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Tarrant County maintains in court filing it is not responsible for Anthony Johnson Jr.'s death

 A photo of three red brick buildings in downtown Fort Worth. The one in the middle is a tall, double tower with a sign that says "Tarrant County Correction Center."
Miranda Suarez
/
四虎影院
The Tarrant County Jail complex in downtown Fort Worth on July 20, 2023.

Tarrant County maintains it is not responsible for the death of Anthony Johnson Jr., who died in jail custody in 2024, according to a court filing Monday.

Filed in the U.S. Fifth Circuit of Appeals, the county argues among several things that the Johnson family have not proved Tarrant County is responsible for any civil rights violations or that jailers lacked proper training that risked the safety of inmates.

鈥淸The Johnsons] have wholly failed to plead a pattern of similar violations, much less a pattern arising out of allegedly similarly deficient training, supervision, or discipline,鈥 the court filing read. "[The Johnsons] did not allege specifically how Tarrant County鈥檚 policies were defective or how the county should have further trained its officers.鈥

The filing is part of a lawsuit from the family of Johnson, a Marine veteran who was diagnosed with schizophrenia, according to his family. He died after detention officers pepper sprayed him and restrained him face-down on the floor of the jail, according to the Tarrant County Sheriff鈥檚 Office and video of the incident.

shows one jailer knelt on Johnson鈥檚 back for 90 seconds, while Johnson said he couldn鈥檛 breathe. The Tarrant County Medical Examiner鈥檚 Office ruled Johnson鈥檚 death a homicide by asphyxiation.

Johnson Jr.鈥檚 parents sued Tarrant County and 15 detention officers following his death, but U.S. District Court Judge Reed O鈥機onnor dismissed Tarrant County and seven jailers from the suit last year. O鈥機onnor ruled the Johnsons failed to prove the county鈥檚 policies and procedures led to Anthony's death and that those six jailers had any responsibility in his death. Two jailers -- Rafael Moreno and Joel Garcia 鈥 have been indicted for murder and are awaiting trial.

Johnson Jr.鈥檚 family filed an appeal on that decision in December, arguing the county and jailers should be added back to the suit because the jail's history with previous inmates' deaths is enough to prove jail policy and training failed to keep people safe in custody.

More than 70 people have died at Tarrant County Jail since 2017. But Monday's court filing claims prior jail deaths were, 鈥渘ot specific nor similar enough to form a sufficient pattern鈥 to support some of the family鈥檚 claims.

鈥淔or the county to now try to argue that they're not responsible for all the deaths that took place and for them to argue that they provided their jailers with adequate training is disingenuous,鈥 Daryl Washington, an attorney for the Johnson family, told 四虎影院 Monday. 鈥淎nthony should be alive today.鈥

Washington said one of the most critical pieces of evidence in this case is the full unredacted video leading up to Johnson鈥檚 deathsomething the county said the family is not entitled to in Monday鈥檚 court filing. They pointed to a trial court鈥檚 previous ruling that did not require the video to be released.

The county released parts of two videos in 2024 鈥 one from security camera footage and the other from a cell phone video.

While Tarrant County fights to stay off the suit, it鈥檚 still responsible for paying for legal counsel for some of the jailers. Commissioners approved an additional $60,000 during last month鈥檚 commissioners court meeting to retain attorneys for two of the detention officers initially named in the suit.

鈥淚nstead of acknowledging that Anthony's death was wrong and trying to fix a broken system, what they've decided to do now is to spend hundreds of thousands of taxpayers' dollars defending wrong,鈥 Washington said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not going to discourage the family. We're going to continue to fight to the very end. It doesn't matter how much it costs.鈥

Additional reporting by Miranda Suarez.

Penelope Rivera is 四虎影院's Tarrant County Accountability Reporter. Got a tip? Email Penelope Rivera at privera@kera.org.

四虎影院 is made possible through the generosity of our members. If you find this reporting valuable, consider . Thank you.

Penelope Rivera is 四虎影院鈥檚 Tarrant County accountability reporter. She joined the newsroom in 2024 as an intern before becoming a full-time breaking news reporter.