Police Department Settles Lawsuit in Strip-Search Arrest That Broke Department Policy 
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Police Department Settles Lawsuit in Strip-Search Arrest That Broke Department Policy 

A man who was the victim of an improper strip-search by police in the middle of a public street while bystanders watched nearby settled a federal lawsuit with Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters and the city for $275,000, according to court records.

In September 2022, police forced Ronnie Reed, who was then 45, to bend over a truck as they yanked his pants down, exposing him in front of his aunt and others while JSO officers conducted a prolonged search for drugs they believe were hidden “up his ass.” 

The three officers who stripped Reed didn’t find any drugs on him but arrested him for possession anyway. Jailers did a more thorough search of Reed and also didn’t find any drugs. Despite that, the State Attorney’s Office spent more than a year pressing Reed to accept a plea agreement that would have sent him to prison for four years before eventually dropping the charge.

The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office opened an investigation into the arrest the next year, prompted by The Tributary’s reporting on the arrest. In it, the department concluded that the two officers who stripped Reed – Joel Belgard and Nicholas Hackley – broke JSO policy.

City attorneys said that although they would have defended the search, Reed would “likely have been permitted to present evidence that the officers’ conduct violated both JSO policy and Florida Statutes,” according to a memo written last month to Mayor Donna Deegan. In sum, the attorneys said, Reed’s lawsuit “carried significant risks as a judge and jury could have found that, under the circumstances of this case, the officers’ conduct was unreasonable and unconstitutional”

Reed had initially sought $1 million from the city.

A Florida statute requires strip searches to be done in a private place where no one else can see, and officers must obtain permission from a supervisor. JSO’s policy says only jail employees can strip-search suspects. Experts told The Tributary in 2022 that Reed’s arrest appeared problematic.

Both Belgard and Hackley said they didn’t know pulling down or manipulating Reed’s pants was considered a strip search because they had never received training on that type of search before. The report showed at least one other officer – an undercover cop – had also not received the training.

Other officers interviewed by internal affairs either weren’t asked about training or their responses were redacted due to being undercover. 

“I believed a strip search was having someone take off their clothing, like completely removing it,” Belgard said. “At the time, I would not have called it a strip search. Looking back at orders and state statute, I would call that a strip search.”

The Tributary asked JSO in April if the outcome of the investigation resulted in additional training for officers, but the department did not respond. Instead, JSO sent a statement to First Coast News saying, in part, “all police officers receive training concerning searches, to include that strip searches are to be performed by corrections officers rather than police officers.”

The settlement is at least the third agreed to by Waters after he lobbied Jacksonville City Council members last year to enact a new and rare law that requires all lawsuit settlement agreements involving JSO be approved by him or the city council president.

This article first appeared on The Tributary and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Nichole Manna is The Tributary's Senior Investigative Reporter. She has covered the criminal justice system for more than a decade and was a Livingston Award finalist in 2021 for her work at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. In 2024, Nichole received first place from the Green Eyeshade Awards in online investigations for her coverage of medical neglect in the Duval County jail. That series of stories was recognized with awards at the local, regional and national level.

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