Current:Home > FinanceFBI is investigating alleged abuse in Baton Rouge police warehouse known as the ‘Brave Cave’ -Financial Clarity Guides
FBI is investigating alleged abuse in Baton Rouge police warehouse known as the ‘Brave Cave’
View
Date:2025-04-26 06:27:20
The FBI said Friday it has opened a civil rights investigation into allegations in recent lawsuits that police in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, assaulted drug suspects they detained in an obscure warehouse known as the “Brave Cave.”
In one case, a man says he was taken to the warehouse and beaten so severely he needed hospital care before being booked into jail. In another, a woman claims she was strip-searched, with an officer using a flashlight to scan her body.
Since the first complaint was filed last month, the city’s mayor has ordered the facility closed, the police department has disbanded its street crimes unit and an officer at the center of the allegations — the son of a current deputy chief — resigned and was arrested on a simple battery charge.
FBI officials confirmed Friday that the agency has opened an investigation based on “allegations that members of the department may have abused their authority.”
This latest scandal adds to a long list of corruption and misconduct allegations plaguing the Baton Rouge Police Department, which came under significant scrutiny following the 2016 fatal police shooting of Alton Sterling, a 37-year-old Black man. In 2021, a corruption probe into the department’s narcotics division led to criminal charges and internal discipline against officers accused of stealing drugs from evidence and lying on police reports.
Baton Rouge Police Chief Murphy Paul, who was hired to lead the agency in the wake of Sterling’s killing, said he was so concerned over the recent warehouse claims that he drove to the FBI’s New Orleans field division and asked them to review the allegations.
“There were some mistakes made,” Paul told The Associated Press, acknowledging that his internal affairs division initially failed to investigate. “I promise you we will get to the bottom of this.”
The most recent lawsuit, which attorneys filed earlier this week on behalf of Ternell Brown, alleges officers pulled her over in June, took her to the same “black site” and strip-searched her for “contraband.” She was released without charges when officers concluded the prescription drugs in her possession were legal.
Her attorneys wrote in the lawsuit that they are still learning “the full horror of what the street crimes unit did there. ... Even those who were not beaten at the torture warehouse, we now know, were still sexually humiliated.”
The officer who resigned, Troy Lawrence Jr., has been the subject of several civil rights lawsuits and excessive force complaints in recent years. His father, Troy Lawrence Sr., was promoted to deputy chief in 2020 after commanding the street crimes unit, which went by the acronym BRAVE, for Baton Rouge Area Violence Elimination.
According to a lawsuit filed last month, Troy Lawrence Jr. repeatedly turned off and muted his body camera during his interactions with Jeremy Lee, the suspect who ended up hospitalized with broken bones and other injuries. Inside the warehouse, officers punched and kicked him while he screamed for help, the lawsuit alleges. After he was violently interrogated and arrested, the only criminal charge prosecutors pursued against Lee was resisting arrest.
Shortly after Lee’s lawsuit, Baton Rouge Mayor Sharon Weston Broome ordered the warehouse closed, saying she was previously unaware of the facility’s existence.
“The severity of these allegations deeply concerns me, especially given the potential impact on the trust our community places in us,” Broome said.
Thomas Frampton, an attorney representing both Lee and Brown, said his team has heard from dozens more people alleging abuse inside the warehouse and they plan to file additional lawsuits.
“This kind of misconduct is so entrenched that people had little reason to expect any kind of positive change,” he said, praising the FBI’s decision to launch an investigation.
___
Mustian reported from Washington, Skene from Baltimore.
veryGood! (617)
Related
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Kevin Costner teases Whoopi Goldberg about commercial break during 'The View' interview
- Survivor Jackie Speier on Jonestown massacre at hands of 'megalomaniac' Jim Jones
- Retirement bites? Almost half of Gen Xers say they'll need a miracle to retire.
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Wildfires force New Mexico village of Ruidoso to evacuate homes: See map
- Wildfires force New Mexico village of Ruidoso to evacuate homes: See map
- Melinda French Gates on disrupting society with new philanthropic focus, finding her voice
- Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
- Adobe steered consumers to pricey services and made it hard to cancel, feds say
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Adobe steered consumers to pricey services and made it hard to cancel, feds say
- In a first, one company is making three-point seatbelts standard on all school buses
- Shay Mitchell on traveling with kids, what she stuffs in her bags (including this salt)
- SFO's new sensory room helps neurodivergent travelers fight flying jitters
- U.S. Secret Service member robbed at gunpoint in California during Biden trip
- 9 people hurt in Indianapolis stabbings outside strip mall
- Man accused of acting as lookout during Whitey Bulger's prison killing avoids more jail time
Recommendation
Paula Abdul settles lawsuit with former 'So You Think You Can Dance' co
California’s Black legislators make case for reparations bills while launching statewide tour
Kansas lawmakers to debate whether wooing the Chiefs with new stadium is worth the cost
Reggaeton icon Don Omar reveals he has cancer: 'Good intentions are well received'
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
Biofuel groups envision ethanol-powered jets. But fueling the effort has not been easy
The Washington Post’s leaders are taking heat for journalism in Britain that wouldn’t fly in the US
Reggaeton Singer Don Omar Shares Cancer Diagnosis