How the 'Dead Suspect Loophole' Lets Texas Police Hide Records of Jail Deaths and Shootings
A Reason investigation of a notorious Texas public records loophole found 81 cases where police hid records of shootings and deaths in custody.

In 2013, an Austin police officer shot 70-year-old John Schaefer twice in the chest, killing him on his own porch.
Schaefer had called 911 to report that he'd shot a neighbor's pit bull after the dog attacked him in his backyard. The officer arrived at Schaefer's house and positioned himself by the door without announcing himself. When Schaefer stepped outside with a holstered handgun, the officer grabbed him in an attempt to disarm him. Schaefer pulled away, drew the gun, and pointed it at the cop, at which point the officer shot and killed him, according to the police narrative of events.
In the immediate aftermath, Schaefer's family and friends were incredulous, a lawyer for the Schaefer family, Robby Alden, told local news outlets. They couldn't believe Schaefer, a gun safety instructor and range supervisor, would draw on a police officer.
A grand jury cleared the officer of criminal wrongdoing, but a month later, Alden filed a public records request to the Travis County district attorney's office for internal records concerning the shooting. What the Schaefers discovered, as many other Texans have, is that when someone dies in police custody in the state, it's nearly impossible to get anything besides the most basic incident reports.
Citing a controversial Texas public record statute that shields the release of police records in cases that didn't result in a conviction, the Austin Police Department denied the request. The Texas office of the attorney general, which reviews all such denials, upheld the rejection.
This statute is known by critics as the "dead suspect loophole," and it has been employed repeatedly by the state to prevent families, journalists, and others from accessing records concerning police shootings and jail deaths.
The loophole not only prevents loved ones from accessing information about how family members died, it protects police from scrutiny, forcing those seeking to pursue legal action against the police to navigate bureaucratic hurdles that can take years to overcome.
Up until now, however, it has never been clear how often the loophole has been used. But an investigation by Reason found that between 2003 and 2018, the loophole was used in at least 81 cases.
Those whose requests were categorically denied include family members trying to discover why their loved ones had died, as well as reporters investigating deaths in police custody. There have been 9,077 deaths in police custody since 2005, according to the Texas Justice Initiative, a nonprofit organization that tracks deaths in police custody in the state.
The Texas legislature passed the statute, Sec. 552.108(a)(2), in 1997. It was intended to shield the privacy of the wrongfully accused and innocent, but media organizations and transparency advocates say the law has been twisted to shield the police from scrutiny. Texas state Rep. Joe Moody (D-El Paso) has introduced legislation to close the loophole.
"The idea behind that statute originally was to protect the living or, say, somebody who was falsely accused or investigated and found not to be worthy of being charged or brought to trial," says Kelly Shannon, the executive director of the Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas. "The way it's being used now is if a suspect dies in custody, the information is not made available to the public because the case didn't end in a conviction or deferred adjudication. Well, guess what? That case isn't going to end that way because the suspect is dead."
Reason searched more than 26,000 public records letter rulings from the Texas attorney general's website that cited the loophole between 2003 and 2018. The letters, which are generated in almost all cases where Texas agencies deny a records request, were then put into a searchable online database.
So far, Reason has identified 81 letters involving custodial death reports, which Texas law enforcement agencies are required to produce when someone dies in custody. Those reports, as well as arrest reports, are public record in Texas, but they only contain summaries of official police narratives.
In case after case—in response to requests from family members, lawyers, and reporters—police departments and cities cited the exemption to withhold nearly everything else, such as video footage, 911 calls, and other evidence that could corroborate or contradict those reports.
A separate investigation by news outlet KXAN in November that focused on Texas' 21 largest police departments identified at least 154 public information requests related to 52 in-custody deaths that cited the exemption to withhold records.
The use of the exemption has grown steadily over time. The Texas attorney general's office responded to 823 requests for rulings that cited 552.108(a)(2) in 2003, according to Reason's analysis. By 2017, that number ballooned to 3,046.
