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Thread: 9yr RichlandCo. sheriff cover up alleged

  1. #1
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    Default 9yr RichlandCo. sheriff cover up alleged

    Court filing: Richland sheriff covered up school deputy preying on teens for 9 years
    BY DAVID TRAVIS BLAND
    MARCH 26, 2021

    Richland County Sheriff announces the arrest of a former deputy accused of criminal sexual conduct against a teenager

    Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott announces the arrest of former Deputy and ex-USC basketball Jamel Bradley for having a sexual relationship with a 17-year-old Spring Valley High School student. BY DAVID TRAVIS BLAND

    Richland County Sheriff Leon Lott and internal investigators protected a deputy from 2010 to 2019 who they had reason to know was a sexual predator, lawyers in a civil suit alleged in a Wednesday court filing.

    Protecting the now-former deputy, Jamel Bradley, who was primarily a school resource officer, amounted to a cover-up to save the Richland County Sheriff’s Department from embarrassment and liability, according to the filings.

    Lott and Capt. John E. Ewing, the former deputy’s supervisor, “deliberately and systematically concealed Deputy Bradley’s predatory nature and concealed their own knowledge of his predatory nature,” the filing said.

    The filing claimed that internal investigations into the former deputy were inadequate and that Lott and Ewing shrugged off evidence that Bradley had inappropriate relationships and possibly sexually assaulted a female student. That evidence included a lie detector test failed by the former deputy and emails with students that lawyers described as clearly suspicious.

    The number of times that Bradley was accused of inappropriate interactions with female students in those nine years would have reasonably proved to Lott and Ewing that the deputy was abusing students, according to the documents. The department officials downplayed those incidents in ways that indicate a cover-up.

    In response, the department said Lott stands by comments he made following Bradley’s arrest in November 2019. At that time, Lott said: “I’m sick to my stomach over the thought of this girl being victimized by one of my former deputies. No child should be subjected to this, and I’m disgusted that it happened with someone who was entrusted with protecting our children.”

    ‘We didn’t ignore this,” Lott said at the time. “As soon as this came to our attention...we got on it.’

    “It was the results of the internal investigations that led to his termination and subsequent arrest,” a department spokesperson said Friday.

    Bradley worked with the department from 2010 to 2019, primarily as a school resource officer at Spring Valley High School. The department fired and charged Bradley with third degree criminal sexual conduct in late 2019. It charged him with sexual battery a few months later. Deputies accused Bradley of sexually assaulting at least two teenage students of Spring Valley.

    Two lawsuits also were filed against the sheriff’s department and Richland District 2 officials. One of the lawsuits was settled last year for $900,000.

    This week’s filing involves the other lawsuit. The department had requested that a judge throw out the lawsuit because it was filed beyond the statue of limitations. On Wednesday, lawyers for the plaintiff responded that the potential for a cover-up excuses the late filing.

    The filing detailed seven incidents from 2010 to 2019 that lawyers argue would have been red flags for Lott and Ewing. The department’s response to those incidents were deficient to the point of “concealment.”

    In 2011, Bradley was accused of habitually acting in a “flirting” manner with a cheerleader, the records show. A Spring Valley cheerleading coach found Bradley’s interactions disturbing enough to have a talk with the student about them.

    The student told sheriff’s department investigators that she and Bradley had talked over social media.

    The plaintiff’s lawyers brought in a policing expert to scrutinize the department’s internal probes and investigations into Bradley. In the 2011 case, the expert found that the department stopped short of a complete investigation.

    The filing claimed the department never requested to see Bradley’s internet records or social media messages to get a better idea of his relationship with the student.

    A department internal investigation found Bradley hadn’t violated any rules of conduct in 2011.

    Concealment of Bradley’s abuse continued in 2015 after he met at 10:30 p.m. with a female Spring Valley student, identified as Jane Doe 2 in the filing, behind the Target on Two Notch Road, according to the documents.

    Two Richland drug investigators saw Bradley meeting with the student and while their actions aren’t described, one of the investigators felt enough concern about what he witnessed to report it to Ewing, Bradley’s supervisor.

    Ewing wanted to see if Bradley’s story matched the student’s, and he interviewed them both separately. The filing said the two stories did not match but that Ewing closed his inquiry, verbally reprimanded Bradley, and told him to stay away from Jane Doe 2 unless in an emergency.

    The policing expert found the inquiry into Bradley’s behavior with Jane Doe 2 “far below acceptable,” the filing said.

    Ewing’s inquiry failed to look into emails between Bradley and Jane Doe 2 even though the supervisor could have accessed those emails, according to the court document. Those 2015 emails show Bradley arranged to meet Jane Doe 2 before school hours; told her to delete a certain email because school officials could see it; and sent pictures of himself to the student.

    The emails showed Bradley had a “casual” and “flirtatious” and possibly sexual relationship with the student, the filing said.

    In a deposition for the other lawsuit filed, Lott said that even after seeing the emails, he still thought Bradley’s relationship with Jane Doe 2 was not inappropriate, according to the filing.

