Lawsuit Seeks District Attorney鈥檚 Records on 鈥淕oon Squad鈥 Misconduct in Mississippi
BRANDON, Miss. 鈥 The ACLU of Mississippi and the Center for Constitutional Rights, with support from the 老熟女午夜福利鈥檚 State Supreme Court Initiative, today filed a public records lawsuit seeking information about the Rankin County District Attorney鈥檚 Office鈥檚 handling of criminal legal cases in which sheriff deputies had engaged in a pattern of misconduct and abuse for nearly two decades.
In 2023, news reports exposed a years-long pattern of torture, extreme violence, and other abusive practices by deputies in the Sheriff鈥檚 Office to coerce confessions and manufacture evidence for criminal prosecutions. These deputies, who called themselves the 鈥淕oon Squad,鈥 were responsible for profound suffering by the local community, including numerous wrongful convictions.
Following the revelations, the civil rights organizations filed a request under the Mississippi Public Records Act (MPRA) to the Rankin County District Attorney鈥檚 Office, which was responsible for criminally prosecuting many of the cases tainted by the Goon Squad. The request sought records relating to any actions the office took in response to the exposed police misconduct. But the District Attorney鈥檚 office initially refused to disclose any documents related to its response to the misconduct revelations and later disclosed only one email to a journalist. This is a direct violation of the MPRA.
鈥淕iven the documented and admitted misconduct of multiple Rankin County officers, which spans the course of two decades, the lack of transparency is deeply troubling, said Ayanna Hill, racial justice staff attorney with the ACLU of Mississippi. 鈥淓xtraordinary measures should not be required to obtain records that, by law, belong to the public.鈥
The lawsuit alleges that the Rankin County District Attorney鈥檚 Office is withholding public records that the state public records law requires it to disclose. It also highlights that the District Attorney鈥檚 claim, that there are no records responsive to several of the specific requests, contradicted by the office鈥檚 public statements that it conducted an 鈥渆xtensive review鈥 of cases potentially tainted by the Goon Squad.
Center for Constitutional Rights Justice Fellow and Attorney Korbin Felder notes that, 鈥淚n the wake of the largest law enforcement scandal in the county鈥檚 history, the District Attorney鈥檚 office should have created a transparent process of disclosing records and reviewing all cases involving these officers. Rather than providing the citizens of Rankin County and the victims of law enforcement abuse the transparency and accountability they deserve, the District Attorney鈥檚 office continues to insist that the public and the victims are not entitled to such.鈥
The public records lawsuit asks the court to compel the release of several categories of records, including a list of cases with Goon Squad involvement, policies related to disclosing exculpatory evidence, any documented actions taken in response to the revelations, and communications between the District Attorney鈥檚 Office and members of the Goon Squad, among others.
鈥淭he Rankin County District Attorney鈥檚 Office prosecuted and convicted people with the Goon Squad鈥檚 help. It should be eager to provide the public with information about what it鈥檚 doing to address that injustice, but instead it is unlawfully withholding all of its records except one self-serving statement to the press,鈥 said Terry Ding, staff attorney with the ACLU State Supreme Court Initiative. 鈥淭he public has a right to know how their public officials respond to cases of severe police misconduct.鈥
Court Case: 老熟女午夜福利 of Mississippi et al. v. Rankin County District Attorney's Office
Affiliate: Mississippi