Corrections records show Ingram had been sentenced to
life in prison on a first-degree murder charge in 1986 out of
Hillsborough County.
A Department of Corrections statement, released five days after
Ingram's death, said 10 officers were placed on administrative leave
while the death was being investigated.
One officer had also resigned, according to the statement.
Ingram was allegedly beat to death by the officers out of the view of surveillance cameras, a source told the Herald.
FDLE officials said before Ingram had been removed from his cell in
the mental health unit, he reportedly threw urine on an officer.
Ingram was placed in handcuffs and that's when the officers began to beat him, officials said.
Officials said Ingram was beaten so badly he had to be carried to the
transport van that was set to take him to Lake Correctional
Institution, in central Florida.
Ingram was placed in a secure compartment in the van by himself, but
when the van made a stop in Ocala, he was found deceased laying on a
bench in the van, officials said.
Christopher Rolon, Kirk Walton, and Ronald Connor are charged with murder
A medical examiner determined Ingram's death was caused by a
punctured lung that led to internal bleeding, officials said. He also
had injuries to his face and torso consistent with a beating.
“What happened in this case is completely unacceptable and is not a
representation of our system, or of Dade Correctional Institution as a
whole," Department of Corrections Secretary Ricky Dixon said in a
statement. "The staff involved in this case failed, and as an agency we
will not stand for this. FDC is committed to providing a safe and
professional environment for inmates and offenders. All inmates,
regardless of their crimes have a right to serve their time free from
victimization and abuse."
Connor, Rolon and Walton were all being held without bond Thursday,
Miami-Dade jail records showed. Attorney information wasn't available.
“Staff misconduct, abuse or criminal behavior have no place in
Florida’s correctional system," Fernandez Rundle said in a statement.
"Individuals who are sentenced to incarceration by our criminal courts
have lost their freedom but not their basic rights. Inmates should not
be subject to forms of ‘back alley’ justice which are actions in
violation of Florida law."
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