Lawsuit: Deputies violated rights

Sheriff’s Department says confrontation took place

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AMBOY – A Lee County man is suing the county for $200,000 over an encounter he believes violated his constitutional rights.

In his lawsuit, Wilson Burnell, 54, contends two Lee County sheriff’s deputies broke into his house in 2009, using pepper spray, deploying a Taser, and knocking him unconscious with a flashlight.

In its response to the lawsuit, the Sheriff’s Department says its deputies tried to restrain Burnell and used a Taser and aerosol irritant.

Burnell was not charged with any crime as a result.

The lawsuit, filed in April, names Lee County and deputies Andrew Tarr and William A. Roberts as defendants. Burnell asks for $200,000 in damages and the return of property he says was taken.

According to the lawsuit:

About 4:30 p.m. Nov. 13, 2009, Tarr and Roberts tried to force their way into Burnell’s Main Street home in Amboy without a warrant.

Burnell, who is represented by Rockford attorney Rene Hernandez, stood in his front door and refused to let the deputies in.

The deputies then used the pepper spray, with one of them pushing a Taser gun around the door and pointing it at Burnell.

The Taser was discharged, and its prongs were sent into the living room.

Burnell then bolted his door. The deputies demanded he surrender and threatened to smash his windows if he did not.

Burnell came out the front door and locked it behind him.

The deputies handcuffed him without resistance. He was then struck with a metal flashlight on the head and collarbone, knocking him unconscious, the suit says.

When Burnell awoke, Roberts was lying on his back, twisting his left leg up against his buttocks while using a Taser on his left arm.

Tarr took Burnell’s keys and demanded to know which one opened the front door.

Burnell, “while being essentially tortured by Cpl. Roberts,” identified the house key. Tarr entered the house without a warrant and the deputies seized “lawfully obtained” weapons from the house, the suit says.

Burnell was taken to the Lee County Jail and placed in a cell without being processed.

The deputies obtained a warrant from a judge shortly before 9 p.m., hours after the encounter, the suit says.

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