KANSAS CITY, Mo. – A former corrections officer at the
Jackson County Detention Center was sentenced in federal court today for
smuggling contraband cell phones and other items to inmates at the Jackson
County Detention Center.
Andre Lamonte Dickerson, 27, of Kansas City, Mo., was
sentenced by U.S. District Judge Stephen R. Bough to one year and four months
in federal prison without parole.
On April 25, 2018, Dickerson pleaded guilty to two counts of
using a telephone in furtherance of the unlawful activity of acceding to
corruption, related to a public servant taking a bribe in return for violating
his legal duty.
Dickerson admitted that, while employed as a corrections
officer at the Jackson County Detention Center, he told a confidential
informant that he would smuggle two packs of cigarettes, a cell phone and a
cell phone charger to an inmate in the detention center for $500. Dickerson met
the informant at a Church’s Fried Chicken restaurant on June 2, 2017, where he
received the payment and the contraband items.
The next day, June 3, 2017, Dickerson entered the inmate’s
cell and put the contraband on the bed. They engaged in a conversation
regarding potential future contraband transactions. Dickerson asked if the
inmate would be interested in paying him a monthly fee of $2,500. In exchange,
Dickerson would ensure he would be the only inmate on the fifth floor to
receive contraband cigarettes, narcotics and telephones. Other inmates would
then shop through him for their contraband.
The inmate smoked one of the packs of cigarettes and
exchanged the second pack of cigarettes with other inmates for food from the
commissary. On the same day, detention center personnel searched his cell and
found the phone and phone charger.
On June 18, 2017, a corrections officer found Dickerson’s
cell phone in the fifth floor control station. Text messages contained
information recording drug deals between Dickerson and inmates within the
Jackson County Detention Center.
Dickerson was arrested on June 27, 2017. At the time of his
arrest, Dickerson had two cell phones in his possession while he was on duty in
the inmate area of the detention center. Corrections officers are not allowed
to have cell phones in their possession while on duty and in the areas of the
detention center where inmates are housed.
This case was prosecuted by Deputy U.S. Attorney Gene Porter
and Assistant U.S. Attorney Brent Venneman. It was investigated by the FBI and
the Jackson County, Mo., Sheriff’s Department with assistance from the Missouri
Department of Corrections, the Kansas City, Mo., Police Department and the
Jackson County Detention Center.
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