Pubdate: Fri, 08 Oct 1999 Source: Houston Chronicle (TX) Copyright: 1999 Houston Chronicle Contact: http://www.chron.com/ Forum: http://www.chron.com/content/hcitalk/index.html Page: 35A Author: Steve Olafson JAILERS' FATE NOW IN HANDS OF JURY GALVESTON -- A jury will begin deliberating today the case against law enforcement officers accused of violating the civil rights of a Missouri inmate three years ago, when he was bitten by a police dog and roughed up by jailers at the Brazoria County Detention Center. After jurors heard final arguments Thursday, an alternate juror released from service expressed doubts that federal prosecutors showed the three defendants acted maliciously, which the government must prove to win a conviction. "I did not get that," said the Pearland woman, who asked not to be identified. She said she believes the defendants, charged with inflicting cruel and unusual punishment on a 22-year old convict, acted out of fear when they manhandled Missouri inmates who had been brought to Brazoria County in 1996. "I think they were all frightened there was a possibility of there being weapons" among the inmates, she said. She added that she was leaning toward acquittal, but might have voted to convict on a lesser charge. On trial are David Cisneros, 39, a former canine officer for the Brazoria County Sheriff's Department now employed by the Lake Jackson police; Robert Percival, 37, who's still employed by the sheriff's department; and Wilton David Wallace, 52, a former employee of a private jail management firm who had been deputized as a jailer to oversee the Missouri inmates. During final arguments before U.S. District Judge Kenneth Hoyt, the three defendants' attorneys told jurors their clients' alleged mistreatment of Toby Hawthorne, a convicted murderer from East St. Louis, Ill., was either unintentional, accidental or simply didn't occur. They disputed the government's contention that a videotape shows Hawthorne being kicked in the groin and head. While there was no disagreement that Hawthorne and two other inmates were bitten by a police dog that was used to help roust the prisoners from their dormitory-style living quarters, the attorney for Cisneros told jurors the dog bites were accidental. "He didn't sic the dog on anybody," lawyer Tex Tonroy told jurors. The defense lawyers stressed that the climate in the jail was tense after the arrival of the Missouri inmates, who were verbally abusive and recently had rioted at another jail in South Texas. At least three homemade weapons had been found among the belongings of the inmates after they were transferred from Crystal City to the jail outside Angleton, according to testimony. Federal prosecutors, however, said that the force used on the Missouri inmate was unnecessary and served no legitimate law enforcement purpose. "This case is about the trust our state and our country places with guards and jailers," said Assistant U.S. Attorney Gerald Doyle. "This is a case about whether they are above the law." During his testimony Friday, Cisneros conceded under cross- examination that there was no law enforcement justification for his dog to bite the Missouri prisoners, though he insisted he didn't intend for the animal to bite them. He also admitted that the report he submitted to justify his dog's actions was fabricated. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea