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Former deputies allege retaliation by Tarrant County Sheriff's Office after whistleblower complaints

Daryl Washington, Brandon Walker and Phil Hill stand at microphones during a news conference at the federal courthouse in Fort Worth.
James Hartley
/
四虎影院
From left to right, attorney Daryl Washington and former Tarrant County sheriff's deputies Brandon Walker and Phil Hill told reporters at a Wednesday news conference that the Tarrant County Sheriff's Office retaliated against them for raising concerns about the office. Walker and Hill have pending lawsuits.

Lawsuits filed by three former Tarrant County Sheriff鈥檚 Office deputies draw a pattern of corruption and apathy in the department, two of those deputies said at a news conference Wednesday.

Brandon Walker, Phillip Hill and Nyla Coleman allege in the suits they were fired after lodging official complaints. Walker and Hill are no longer employees of the sheriff鈥檚 office after they were fired. Coleman was reinstated after more than a year appealing a decision to dishonorably discharge her from the sheriff鈥檚 office but later quit for fear of retaliation.

The sheriff鈥檚 office said in an emailed statement to 四虎影院 that the lawsuits, along with Wednesday鈥檚 news conference, are a 鈥減olitically motivated attack against Sheriff Bill Waybourn and the Tarrant County Sheriff鈥檚 Office.鈥

鈥淭his is nothing more than political grandstanding by those with an axe to grind,鈥 the sheriff鈥檚 office said in the statement. 鈥淭he sheriff鈥檚 political opponent was invited and all three former TCSO employees have pending litigation.鈥

The statement said it would be inappropriate to comment on pending litigation, but that law enforcement employees aren鈥檛 fired 鈥渨ith a wave of the hand by the sheriff鈥 and that termination only happens after 鈥渄ue process indicates termination is appropriate.鈥

Actions by leaders in the sheriff鈥檚 office, including Sheriff Bill Waybourn, constituted retaliation and attempts to cover up crimes committed by deputies and leadership in the sheriff鈥檚 office, the former deputies said.

At the news conference Wednesday, Hill and Walker said their attempts to sound alarms within the sheriff鈥檚 office were ignored and met with negative consequences.

Hill said he raised concerns about sheriff鈥檚 deputies working closely with bond agents, commonly called bounty hunters, looking for people who had skipped bond. His supervisor used deputies under his command to assist, including in situations where those bounty hunters threatened people with arrest if they weren鈥檛 given the information they demanded.

Hill said more and more often the warrants his team was assigned to serve were bond forfeiture, which disturbed him.

鈥淭his is the only type of warrant we serve that has something to do with money,鈥 Hill said at the news conference. 鈥淪omebody is getting paid when these warrants are being served.鈥

Hill said he found out his supervisor had given his number out to bounty hunters in Tarrant County.

鈥淚t became clear to me that my supervisor had built a personal relationship with many of these agents who would contact him on his personal phone,鈥 Hill said. 鈥淗e would take their calls and call the deputies that were assigned under him to go serve warrants on behalf of these bond agents.鈥

He said that although it was odd, though not wrong, for deputies to serve bond forfeiture warrants, the frequency worried him. Working as deputies to benefit bounty hunters didn鈥檛 seem right.

Hill said it started as deputies serving warrants on behalf of bond agents, but after a while those bounty hunters were serving the warrants with the supervisor. He became concerned about constitutional violations. The bond agents would go on private property allowed in their yards and sometimes inside their homes.

鈥淭his is an unreasonable search under the 4th Amendment, and I had a real problem with this,鈥 Hill said.

He said most people know police can go into their home with a warrant to arrest someone.

鈥淲hat people in this country don鈥檛 understand is that law enforcement would use their legal authority and convey that on civilian personnel who serve a profit motive and would allow these people to come into your home and search your home for a wanted person so that they could get paid,鈥 Hill said.

He said he wasn鈥檛 the only person to complain about what was happening, but their concerns were brushed off. He added that it was unlawful and unethical for the sheriff鈥檚 office to use sheriff鈥檚 office vehicles and taxpayer dollars to pay deputies to help bond agents make money.

When he filed a complaint with his lieutenant, reporting the practice as illegal, unethical and disproportionately targeting people of color in Tarrant County, Hill鈥檚 supervisor filed a complaint accusing him of insubordination.

Hill said he was investigated and suspended despite no previous discipline during his time with the sheriff鈥檚 office. Hill filed a whistleblower lawsuit and said he faced immediate retaliation, including being put on less desirable assignments and eventually terminated.

Walker, a former deputy on the sheriff鈥檚 narcotics team, said he was fired from the sheriff鈥檚 office after filing a whistleblower lawsuit.

鈥淭his failure to act ultimate allowed Tarrant County Sheriff鈥檚 Office Deputy Jay Allen Rotter the opportunity to commit a tragic crime: the murder of Leslie Hartman,鈥 Walker said.

Rotter killed Hartman in their Denton home in 2020. A Denton County jury convicted him of murder in Nov. 2023 and sentenced Rotter to 30 years in prison. In a written statement provided after the news conference, Walker wrote that he 鈥渞eported Rotter鈥檚 drug use and apparent psychotic episodes鈥 before Rotter killed Hartman.

During the investigation, detectives found illegal drugs in Rotter鈥檚 home, 四虎影院 previously reported.

Tears in his eyes, Walker took a moment for a few deep breaths and said he needed to apologize to Rotter and Hartman鈥檚 families.

鈥淚鈥檇 done all that I could do to prevent such a tragic event,鈥 Walker said. 鈥淛ay wasn鈥檛 an evil guy as drugs make people do the damndest of things. I believe he developed an uncontrollable habit while in the Tarrant County Sheriff鈥檚 narcotics unit. The Tarrant County Sheriff鈥檚 Office failed them both by not properly investigating his drug use.鈥

He believes that if authorities took his complaints seriously, Hartman would still be alive today.

Walker said he reported Rotter and other 鈥渉igh ranking command deputies that were involved in unlawful, illegal activities.鈥 One of the things for which Walker said he reported Rotter was using drugs on duty.

鈥淭arrant County never investigated my complaints but only strategically created defenses to the complaints with their fabricated evidence, fabricated statements, the destruction of evidence and the almighty perjury,鈥 Walker said.

He said after making the report he noticed a significant change in the way he was treated by administrators and peers.

Had his complaints been taken seriously, Walker said he believes Hartman would still be alive and Rotter would have gotten help with the drug use he alleged.

鈥淭he systemic failure to address these issues had dire consequences,鈥 Walker said.

The whistleblower lawsuit was filed before Walker鈥檚 termination and included complaints that his supervisor ordered him to conduct an unlawful search of the supervisor鈥檚 wife鈥檚 phone to investigate infidelity.

Nyla Coleman, another deputy who said she was fired after filing complaints, said she was reinstated after a year of appealing with the sheriff鈥檚 office. She said Wednesday she was dishonorably discharged, which meant she couldn鈥檛 get another job, but that she couldn鈥檛 talk more about what happened.

The Tarrant County Civil Service Commission overturned her termination and she was reinstated. She wrote that she left the agency for other employment out of fear she would face further retaliation.

This story has been updated with comments from the three former deputies and a statement from the Tarrant County Sheriff's Office.

James Hartley is the Arlington Government Accountability reporter for 四虎影院.