Jarius Brown beating: Deputies cleared after DeSoto Parish Detention Center excessive force caught on tape in Louisiana

MANSFIELD, La. — In just six minutes, a strip search left Jarius Brown with a broken nose, a fractured eye socket, and severe facial swelling.

Previously unseen video footage reveals the cause: Two deputies in Louisiana’s sheriff’s office brutally beat the naked 25-year-old. They tossed him around the laundry room of the DeSoto Parish Detention Center, striking him with about 50 punches.

After the 2019 incident, one deputy quit, and the other received a suspension. The sheriff’s office’s internal report stated their actions were indefensible.

An investigation by the Associated Press has uncovered that despite these findings, the Louisiana State Police, after significant delay, cleared the deputies of any misconduct. They claimed Brown had been the “aggressor” during a scuffle following his arrest for car theft.

If not for federal prosecutors stepping in and determining that Brown suffered from excessive force, the issue might have been forgotten.

This month, as part of his ongoing lawsuit for damages related to his injuries, the concealed video became public after remaining hidden for six years. Brown, now 32, has opted not to speak, referring inquiries to his legal team.

Gary Evans, a former DeSoto Parish district attorney, said the case underscores the safety net the Justice Department long provided in smaller communities – a role many advocates fear has been thrown into doubt as the department dials back its civil rights enforcement amid President Donald Trump’s mandate to “unleash” the police.

“This was a great miscarriage of justice at the state level, and it shows the system has broken down and doesn’t protect citizens,” Evans said. “In a community like this, the federal government is the only avenue for anything to get done.”

Brown’s beating was just the latest in a litany of police misconduct cases in DeSoto Parish, a rural swath of piney woods and rolling farmlands south of Shreveport, Louisiana.

A month before Brown was pummeled, another deputy was charged with malfeasance after tackling and repeatedly punching a man walking into a grocery store. He agreed to a permanent ban from law enforcement in exchange for the charges being dismissed. In another case, a DeSoto Parish deputy was charged with third-degree rape after ordering a woman he arrested to perform oral sex on him.

Russell Graham, a state police spokesperson, declined to explain his agency’s conclusion that there “was not sufficient evidence” the deputies in Brown’s case committed a crime. He attributed delays in the investigation to the COVID-19 pandemic, which began six months after the beating.

“LSP remains committed to thorough, impartial investigations and working with partners to ensure accountability and uphold public trust,” Graham wrote in an email to AP, adding the agency had “conducted a thorough investigation of this matter when it was presented to them.”

Former deputy Javarrea Pouncy pleaded guilty to using excessive force and was sentenced last year to serve about three years in federal prison. He could not be reached for comment.

The other deputy, DeMarkes Grant, who pleaded guilty to obstructing justice, was released from prison in April after serving a 10-month sentence. Grant told AP he was still “stressed out” and had “lost a lot” as a result of his conviction. He declined to say whether he regretted the beating.

“What has happened has happened,” he said.

Experts: Brown was victim of excessive force

Use of force experts questioned the divergent outcomes at the state and federal level, saying Brown never posed a threat and the beating was excessive.

The grainy footage shows a handcuffed Brown calmly walking into the jail’s laundry room before disrobing. The beating begins halfway through the search, after the deputies confront Brown for not squatting as directed so they could fully search him.

Neither deputy sought medical care for Brown after the beating, but the warden recognized the man needed attention and ensured he was taken to the hospital.

“I don’t know how any objective evaluator of this incident could determine this was anything but excessive,” said Charles “Joe” Key, a former Baltimore police lieutenant who typically testifies in defense of police and reviewed the footage at AP’s request.

Andrew Scott, a former police chief of Boca Raton, Florida, said there was nothing on the video that would have justified the beating. He could only surmise the deputies were “delivering retribution.” Any police official who justified the beating after watching the video, Scott added, is “not a competent or truthful expert.”

Within days of the beating, DeSoto Parish Sheriff Jayson Richardson suspended Grant and elicited Pouncy’s resignation. He defended the state police probe in a recent interview, saying federal and state reviews weren’t an “apples to apples” comparison due to differing criminal statutes.

Evans, the former district attorney, said local officials repeatedly thwarted his efforts to obtain the video.

Louisiana State Police described Brown as aggressor

Louisiana State Police ultimately provided the beating video to Evans’ successor, Charles Adams, who closed the investigation in 2021. Regardless of what the video shows, Adams told AP, the state police report would have made a state prosecution “very difficult, if not impossible” because it concluded there wasn’t enough evidence of a crime.

“That report would have been brought out and beat over our head,” Adams said.

The state police report describes Brown as the aggressor and said the man told troopers he was “probably high” when he was attacked but that officers took “appropriate action” against him.

State investigators also concluded the footage supported the deputies’ accounts of the attack. The U.S. Justice Department, however, charged both deputies with falsifying their reports, which Grant admitted were fabricated to create a “false narrative.”