"It's big enough to drive a freight train through," Joe Larsen, a Houston open government attorney, says of the exemption.
The most infamous example is that of 18-year-old Graham Dyer, who died after being arrested by police officers in Mesquite, Texas, one night in 2013. Dyer was having a bad LSD trip and became extremely agitated. Two hours after his arrest he was rushed to a hospital. He died the following morning from severe head trauma.
Dyer's parents, desperate to know why their son was dead, filed a public records request for video from the police cruiser and jail, but the Mesquite Police Department rejected their request. Because Dyer had been charged with assaulting an officer but never convicted, the footage of his last hours was exempt from disclosure under state law.
Dyer's parents then filed a civil rights suit, but it was dismissed for insufficient factual details, which of course they didn't have because the Mesquite Police refused to release them.
Undaunted, the Dyers convinced the FBI to launch a civil rights investigation into their son's death, but that investigation closed two months later without result.
The FBI, however, isn't bound by Texas public records law. In a clever bit of public records jiu-jitsu, the Dyers then filed a federal Freedom of Information Act request for the records the Mesquite police turned over to the FBI. The feds were obliged to hand everything over, and after a two-year battle, the Dyers finally got the long-sought-after video.
The footage showed the delirious Dyer repeatedly slamming his head against the interior of a police cruiser after he wasn't properly restrained. At one point an officer repeatedly tased him in the testicles to try and make him stop. The Mesquite Police Department had neglected to mention the tasings in the incident report it was forced to release to Dyer's parents.
The report also stated that it took several officers to subdue Dyer, 5 feet 4 inches and 110 pounds, and put him in a restraint chair in a padded cell. Video, however, showed Dyer being left handcuffed on the concrete floor of the jail's sally port, where he continued to smash his head against the ground. Jail officials didn't request medical assistance until he was found unresponsive in his cell.
After the footage became public, the Dallas County district attorney reopened the case and declared there was sufficient evidence to charge Mesquite police officers with negligent homicide—if the statute of limitations hadn't already expired.
Civil rights lawyers and news outlets say Texas has essentially created a catch-22: It's almost impossible to get these type of records except through a lawsuit, but you need the documents in the first place to survive the high initial bar for a federal civil rights lawsuit against government officials.
Even if the case survives the government's inevitable motions to both dismiss the case and to grant qualified immunity to the individual officials, federal civil rights lawsuits often take years to litigate, by which time the state's statute of limitations for wrongful death claims or criminally negligent homicide will likely have expired.
All of this make it incredibly difficult for lawyers and the families they represent to discover if they have a case worth pursuing in court in the first place, says Dean Malone, a Dallas civil rights attorney.
Malone is representing the family of Toni Collins, who was shot and killed in an alley by an off-duty Galveston police officer in 2017, in a civil rights lawsuit.
According to the suit, Collins was holding a pink Daisy BB gun when the officer jumped out of an SUV and drew his gun on her. After Collins dropped the BB gun, the suit claims the officer shoved her against a fence and pistol-whipped her. According to the police narrative, the officer and Collins, who was 5 feet 2 inches and 144 pounds, got into a physical altercation, during which Collins grabbed a stick off the ground and raised it at the officer, who shot her in the chest.
Malone filed a public records request in March 2017 to the Galveston County Sheriff's Office for all of its investigative files on the Collins shooting. The sheriff's office attempted to withhold all of the records, including a custodial death report and autopsy photos.
The Texas attorney general's office, which reviews nearly all public records request denials in the state, ruled that, because the case never resulted in a conviction, all of the information except the custodial death report could be withheld.
The loophole also stymies reporters investigating jail deaths in Texas' sprawling criminal justice system.
For example, the Travis County sheriff is currently suing the Texas attorney general to keep secret portions of an internal investigation into the 2016 jail death of Justin Daniel Dominguez. The A.G.'s office had ruled that the sheriff's office must release the internal report to an Austin American-Statesman reporter.
