Former Dallas Transit Police Officer Convicted
of Civil Rights Violation Sentenced to
30 Months
in Federal Prison
DALLAS—Lance Kendall Bonner, of Dallas, Texas,
a former police officer with Dallas Area Rapid Transit
(DART), was sentenced today by U.S. Chief District
Judge Sidney A. Fitzwater to 30 months in prison and
ordered to pay a $10,000 fine for violating the civil
rights of a Dallas woman, announced U.S. Attorney Richard
B. Roper of the Northern District of Texas. Bonner
pled guilty in April to one count of deprivation of
civil rights under color of law. Judge Fitzwater also
sentenced Bonner to a six-month period of home confinement
to follow his 30-month sentence, which is a condition
of his three-year term of supervised release. Bonner
is to surrender to the Bureau of Prisons on August
26, 2008.
Bonner admitted that during the early morning hours
of October 10, 2004, he saw a woman at a Dallas convenience
store, followed her, made a traffic stop of the car
in which she was riding, and arrested her. Bonner then
drove the woman to the Dallas County jail but did not
take her inside. Instead, he drove her to an empty
DART substation and told her he would release her if
she engaged in sexual acts with him. The woman complied
and, after they engaged in sexual acts, Bonner released
her from custody. Bonner acknowledged that he violated
the woman’s constitutional rights and caused
her bodily injury.
At today’s sentencing hearing, the victim addressed
the Court and stated that she agreed with the plea
agreement between Bonner and the government and that
she forgave Bonner for his crime.
U.S. Attorney Roper praised the investigative efforts
of the FBI and the Dallas Police Department. Assistant
U.S. Attorneys Tammy Reno and Marcus Busch and DOJ
Civil Rights Division Trial Attorney Jonathan Skrmetti
prosecuted the case.
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