After Anthony Johnson Jr. died in Tarrant County jail custody last month, county leaders are looking for ways to prevent future deaths and improve transparency.
Johnson died after an altercation with Tarrant County jailers on April 21. His mother and sisters demanded to see video of the fight, which was not released until May 16. Sheriff Bill Waybourn also shared video clips with the public. One clip, captured on a phone, shows one jailer kneeling on Johnson鈥檚 back while he was restrained on the floor. At one point, Johnson told jailers he couldn鈥檛 breathe.
Waybourn fired the officer who knelt on Johnson and the supervisor who didn鈥檛 stop him. Johnson鈥檚 official cause of death has not been released yet.
Johnson鈥檚 death was one of more than 60 in county custody since Waybourn took office in 2017.
Waybourn and one of his chiefs addressed county commissioners Tuesday on the way jailers are trained to respond to incidents like this one, and efforts to guide communication after future jail deaths.
鈥楽hock and awe'
Democratic County Commissioner Alisa Simmons requested an explanation for why Tarrant County doesn鈥檛 have a special response teams in the jail. Those are teams and other large Texas counties, , use them.
Waybourn explained why with a photo of an officer he said serves on the special response team in the Bexar County Jail. The officer was decked out in black SWAT gear, including a helmet with a metal face screen, like a football helmet.
Deploying officers dressed like that just escalates situations, Waybourn said. It signals to prisoners they鈥檙e there for a fight.
鈥淭his would spread fear and take any hope away that we have in the pods,鈥 he said.
Instead, Waybourn relies on detention officers to deescalate situations, which is part of their training, he said.
鈥淚 want you to know that our jailers on duty [are] often these people鈥檚 doctor, they鈥檙e often their chaplain, often their guardian, they鈥檙e often their social worker, and of course, their corrections officer, all rolled up into one for about $53,000 a year,鈥 he said.
Democratic Commissioner Roy Charles Brooks agreed he would rather not see special response teams in Tarrant County 鈥 鈥渢hat shock and awe business in the Star Wars type of suits,鈥 he said.
But for Waybourn鈥檚 model to work, detention officers need to be committed to de-escalation in every situation, he said.
鈥淚t requires constant training and retraining to emphasize the techniques that we want those jailers to use, without fail,鈥 Brooks said. 鈥淭hey鈥檝e got to use them in each and every case. There鈥檚 no room for deviation from the best practice.鈥
鈥淩ight,鈥 Waybourn agreed.

Brooks also urged Waybourn to move away from the use of pepper spray. The Sheriff's Office has also said Johnson was pepper sprayed during the fight.
The jail鈥檚 current practices do not prevent deaths, violence and neglect, said Pamela Young, executive director of the activist group United Fort Worth.
She pointed to Chasity Congious, a woman who gave birth alone in her cell in 2020 and lost her baby 10 days later. At the same meeting Tuesday, commissioners approved a $1.2 million settlement in a lawsuit brought by Congious鈥 mother, the largest payout in county history.
鈥淭he answer is not more training and more police, more gear,鈥 Young told commissioners during public comment. 鈥淭he answer is to get people out of the jail who do not belong there.鈥
Waybourn has previously said the jail is the county鈥檚 biggest psychiatric hospital. On Tuesday, he told commissioners right now, about 60% of the jail population receives services from MHMR, which runs mental health care within the jail. Sometimes that percentage is even higher, though the existence of the Mental Health Jail Diversion Center does help, he said.
Johnson was diagnosed with schizophrenia. His family sought mental health care for him the day he was arrested, but a treatment facility turned him away because he wasn鈥檛 deemed a threat to himself or others, his mother has said. Johnson ended up in jail after he allegedly wielded a knife at a driver in Saginaw.
Tarrant County needs to offer more mental health care options outside the jail, Brooks said.
鈥淲e as a county, we as a community, have to figure out how to do that differently,鈥 he said.
More transparency
The Tarrant County Sheriff鈥檚 Office also indicated Tuesday it plans to change the way it communicates about deaths in the jail.
Sheriff鈥檚 Office Chief of Staff Jennifer Gabbert told commissioners the agency will craft a policy about releasing information to the public, so people aren鈥檛 left wondering about controversial cases.
That policy may not include immediate release of video, she said.
鈥淲e鈥檙e not trying to have a lack of transparency in the Sheriff鈥檚 Office,鈥 Gabbert said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very important to us that we make sure that the investigation is done well and appropriately at the beginning, and then as things can be released, we鈥檙e willing to release them if it will not affect the investigation.鈥
Republican County Commissioner Manny Ramirez proposed a communications policy earlier this month, when he criticized how the Sheriff鈥檚 Office handled communication about Johnson鈥檚 death. He called for greater transparency, for both the public and the family.
鈥淚f an event happens today, there鈥檚 no plan or guidelines for how we will respond to it,鈥 Ramirez said Tuesday.
Ramirez suggested establishing a timeline for when video is released, and for what information the public can know within the first few days and weeks of an investigation. That would give people something to point to if the Sheriff鈥檚 Office doesn鈥檛 follow the policy, he said.

Simmons said commissioners also need to be more aggressive with their biggest power: the power of the purse.
The Commissioners Court can鈥檛 tell other elected officials like the sheriff what to do, but they do control his budget.
鈥淭his body needs to be willing to exercise our one potent tool to ensure accountability,鈥 she said.
Speaking directly to Ramirez, Simmons said his call for a new communications policy 鈥渕eans, really, absolutely diddly if you are unwilling to join me in putting an 鈥榦r else鈥 with regard to funding behind this request.鈥
Simmons said last week she supports calls for Waybourn to resign.
She and members of the public also renewed calls to see all the video captured of Johnson鈥檚 altercation with jailers.
The Sheriff鈥檚 Office has resisted Simmons鈥 requests to show county commissioners the footage behind closed doors, she said. She wants to see the 14 or 15 minutes of video she said exists, beyond the five minutes the sheriff released.
鈥淐ourt members should not be treated like the general public, because we have additional responsibility as elected officials who are responsible for governing this county,鈥 she said.
Got a tip? Email Miranda Suarez at msuarez@kera.org. You can follow Miranda on Twitter @MirandaRSuarez.
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