âI could not imagine a more infected group of officersâ: Details emerge in case where deputy beat Black man
An O.C. sheriffâs deputy was caught on video repeatedly punching Mohamed Sayem, a Black man, in 2018.
Orange County sheriffâs deputies involved in the âviciousâ beating of a Black man have faced investigations for prior misconduct, including Tasering a suspect in the back of a patrol vehicle and filing dozens of false police reports, according to court documents recently filed by the public defenderâs office.
The beating of Mohamed Sayem made national headlines after dashcam footage of the incident surfaced in 2018. Sayem was allegedly intoxicated and sleeping in his car in a parking lot in Stanton when a group of deputies confronted him in mid-August of that year.
âThe victim was beaten to the ground and then terrorized,â according to the court documents. âWhile lying face-first on the pavement, the victim looked up at the assailant and his accomplice â both well-armed â and asked whether they were going to shoot him. The second assailant said he would âlike to.â When the victim asked whether he meant this, both remained cruelly silent.â
The district attorneyâs office charged Sayem with a felony of resisting an officer through force or violence.
When reached for comment this week, sheriffâs spokeswoman Carrie Braun responded with former Sheriff Sandra Hutchensâ statement at the time.
âThe deputy used force appropriate for the situation to gain control of an uncooperative, assaultive and intoxicated person,â Hutchens said. âAny assertion otherwise substantially misrepresents the facts, and serves only to swell an anti-law enforcement narrative.â
The public defendersâ account laid out in the recently-filed documents dispute Hutchensâ claims.
âI could not imagine a more infected group of officers at the scene,â said Assistant Public Defender Scott Sanders,
who in 2016 discovered that the district attorneyâs office and sheriffâs department were illegally using jailhouse informants to obtain confessions.
According to the court documents and the widely-viewed video, Deputy Michael Devitt âyankedâ Sayem from the car and punched him repeatedly in the face, yet Devitt changed his account in teletype entries made on scene and in his final report, claiming that Sayem stepped out of the car and tried to grab his safety vest.
Devitt is currently under investigation unrelated to this case. The public defenderâs office received the documents on the details of that investigation in court on Friday, though they were placed under a protective order despite Sandersâ objection.
While he was on the ground, Sayem asked the deputies whether they were going to shoot him and Deputy Eric Ota said he would âlike to.â Ota omitted this from his report, the documents say. Ota never faced an investigation for his alleged comment.
Then, as Sayem sat bloodied in the backseat of Devittâs patrol car, Deputy Blake Blaney âmused nostalgicallyâ of another fight he had been in.
âI got in another good one last week,â he told his fellow deputies after laughing, the court documents say.
Blaney was the first sworn member of the Sheriffâs Department to illegally access inmate calls to their attorneys in 2015. He didnât report this or face any punishment for the misconduct.
Meanwhile, Sgt. Christopher Hibbs, a supervising officer on scene, was attempting to make sure his audio recorder was on.
âIt says on,â Hibbs said, according to the documents. âOn is on, right?â
One of the deputies was heard on the recording saying, âYouâre recording this now?â Another said, âYouâve been recording this the wholeâŚâ But before the deputy could finish his sentence, Deputy Brant Lewis walked over and turned Hibbsâ recorder off, the documents say.
That left about an 11-minute gap in the audio recording of the incident. Without the audio being recorded, Devitt âchanged his versionâ with his teletype, the documents say.
Sanders said Hibbsâ dashcam footage was the only one the department said existed.
At the time, Lewis was being internally and criminally investigated for writing false reports and failing to book evidence on time, the documents say. Lewis was a key subject in the highly publicized evidence mishandling scandal.
â...and just three months earlier [Lewis] was interviewed by an investigator and sergeant with his attorney present about actions that should have led to felony prosecution,â the documents say.
âBrant Lewis, inexplicably is out in the field even though he is one of the 17 key subjects in the evidence booking scandal,â Sanders said. âHeâs out in the field, it makes absolutely no sense. He walks up to his supervisor, unaffected by the criminal investigation he is in⌠He still felt comfortable walking up to his supervisor and turning off his microphone.â
According to the documents, Lewis filed 47 false police reports and was late to book evidence on several occasions, including one instance where he was 227 days late, and another after 158 days after a suspect had already pled guilty. Lewis also claimed on nine separate instances that he seized evidence that was never booked.
Lewis was never charged for his actions and still works in Stanton.
Hibbs, who was tasked with writing the use of force report, was prosecuted a decade prior for allegedly Tasering a suspect who was already detained in the back of a patrol car, the document says. Hibbs wasnât convicted and was eventually promoted to sergeant. That incident also occurred in Stanton.
The document says that the Sheriffâs Department and county counsel attempted to hide the existence of the report, âbecause they knew disclosure would reveal that the OCSD has unlawfully and systematically hidden this type of report from courtsâŚâ Hibbs allegedly left out of the report that Devitt had changed his version of events, the documents say.
Through seeking the use of force report, the public defenderâs office discovered that the Sheriffâs Department has hidden use of force reports for years.
âThis is not debatable â in court, county counsel denied the report existed, but later came back and admitted its existence,â Sanders said. âThis would lead to a study by us and our analysis in the current motions that approximately 98% of use of force investigations are improperly hidden from the Pitchess/peace officer discovery process.â
The public defenderâs office estimates that over a five-year span, 3,667 of the 3,742 use of force reports, or 98%, were unlawfully hidden from courts and defendants, court documents say. These reports may have included cases where suspects sustained a broken nose, an orbital fracture and a fractured arm.
Sanders said he doesnât understand why the district attorneyâs office is still pursuing the case.
âAfter all this the question is why are we still in this litigationâŚâ Sanders said. âYou file these felony charges on [Sayem] which are so impacting on his life...itâs just insane. You are going to stick with it no matter what. You just donât want to give in...They should absolutely walk away from this litigation right now, just to be smart.â
D.A. spokeswoman Kimberly Edds said Tuesday the office will not comment on the Sayem case because itâs pending litigation.
Sayemâs case is again starting to gain public attention in the wake of the killing of George Floyd and the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement.
OC Protests and Black OC, local Black-run activist groups, held a rally outside the courthouse on Friday to draw attention to the case and show solidarity with Sayem.
âToday we began this process by calling upon OC District Attorney Todd Spitzer to do the right thing in the case of Mohamed Sayem,â Black OC said in an Instagram post. âMoving forward from here, we will raise awareness about Mohamedâs case and all involved parties, amplify our communities presence and participation throughout every step of the trial process, and we will not fail to remember OC District Attorney Todd Spitzerâs action in this moment: whether itâs because he recognized the legitimate plea of our community and did the right thing in the case of our brother Mohamed Sayem, or whether itâs because he turned a deaf ear and blind eye to POC in OC in the matter of Mohamed Sayem.â
Zoe-Raven Wianecki, who runs OC Protests, said they are planning on holding a protest at Sayemâs next hearing on Sept. 2.
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