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Tag: tarrant county jail

  • Learn how DNA led Arlington police to suspect in 2017 cold case murder

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    Police have arrested a suspect in connection with the 2017 killing of a man at his Arlington apartment.

    A 29-year-old Fort Worth man faces a capital murder charge after DNA evidence linked him to a 2017 shooting that left a victim dead at an Arlington apartment, police said in a news release Friday.

    Devin Cameron-Mack was already in the Tarrant County Jail on an unrelated offense when homicide detectives obtained a warrant for his arrest, according to the release.

    On the evening of Oct. 4, 2017, Arlington police were called to the 2000 block of Valleywood Drive after someone reported a shooting. They found Justin Dotson unresponsive from a gunshot wound. The 25-year-old died at the scene.

    Investigators believe Dotson was shot during an attempted robbery connected “with suspected narcotics activity,” police said. Several pieces of evidence were found inside Dotson’s apartment, including a blood stain that was from an unknown person.

    The DNA profile from the stain was uploaded into CODIS, the national law enforcement database. This type of testing only works if a suspect’s DNA is already in the system, and no matches were found at the time that could help police identify Dotson’s killer.

    That changed in November when CODIS returned a hit on Cameron-Mack’s recently uploaded DNA profile. Cameron-Mack insisted that he wasn’t involved in Dotson’s murder, but detectives obtained a search warrant for another DNA sample. It was a match for what was found at the crime scene, according to the release.

    Cameron-Mack is being held in the Tarrant County Jail on a $1 million bond.

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  • Former TCU student found not guilty of assaulting Tarrant detention officer

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    Jail cells at the Tarrant County Corrections Center in Fort Worth on Jan. 25, 2024.

    Jail cells at the Tarrant County Corrections Center in Fort Worth on Jan. 25, 2024.

    ctorres@star-telegram.com

    A former TCU student accused of threatening to blow up the Fort Worth university’s campus in 2023 has been found not guilty of assaulting a Tarrant County detention officer after not receiving his lunch on time.

    The jury gathered at 9 a.m. Tuesday in the 213th District Court to hear the assault case against Ahmad Peterson-Adeyanju. The 27-year-old defendant has spent time in the Tarrant County Jail since he was arrested Feb. 2, 2023, in connection to his alleged threats against Texas Christian University.

    Peterson-Adeyanju still faces several charges, including terroristic threat, in connection with the TCU incident. Those will be taken up during a separate trial, according to defense attorney Eric Nickols.

    On June 20, 2023, Peterson-Adeyanju was involved in a fight with detention officer Jimmy Villa and hit him in the head multiple times, according to witnesses and video evidence. His defense attorneys argued he was just trying to defend himself against what he felt was aggression on Villa’s part.

    “The question will be, does Ahmad lose his right to self-defense simply because he’s in custody?” defense attorney Tamla Ray asked.

    The jury returned the not guilty verdict after about an hour of deliberation. Peterson-Adeyanju did not testify during the trial.

    Villa was distributing trays of food to the inmates for lunch. There weren’t enough to go around, and Peterson-Adeyanju and two or three inmates didn’t get one. Villa said that he ordered more, but Peterson-Adeyanju demanded his immediately and became increasingly hostile, according to testimony.

    Villa said he tried to restrain him, but Peterson-Adeyanju fought back, and the two ended up on the ground.

    Prosecutors said Villa’s use of force to restrain a hostile inmate was justified, but Ray and Nichols argued that Villa had caused the incident by getting too close to Peterson-Adeyanju and pushing him backwards, a move Villa said was intended to create space between them.

    Villa told the court he couldn’t work for five months due to injuries he received and required therapy. Peterson-Adeyanju wasn’t injured during the incident.

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    Harriet Ramos covers crime and other breaking news for the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.

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  • Tarrant County inmate dies after being pepper sprayed in fight during contraband check

    Tarrant County inmate dies after being pepper sprayed in fight during contraband check

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    The Tarrant County Jail on Tuesday, October 11, 2022.

    The Tarrant County Jail on Tuesday, October 11, 2022.

    amccoy@star-telegram.com

    An inmate died after he was pepper sprayed while fighting with detention officers at the Tarrant County Jail during a check for contraband, the Tarrant County Sheriff’s Office said in a news release.

    Anthony Johnson, 31, died just before 10 a.m. Sunday, according to the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s Office.

    Jailers were conducting what the sheriff’s office called routine contraband checks in cells just before 9 a.m. Sunday morning when Johnson refused to exit his cell so it could be searched, according to the release. He began fighting with detention officers and they used the pepper spray “to assist in bringing the inmate under control,” the sheriff’s office said.

    After he was pepper sprayed, Johnson was examined by John Peter Smith Hospital medical staff working at the jail and was not responsive, the release said.

    Medical staff peformed CPR and Johnson was taken to JPS, where he died.

    Johnson was arrested Friday by Saginaw police on charges of possession of a controlled substance in penalty group 1, tampering /fabricating physical evidence with intent to impair and evading arrest or detention and was taken to the Tarrant County Jail on Saturday, according to the release.

    The sheriff’s office said Johnson was arrested after police responded to a call about a man standing in an intersection wielding a knife at a driver. When officers arrived, the sheriff’s office said he attempted to flee on foot.

    A detention officer was also injured and was taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries. The Texas Rangers will be leading the investigation.

    The medical examiner’s office will determine the cause of death.

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    James Hartley is a breaking news reporter with awards including features, breaking news and deadline writing. A North Texas native, he joined the Fort Worth Star-Telegram in 2019. He has a passion for true stories, understated movies, good tea and scotch that’s out of his budget.

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