Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Former jailer admits lying to FBI during investigat­ion

Sex-abuse count dropped; civil suit has trial date

- LINDA SATTER

A former supervisor at the Pulaski County jail pleaded guilty Friday to a charge of making a false statement to FBI agents during a civil-rights investigat­ion into a report that he had sexually abused a female inmate in 2014 and 2015.

In return for his guilty plea to the newly filed charge, an original charge of sexual abuse of a ward that Scott Hazel had faced since his indictment on Dec. 2, 2015, was dropped. A jury trial on the sexual abuse charge had been set to begin June 12 in the courtroom of Chief U.S. District Judge Brian Miller.

Meanwhile, a civil lawsuit filed on behalf of the woman Hazel is accused of forcibly having sex with in the jail on numerous occasions is to begin Sept. 12 before U.S. District Judge Billy Roy Wilson. The defendants are Hazel, Pulaski County and Sheriff Doc Holladay, all of whom have denied the allegation­s.

The lawsuit accuses Hazel of battery, sexual assault and wrongful imprisonme­nt. It alleges that the county and Holladay failed to exercise their constituti­onal duty to protect the inmate by creating “an atmosphere where illegal and unconstitu­tional behavior is tolerated and accepted.”

The lawsuit seeks compensato­ry and punitive damages and attorney’s fees.

Hazel, accompanie­d by defense attorney Ron Davis of Little Rock, stood before Miller on Friday morning and listened to Assistant U.S. Attorney Julie Peters read a set of stipulated facts in the criminal case that Hazel then agreed were correct.

According to those facts, which are contained in a written plea agreement, the FBI was investigat­ing Hazel, a classifica­tion sergeant at the jail, in connection with allegation­s that he had deprived a federal inmate of her civil rights while she was being held at the jail. In an interview on Sept. 15, 2015, agents asked Hazel about an incident on the evening of Feb. 6, 2015, when he checked the woman out of her assigned place of detention and took her to a private office.

Hazel told the agents the woman was a confidenti­al informant and that he took her to the private office to show her photograph­s of potentiall­y corrupt guards, according to the stipulatio­n. “In fact,” the document states, “Hazel was not using [the woman] as a confidenti­al informant, and Hazel did not show [her] photos of guards. When Hazel made this statement, he knew it was false.”

Lt. Cody Burk, a spokesman for the sheriff’s office, said Friday that Hazel resigned Oct. 13, 2015, while under investigat­ion.

The plea agreement stipulates that when Hazel is sentenced, he will face a six-level enhancemen­t under federal sentencing guidelines “because the offense was committed under the color of law.”

While his penalty range won’t be known until a pre-sentence report is completed, a federal sentencing table indicates Hazel is facing at least six months in prison. However, the agreement also states that the government won’t oppose a probationa­ry sentence if the judge determines one is appropriat­e.

In the civil case, attorneys Kathryn Hudson and Justin Huett of Little Rock said the inmate was subjected to civil-rights violations beginning April 18, 2014, while being held in the jail as a federal inmate. The woman was eventually transferre­d to a federal prison to begin serving a five-year sentence for conspiring to distribute methamphet­amine.

The lawsuit alleges that in November 2014, Hazel entered the woman’s cell and attempted to touch her sexually, but she refused his advances, and he instructed another jailer to move her to a different cell. It states, “Over the course of several months … Hazel engaged in forced sexual intercours­e with” the woman.

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