In 2016, Huffington Post reporter Dana Liebelson attempted to gather records from the Texas town of Westworth Village on the death of Jason Johnston, who hanged himself in the town's jail in 2015 after being arrested for allegedly shoplifting from a Walmart.
"Because the investigation as to Mr. Johnston's alleged criminal activity ended as to Mr. Johnston when he committed suicide, the information is excepted from disclosure pursuant to 552.108(a)(2)," the city wrote to the Texas attorney general's office. The A.G. agreed.
Texas state Rep. Joe Moody (D-El Paso) has introduced a bill that would amend the exemption to except cases where subject of the request is deceased, gives permission for the records to be released, or where the case involves the criminal or internal investigations of police misconduct.
An identical bill was introduced last year, but died on the vine in a contentious legislative session.
"We do a lot of things in [the Capitol] with the best intentions," Moody told KXAN. "But how that works in the real world isn't known until that law gets on the books and starts getting utilized. Are there unintended consequences?"
The consequences were that what the public knows of deaths at the hands of, or in the care of, Texas police is often limited to what those very agencies say happened.
"What's missing are the pieces of evidence that allow watchdogs, family members, and lawyers, to look at cases and find out if there was any error," Eva Ruth Moravec, co-founder of the Texas Justice Initiative, says, "If there was anything that someone should have done differently or could have done to avoid the tragedy."
As it stands, the families of those who die in police custody in Texas will be left wondering.
In the case of John Schaefer, Austin's Citizens Review Panel, a now-defunct civilian police oversight body, found the shooting was justified, but it criticized the officer for his "inept" attempt to disarm the elderly man and found "no evidence that the startled Mr. Schaefer realized that the person physically assaulting him from the side was a police officer."
A civil suit filed against the officer and the Austin Police Department, brought by Schaefer's son, John Schaefer, Jr., was eventually dismissed. To this day, the younger Schaefer says he is nagged by questions and grief.
"I haven't really had any closure from this," he says in an interview. "It's been really tough to deal with. It was almost six years ago, and it's still in my head every day."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I can't wait until we have strong Federal privacy laws. Can you imagine what the Feds and states will hide once that's in effect? #smh
WTF?? The feds are going to save us from the states? More gov, more centralization, more impersonal bureaucracy is the answer?
I hope you're using sarcasm.
"That case isn't going to end that way because..." the cop union found a way to shield their murderers from conviction. Pretty neat.
Is there a single "privacy" law that isn't abused to hide abuse by the powerful against the weak?
Peeping Tom laws?
I'm guessing no, because I can't think of a single congressman that has ever been charged as a peeping tom. That is remarkable, considering their use of taxpayer dollars to hush up sexual harassment claims [with an accompanying NDA to protect the guilty, I wouldn't doubt]. Last I heard there were over 200 claims settled this way and... they may not even have to be legitimate. For all we know people get paid to make a claim to flush out some cash to launder back into a campaign.
But thinking about this story, anyone shot by a police officer in Texas apparently has to sue for wrongful death in order to have any hope of discovery. That is a pitiful state of affairs in that it effectively means open season on poor people [who can't afford process].
Argh! Dead men tell no tales!
Even counting all of 2018 to make 14 years, that's 648 cop killers every year in Texas alone. Doesn't seem impossible, but does seem high, when other reports are of 1000 cop killers nationwide.
Killed by cops, not killers of cops.
Yes, I know. I wasn't clear enough, should have found a better adjecitve-noun pair. The question stands.
OK, I see what you mean now.
I think it's probably that "died in custody" doesn't always mean killed by cops. I'm sure cops have tricks to move people from one column to the other. But I don't doubt that there is a good number of people dying in police custody for reasons other than that the cops killed them.
What, like old age or cancer?
Custody means, in control and care of.
I essentially started three weeks past and that i makes $385 benefit $135 to $a hundred and fifty
consistently simply by working at the internet from domestic. I made ina long term! "a great deal obliged to
ou for giving American explicit this remarkable opportunity to earn more money from domestic. This in
ddition coins has adjusted my lifestyles in such quite a few manners by which, supply you!". go to this
website online domestic media tech tab for extra element thank you .
http://www.geosalary.com
So the standard libertarian response to a corrupt state is to vote with your feet.
