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PRISON FOR SECURITY GUARD GIRL ASSAULTED, FORCED TO DRINK LIQUOR.


Byline: Karen Maeshiro Staff Writer

LANCASTER - Two security guards accused of illegally holding four teenagers for hours in a supermarket back office, forcing them to drink liquor and assaulting one boy and molesting a girl entered no contest pleas Tuesday to child abuse charges.

Omar Maurice Ray, 23, of Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , was sentenced to four years in prison, and Jermar Jackson, 21, of Inglewood, was sentenced to time already served, placed on three years probation and ordered to work 120 days along state highways.

``This way the victims, who were already extremely traumatized by the experience, do not have to testify, both defendants have felony convictions, and the person mainly responsible went off to state prison,'' Deputy District Attorney Kelly Cromer said after the sentencing.

As for Jackson doing work for the state Department of Transportation, Cromer said, ``It has to be physical community service like graffiti removal. I don't want him sitting at a desk.''

In exchange for their pleas, prosecutors dismissed additional charges, including assault, false imprisonment false imprisonment, complete restraint upon a person's liberty of movement without legal justification. Actual physical contact is not necessary; a show of authority or a threat of force is sufficient. The person falsely imprisoned may sue the offender for damages. , committing a lewd act on a child, kidnapping kidnapping, in law, the taking away of a person by force, threat, or deceit, with intent to cause him to be detained against his will. Kidnapping may be done for ransom or for political or other purposes.  with intent to commit a sexual assault and attempted rape.

Ray's attorney, Benard Udeozor declined to comment on his client's plea but noted that he was eligible for release after half his sentence if he works in prison without disciplinary problems.

The Albertsons supermarket chain faces a lawsuit over the incident, which occurred June 5 at the Albertsons store in the 4600 block of East Avenue S in Palmdale.

The lawsuit, filed on behalf of three of the teens, seeks unspecified monetary damages Monetary damages, in civil law, refers to compensation given to an injured party by a liable party. Monetary damages may be restitution, a penalty, or both.  from Albertsons Inc., the Los Angeles security firm that hired the two plainclothes plain·clothes or plain-clothes  
adj.
Wearing civilian clothes while on duty to avoid being identified as police or security: a plainclothes detective. 
 loss prevention officers and the two security guards themselves.

The teens' attorney said Albertsons' company policy was violated numerous times during their detention, which started after the guards said they had caught one boy walking out of the store with a bottle of vodka.

Sheriff's deputies were never called, the teens' parents were never called and the two girls were left with the two guards without a female employee present, the lawsuit said.

The security officers wore civilian clothes and were supposed to watch surreptitiously sur·rep·ti·tious  
adj.
1. Obtained, done, or made by clandestine or stealthy means.

2. Acting with or marked by stealth. See Synonyms at secret.
 for shoplifters.

After apprehending the boy and a girl, the security officers went out to a car in the parking lot where another boy and girl were waiting and took them into custody, sheriff's deputies said.

A 14-year-old girl testified in court in July that the teens were told their friend would go to jail for trying to steal a bottle of vodka if they didn't drink it.

At some point, two of the teens were told to leave, leaving the girl and the friend who was detained de·tain  
tr.v. de·tained, de·tain·ing, de·tains
1. To keep from proceeding; delay or retard.

2. To keep in custody or temporary confinement:
 for trying to steal the vodka.

The girl testified she was intoxicated in·tox·i·cate  
v. in·tox·i·cat·ed, in·tox·i·cat·ing, in·tox·i·cates

v.tr.
1. To stupefy or excite by the action of a chemical substance such as alcohol.

2.
 when she was taken into a separate room and that Jackson held her up while Ray removed some of her clothing.

The girl said she then threw up. When her friend opened the door, Jackson punched him, the girl said.

The lawsuit said neither Jackson nor Ray nor store employees called sheriff's deputies to say they had shoplifting Ask a Lawyer

Question
Country: United States of America
State: Florida

caught shoplifting at sears 12/05/05, first time, 20yearsold, have no criminal record.
 suspects in custody.

The lawsuit said the boy who was punched had originally approached Jackson and asked him to buy him a bottle of vodka. Jackson said he too was too young to buy alcohol, the lawsuit said, but Ray stuck a liquor bottle down his pants and told the boy to do the same.

When the boy walked outside with the pair, they threw him against the wall, handcuffed him and took him back inside, the lawsuit said.

While the four teens Four Teens is a Barbershop quartet that won the 1952 SPEBSQSA international competition.

Preceded by
Schmitt Brothers SPEBSQSA International Quartet Champions
1952 Succeeded by
Vikings
 were in custody in a back room, Ray said in front of an Albertsons employee that he intended to make the teens drink the vodka, but the employee passed off the remark as a joke, the lawsuit said.

The female employee was there because company policy requires a female employee to be present whenever a female is in custody, but she left the teens alone with Jackson and Ray after Ray told her they were being released, the lawsuit said.

Instead of letting them go, the lawsuit said, Ray and Jackson kept the teens in the back room and made them drink the vodka, then got a bottle of whiskey whiskey [from the Gaelic for "water of life"], spirituous liquor distilled from a fermented mash of grains, usually rye, barley, oats, wheat, or corn. Inferior whiskeys are made from potatoes, beets, and other roots. .

After releasing the boy and girl they had taken from the car, the lawsuit said, the guards took the younger girl into another room. When the girl yelled as the men began removing her pants, the remaining boy opened the door to the other room, knocking down Ray, the lawsuit said.

The men punched the boy, the lawsuit said. The girl eventually blacked out and woke up in the first room with the boy, the lawsuit said.

The second boy and girl were let go after the girl's parents came to the store looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 her about 9:30 p.m., or about 3 1/2 hours after the teens entered the store, the lawsuit said. Her parents called sheriff's deputies.

The first girl was found passed out on a street corner by a good Samaritan Good Samaritan

man who helped half-dead victim of thieves after a priest and a Levite had “passed by.” [N.T.: Luke 10:33]

See : Helpfulness


Good Samaritan
, the lawsuit said.

Karen Maeshiro, (661) 267-5744

karen.maeshiro(at)dailynews.com
COPYRIGHT 2005 Daily News
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Jan 26, 2005
Words:857
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