Weeks after the September 2019 beating at the jail, Brown pleaded guilty to “unauthorized use of a motor vehicle” and was sentenced to 18 months behind bars. State police interviewed Brown in jail in early 2021 and reported he “did not want anything done” about the beating and “was not interested in pursuing the matter criminally or civilly.”

A local judge, Amy McCartney, dismissed the lawsuit Brown filed against the deputies, ruling in 2023 the beating did not constitute a “crime of violence.” An appeals court reversed that decision, and Brown’s lawyers are seeking damages for his injuries and medical expenses.

“Jarius Brown survived a horrific, unprovoked beating,” said Brown’s attorney, Michael Imbroscio, adding he is “entitled to justice.” Brown also is represented by the American Civil Liberties Union of Louisiana, which fought a lengthy legal battle related to the state’s statute of limitations on civil claims stemming from police violence.

Brown’s father, Derek Washington, said the attack sent his son’s already unstable mental capacity “into a more severe case of schizophrenia and anxiety.” Today, Brown is fearful of crowds and closed-in spaces, he said, and “cannot function in society.”

“He always thinks someone is trying to harm him physically,” Washington said. “Right now, my son is just a stranger, and I just want to get some semblance of him back.”

___

Brook reported from New Orleans.

Copyright © 2025 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.

You May Also Like
Witnesses in Karmelo Anthony murder trial confirm Austin Metcalf's words immediately after attack

Key Testimonies Emerge in Karmelo Anthony Murder Trial: Austin Metcalf’s Post-Attack Statements Verified by Witnesses

Newly emerged witness accounts have provided a chilling glimpse into the tragic…
Sherpa missing for a week on Everest found crawling toward base camp after his family begins funeral rites

Miraculous Survival: Missing Sherpa Found Crawling Back to Everest Base Camp as Family Prepares Farewell

A Sherpa guide, whose family had already commenced funeral rituals after he…
Spencer Pratt sums up LA's glacial vote count in a single image

Spencer Pratt Captures Los Angeles’ Slow Vote Counting in One Striking Image

Spencer Pratt, a candidate in the Los Angeles mayoral race, voiced his…
Mindy Kaling, Paul Anthony Kelly, Thomas Doherty and Owen Thiele are honored at Newport Beach TV Fest

Mindy Kaling, Paul Anthony Kelly, Thomas Doherty, and Owen Thiele Recognized at Newport Beach TV Festival

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. — The Newport Beach Film Festival has expanded its…
Decapitated 'Chelsea Jane Doe' identified as missing PA teen 25 years later

Decades-Old Mystery Solved: ‘Chelsea Jane Doe’ Identified as Missing Pennsylvania Teen After 25 Years

In a breakthrough development, authorities have identified the body of a girl…
US Coast Guard seizes dinghy Lynette Hooker vanished from on mysterious Bahamas trip

US Coast Guard Confiscates Dinghy Linked to Disappearance of Lynette Hooker in Bahamas

The US Coast Guard has taken possession of the dinghy that vanished…
World War II veteran reveals 1-word feeling before D-Day 82 years later

WWII Veteran Unveils Single Emotion Felt Before D-Day, 82 Years On

In a poignant ceremony held in Normandy, France, World War II veteran…
Pope Leo XIV jokes young Spaniards would pick Bad Bunny over him during Madrid visit this weekend

During his visit to Madrid this weekend, Pope Leo XIV humorously suggests young Spaniards might prefer Bad Bunny over him.

Pope Leo XIV lightheartedly remarked on Saturday that he has a good…
Victoria Gotti told Carmine Gotti Agnello's girlfriend 'you're a rat' after she reported abuse: police sources

Victoria Gotti Accuses Carmine Gotti Agnello’s Girlfriend of Betrayal Following Abuse Allegations: Police Sources Report

Victoria Gotti, known as both a member of a notorious criminal family…
Jeff Bartos says UN reform is no longer an 'oxymoron' after $570M in cuts

Jeff Bartos Sees Real Change as UN Slashes $570M from Budget

In 2025, Jeff Bartos stood before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for…
NYC Schools Chancellor Kamar Samuels could face charges in probe over shady contracts — and DOE is 'at DEFCON 1'

NYC Schools Chancellor Kamar Samuels Under Investigation for Alleged Contract Misconduct: DOE on High Alert

New York City Schools Chancellor Kamar Samuels is under scrutiny as investigators…
Photographer traveling with Iraq soccer team denied entry to US at Chicago O'Hare Airport amid FIFA World Cup games: CBP

Iraqi Soccer Team Photographer Denied U.S. Entry at Chicago O’Hare During FIFA World Cup, Reports CBP

A photographer accompanying Iraq’s national soccer team faced a setback at Chicago…