Dead inmate's family wins battle, but will feds pay?

Published: Saturday, April 5 2008 12:44 a.m. MDT

Attorney Jesse Trentadue, left, stands with his brother Kenneth Trentadue, who later died while in FBI custody in 1995.

A federal judge in Oklahoma has ordered the U.S. Department of Justice to pay the family of a deceased federal inmate close to a million dollars in damages.

The judge determined that agents intentionally inflicted emotional distress when they shipped the bruised and bloody body of Kenneth Michael Trentadue to the family while saying little about how he died.

For Salt Lake attorney Jesse Trentadue, the ruling issued last week is a victory in his now 13-year legal battle with the federal government to prove that, in a case of mistaken identity, his brother was interrogated and murdered by FBI agents investigating the Oklahoma City bombing.

"I think it's a victory," Trentadue told the Deseret Morning News. "Although I don't plan to see a dime of it."

In what has been a long and nasty legal war, government officials twice tried to have Trentadue indicted on obstruction of justice charges. He believes such attempts were made to end his family's civil suit. The charges never went anywhere and on one occasion, the federal grand jury refused to indict due to a lack of evidence on the government's part.

Trentadue said Justice Department attorneys in Washington, D.C., have flat out told him no matter how many court judgments he gets, they don't plan on paying out. "They told us that it would be a cold day in hell before they pay anything."

When asked to respond, a Justice official said his office has not decided what step to take. "We are still reviewing the court's order and we've made no decision as to what our next step will be," said Charles Miller, spokesman for the department's civil division.

As for Trentadue's statement about being told he won't be paid: "I don't think we want to comment on that," Miller said.

Trentadue still clearly remembers getting a call from his mother saying his brother had died while in federal custody. Kenneth Trentadue, a paroled bank robber, was picked up in California on a parole violation and transported to Oklahoma City. Investigators apparently believed he matched the description of someone they were looking for who was involved in the Oklahoma City bombing plot, according to Jesse Trentadue and sworn affidavits from inmates.

At the time, Federal Bureau of Prisons officials told the Trentadues that Kenneth had committed suicide and was found hanging from a bed sheet in his cell. It wasn't until later that family members found out prison officials tried to have the body cremated, only to have a state coroner in Oklahoma refuse without family consent, according to court documents.

When Kenneth Trentadue's body arrived at a funeral home in California, family members were stunned to find the body bloody and covered in bruises. To them, this did not appear to be a simple suicide. It looked as if Kenneth Trentadue had been beaten severely. The government had also conducted an autopsy on the body without telling family members.

In August 1997, the family filed a wrongful death suit in federal court in Oklahoma. Trentadue also pursued legal action to obtain documents to support his claims of torture.

In the suit, the family brought forward allegations that federal agents fabricated evidence of Kenneth's death, threatened witnesses, bribed witnesses, intimidated family members and balked at giving any information about the cause of death.

During a bench trial in 2001, a federal judge found the conspiracy allegations could not be proven but ruled federal agents did intentionally inflict emotional distress by failing to tell the family about the condition of the body.

The government appealed to the 10th Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver. After bouncing back twice on appeal, the district judge last week issued another opinion, ordering the government to pay about $1 million in damages to the Trentadue family.

Get The Deseret News Everywhere

Subscribe

Mobile

RSS