January 22, 2011
Mercer family sues State Police over alleged beating
Kenny Kemp
Harry Deakins checks on his wife, Kay, in their Mercer County home. The Deakinses say State Police beat them after coming to serve a warrant on Harry.
Page 2 of 2
Kenny Kemp
Harry Deakins
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Kay Deakins, who was in her wheelchair and on oxygen, witnessed the incident, according to the suit.

Another trooper then "forcefully grabbed Kay's left shoulder and ripped her out of her wheelchair and slung her into the corner of the kitchen counter," according to the lawsuit. "Mrs. Deakins' breathing tube was torn out of her nose. ... Mrs. Deakins landed on the kitchen floor onto her stomach."

A trooper then put his foot on her neck and grabbed her arms to handcuff her, according to the report.

The trooper then told Kay Deakins to, "get your whore ass off the ... floor right now!" according to the complaint.

"Mrs. Deakins advised ... 'I can't walk, that's why I'm in a wheelchair,'" according to the suit.

When Kay Deakins couldn't get up, the trooper, "became enraged and incensed at Mrs. Deakins, forcefully grabbed her handcuffs and dragged her backwards towards the back door and out onto the back porch ... [and] down the steps despite her constant pleas to stop."

The trooper then dragged her to his cruiser and slung her inside, according to the lawsuit.

Anthony Deakins says he did not reach for or try to disarm the officer, as the State Police claim.

"Basically, I was tackled after I dropped the screwdriver and on my stomach with my arms under me," he said. "That's when [a trooper] punched me in the mouth."

The troopers then took computers and cameras from the home, according to the lawsuit. Harry Deakins says they've yet to get those back.

Troopers then took all three of the Deakinses to the Princeton detachment, according to the lawsuit.

Harry Deakins said he was sprayed with pepper spray and cursed at by the trooper driving him to the detachment.

The lawsuit claims that during the car ride, an officer said to Harry Deakins, "you're a Nazi skinhead, racist Jew boy..."

Once at the detachment, two of the troopers beat Harry Deakins in the garage area, as the others watched, according to the lawsuit. They stopped long enough to turn off the surveillance cameras, according to the suit.

One trooper hit, kicked and choked Harry until he nearly passed out, according to the lawsuit.

Then another started twisting his nose until it bled on the floor, shouting Jewish slurs all along.

One of the troopers then told Harry Deakins his family needed to move out of town or he was "going to come back and burn your ... house down and kill every one of you!"

He was taken to the Princeton Community Hospital emergency room and treated for his injuries.

A photo of Harry Deakins, which he says is his mugshot from that night, shows him in a neck brace and with his face severely bruised. The mugshot provided by the West Virginia Regional Jail Authority shows Deakins in an orange jumpsuit with no visible signs of distress. He says the jumpsuit photo was taken later and replaced the photo from that night.

Internal investigation

In February, Sean Deakins was living with his father, mother and brother. His wife filed a domestic violence petition against him and came to the Deakinses' home to take back her car. State Police and sheriff's deputies parked along the road while she came to the house, the family says. Instead of just taking her car, he said she also took another vehicle that Sean had recently sold to Anthony.

Anthony contacted the State Police, who he says eventually agreed through checking the car's VIN number that the vehicle was his. But, he says, they refused to help him get it back.

It was then -- on Feb. 8 -- that he gave a statement to the Princeton detachment that resulted in the internal investigation. Anthony Deakins provided a copy of a letter from Capt. Gordon Ingold, head of the department's professional standards division, dated May 6, 2010.

"A review of the facts surrounding the incident has uncovered no chargeable actions on the part of the involved member and this case has been closed as unfounded and no further action will be taken in this matter," Ingold wrote.

Kay Deakins, who was admitted to the hospital last week after suffering a seizure, has been seeking psychological help since the April 22 incident. In an interview earlier this month she said all the State Police had to do was to identify themselves at the beginning and they would have been let in. There was no need for violence, she said.

"It's crazy," Anthony said. "One said he could shoot me between the eyes and get three days off."

The rough treatment by troopers has caused Kay to have two surgeries and multiple hospitalizations, according to the lawsuit. Medical records provided by the Deakins family show that Kay was treated for a wound on her right leg on May 21, 2010. In the medical report, it states that the visit is a follow-up to a visit from where she was injured when, according to the report, "the cops were after her son and the cops dragged her and she got a wound on her right gluteal which is draining."

Harry Deakins also provided a patient evaluation for himself from April 22. The medical record states the emergency as "alleged assault" and lists injuries to his face, neck, chest, back and shoulder.

Harry Deakins spent 84 days in jail because of the Virginia warrant. He also pleaded guilty to one count of battery and was given time served while there. He says he has no recollection of the plea deal because of his head injury.

"I don't remember any of it," he said.

Anthony and Kay Deakins also originally accepted plea deals, which were tied to one another. In the deals, Anthony entered a guilty plea without admission of guilt, thus getting the charges dropped and lowering his exposure to jail time. Kay would have pleaded guilty to one count of attempting to disarm a police officer and paid a fine. But all that fell apart when the State Police failed to return the computers, Anthony said.

Kay's trial is set for Feb. 18 in magistrate court, said Mercer County Prosecuting Attorney Scott Ash. Anthony's trial is set for March 8 in Mercer County Circuit Court, he said. 

"I'm not guilty, so I'm not doing that," Anthony said of his original plea deal. 

Reach Gary Harki at gha...@wvgazette.com or 304-348-5163.

 

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Copyright 2011 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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