Or you could have a federal government bring racketeering charges against the local police, but that has its own problems of concentrated federal power.
So how do libertarians work their way through this?
This libertarian (voluntarist) doesn't vote, period. Voting is forfeiting sovereignty to a ruling elite. That's the problem, not the solution. Expressing rejection by leaving is surrendering the country to the enemy. It's a good strategy if there was a free country to escape to. There isn't. I will stay and fight the ignorance, the willful blindness, the victims who defend their enslavers. I will fight with words of enlightenment, reason, and logic.
Fire all the Law Enforcement Officers and replace them with Peace Officers.
It's not necessarily a corrupt state, it's a corrupt agency of the state.
The correct response is to vote in more transparency.
Unlike the honest, the corrupt plan to get away with crime. They look for and leverage human weaknesses like greed.
Only the shared truth threatens them and they actively plan to prevent it.
The only solution is to redouble our ability to discern and share truth.
We need the human right to record every memory we witness everywhere we are. We now have the technology to do it.
If someone is taken into custody the opportunity to be recorded continuously and retrieve the recordings must be a human right.
The honest majority are largely unaware of the corruption around them, until they experience it. The media and government are corrupt and trusting them is the last thing we should be doing.
We need to protect and expand our rights that enable our discerning and sharing of truth. This must be the plan of the honest and it will defeat the corrupt.
"We need to protect and expand our rights..." We can't have a sustainable society without rights. Protection of rights was the reason for the American Revolution and why a gov was created. However, that gov, under the Constitution, was granted sovereignty. A sovereign gov and sovereign individuals are impossible. They are opposites.
Few, only the anti-Federalists, recognized this fact. When the Constitution was adopted, it was the beginning of the end for a sovereign people, the American Dream. It was a silent, covert, anti-American coup. We the victims are living with the proof all around us. And few are capable of identifying it, thanks to gov schooling, brainwashing.
To sum up the "catch 22" police use: You can't investigate the death of someone in police custody when they are dead.
In a broader perspective, I would say you can't grant sovereignty to authorities and then hold them accountable.
Expecting law enforcers to enforce the law against themselves is delusional. One must be brainwashed and living in denial of reality to do so. This describes most, its the result of the gov school system.
It's unclear if your pining for justice or to be the supreme ruler,
We can't all be sovereign so sovereignty isn't our objective. There are also corrupt sovereigns.
Justice is based on the truth the whole truth and nothing but the truth.
Recording our memories and sharing them promotes truth, they are undeniable.
Never before in human history have we had this opportunity. Here it is, the solution to corruption. The government and media want no part of it and apparently neither do many others.
I guess the benefits of corruption outweigh the virtue of justice to them and they are blinded by their greed to see that corruption has a violent ending.
So choose corruption or justice and know your enemy.
I essentially started three weeks past and that i makes $385 benefit $135 to $a hundred and fifty consistently simply by working at the internet from domestic. I made ina long term! "a great deal obliged to you for giving American explicit this remarkable opportunity to earn more money from domestic. This in addition coins has adjusted my lifestyles in such quite a few manners by which, supply you!". go to this website online domestic media tech tab for extra element thank you .
http://www.Mesalary.com
"When Schaefer stepped outside with a holstered handgun, the officer grabbed him in an attempt to disarm him. Schaefer pulled away, drew the gun, and pointed it at the cop, at which point the officer shot and killed him, according to the police narrative of events."
Well, it that's actually the police description of events, then sounds like first degree murder. Taking a man by surprise on his own porch is wrong, and just plain stupid. Cop deserved to have a surprised individual draw on him, and because the setup was of the cop's own doing, the cop does not get to gun the man down as a result of the cop's stupidity.
If the police officer makes a fatal mistake, it is not acceptable for that officer to shift the fatality to some one else.