    In a separate complaint, a parent in 2016 overheard her daughter and a friend discussing the friend’s relationship with Bradley. The parent told a Spring Valley administrator that her daughter saw pictures of Bradley with the friend. The parent thought Bradley was having “sexual relations” with the student. Administrators eventually informed the sheriff’s department and the information was sent to Ewing.

    The department opened up an internal affairs investigation, which consisted of investigators asking Bradley seven questions and trying to arrange to speak with the parent, the filing said. The meeting with the parent never happened.

    The internal investigation into that complaint did not clear Bradley of misconduct, labeling the findings as “Non-sustained,” the filing said. If it had completely cleared Bradley, the findings would have been labeled “Unfounded,” according to the filing.

    Again the policing expert described the investigation as insufficient, saying that the department should have taken more steps to get more information. “Simply trying to interview one person and not getting anywhere with it is not an investigation.”

    In March 2018, a 15-year-old sophomore was the subject of rumors at Spring Valley that she was pregnant by Bradley. A Spring Valley administrator asked her about the rumor, and the student said it wasn’t true “but gave a clear indication that she had been sexually assaulted” by Bradley, according to the filing.

    A month later the same student presented a hypothetical situation to the school administrator in which a girl was sexually assaulted by Bradley but didn’t want to report him. The administrator believed the hypothetical girl was the student and informed sheriff’s department officials.

    Ewing told Bradley to stay away from the student unless she needed emergency help. The student’s complaints “were not taken seriously,” the filing said. Bradley remained a resource officer at Spring Valley.

    Because of Bradley’s presence at the school, the 15-year-old’s mental health deteriorated to the point that she was hospitalized for 50 days because of suicidal thoughts.

    The student told a doctor in April 2018 that Bradley had sexually assaulted her, according to the filing.

    The sheriff’s department again investigated Bradley, who took a lie detector test. He was found to be “purposefully uncooperative” and the examiner found him to be untruthful, the filing said.

    A department investigator believed Bradley touched the student, according to the court document. The department opened a criminal investigation into Bradley and found he was “untruthful with investigators.” Two of the department’s criminal investigators said they believed the student was being truthful about Bradley assaulting her.

    But the criminal investigation was “closed mysteriously and abruptly” while one of the investigators was out of town, the filing said. The investigation determined there was not enough probable cause to arrest Bradley.

    One of the investigators described Bradley as “above reproach,” the lawyers wrote in the filing.

    After the criminal investigation, Bradley, who had been reassigned, returned as a resource officer at Spring Valley.

    In a later deposition, Lott said that at the time of the polygraph test, he was not concerned that the operator believed Bradley was lying.

    The mother of the student, later labeled Jane Doe 1 in a civil lawsuit, filed a legal request for the department’s records on Bradley. The department refused to release his records and the mother and Jane Doe 1 sued to get them, prevailing in the case, the filing said. A judge said that the sheriff’s department’s refusal to hand over Bradley’s records had “no legal or factual justification.”

    This lack of transparency added to what the plaintiff’s lawyer continually called “deliberate concealment” of Bradley’s actions in the filings.

    In a July 2019 deposition, Lott said that he believed Bradley was innocent of all the allegations against him and that Jane Doe 1 was being untruthful.

    “Do you believe that the allegation from my client (Jane Doe 1) are untrue?” the lawyer asked.

    “That’s correct,” Lott said.

    “So you stand behind Deputy Bradley”

    “That’s correct,” Lott said.

    Four months later, after the department charged Bradley with sexually assaulting a student, Lott called him a “monster” who “hid behind the badge and my name for all this time.”

    The department said the charge followed a deposition of Jane Doe 1 in her civil suit against the department.

    https://www.thestate.com/news/local/...ainstage_card2

  2. #2
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    Lott sounds like a politician.

  3. #3
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    child molestors deserve a long slow painful death!
    "Eventually, all things merge into one, and a river runs through it. The river was cut by the world's great flood and runs over rocks from the basement of time. On some of the rocks are timeless raindrops. Under the rocks are the words, and some of the words are theirs.
    I am haunted by waters" Norman Maclean.

  4. #4
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    I can hear Boone saying , “who’s the bitch now?”

  5. #5
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    That is a poorly written article. The writer and the editor should be arrested.

  6. #6
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    Sounds like Jane Doe 2 got woke and wants her piece of the pie now.
    Last edited by mudflat; 03-28-2021 at 08:33 AM.
    Low country redneck who moved north

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sportin' Woodies View Post
    Lott sounds like a politician.
    That’s because he is.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Sportin' Woodies View Post
    Lott sounds like a politician.
    And a jock sniffer.

  9. #9
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    Sheriff of the year!

  10. #10
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    Just bad luck on Lott's part. A female SRO and male students and we'd be tossin fist bumps and no investigation.

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Glenn View Post
    Just bad luck on Lott's part. A female SRO and male students and we'd be tossin fist bumps and no investigation.
    Don’t come in here bein all logical and stuff.....
    Quote Originally Posted by Mars Bluff View Post
    Only thing we need to be wearing in this country are ass whippings & condoms. That'll clear up half our issues.

  12. #12
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    Nailing a hot female SRO is legend status.

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