Crime & Safety
2 Former Correction Officers Found Guilty Of Beating Inmate
They also were convicted of trying to cover up evidence of the crime.

FISHKILL, NY — Two former corrections officers were convicted of beating an inmate and then covering it up. Joon H. Kim, the acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, said Tuesday Kathy Scott and George Santiago Jr. were found guilty by a jury of beating inmate Kevin Moore at the Downstate Correction Facility in Fishkill and falsifying records after the fact to cover up the beating.
Scott and Santiago assaulted Moore in violation of his constitutional rights by repeatedly punching and kicking him in the had and body as he lay on the floor, Kim said.
Moore had to be hospitalized for two weeks with facial bone fractures, five broken ribs and a collapsed lung.
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The two former correction officers were also charged with, and convicted of, conspiring to violate Moore’s civil rights, as well as falsifying and conspiring to falsify Department of Correction records concerning the assault.
After the verdict, Scott and Santiago were immediately taken into custody.
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Kim said the verdict should send a loud and clear message to the New York State prison system that the protections of the Constitution do not stop at the prison wall.
“Although most correction officers are good and honest public servants doing an enormously challenging and import job, there are those who become criminals themselves,” he said. “Officers who beat inmates, supervising officers who facilitate abuse and those who lie about it to investigators will face the consequences. And that could be a federal conviction and time in prison as an inmate themselves.”
Scott, 43, of Saugerties, and Santiago, 35, of Fremont Center, were each convicted of one count of deprivation of rights under color of law, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison; one count of conspiracy to deprive civil rights, which carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison; one count of falsifying documents, which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, and one count of conspiring to falsify documents, which carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison.
They will be sentenced April 10.
Three other former Downstate correction officers pleaded guilty to the same four offenses: Andrew Lowery, on July 27, 2016; Donald Cosman, Aug. 31, 2016; and Carson Morris, Nov. 1.
According to evidence introduced at trial, on Nov. 12, 2013, Moore, then 54, was brought to the 1D Housing Unit at Downstate Correctional Facility to be housed overnight. Moore objected to his cell assignment and a verbal dispute ensued between Moore and a group of correction officers. After Moore yelled, in sum and substance, “I’m a monster,” multiple officers, including Santiago, forced Moore to the floor, held him down, and proceeded to assault Moore as he lay there, repeatedly punching and kicking Moore in the head and body. At no time did Moore ever try to attack, touch, or even make a threatening gesture toward any of the officers. While Moore lay defenseless on the floor, Santiago cocked back his leg and kicked Moore in the face. Santiago also continued to strike Moore after Moore was handcuffed. During the beating, Santiago laughed and taunted Moore, yelling, “Who’s the monster now?”
Scott, who was then a sergeant and the supervising officer on the scene, was present for the entire beating and was required to stop the excessive force of her subordinates. Instead of taking action to stop the unlawful violence, Scott encouraged it, ordering an officer to hold Moore down on the floor while other officers continued to kick and punch him. During the beating, Moore repeatedly cried out in pain and begged Scott and the other officers to stop hurting him.
Immediately after the beating, Santiago and other officers, led by Scott, engaged in an elaborate cover-up of the crime they had committed. They made up a false cover story that Moore had attacked one of the officers and that another officer had to strike Moore once in the head. To make this lie believable, the officers claimed that Moore had injured the officer’s back by pushing the officer backward onto a table. Because nothing of the sort had occurred, they created a phony injury. Specifically, Santiago hit one of the other officers repeatedly on the back with a baton and Scott photographed the fake injury. Scott then prepared a false Use of Force Report of the incident, incorporating the photos and false statements from herself and other officers, including Santiago, and submitted the report to her superiors. Scott and Santiago also repeatedly pressured other officers to lie to investigators about what had occurred.
Image via Shutterstock.
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