A Maryland probation agent who authorities say was killed by a client during a home visit had earlier reported to his agency that the man — a convicted sex offender — no longer wanted to cooperate with the probation process, according to police radio traffic on the night the agent was found dead.
Maryland
Md. probation agent reportedly raised concerns before he was killed
The concerns, as captured by the public-safety-scanner archiving service openmhz.com, are consistent with other worries raised by probation employees about the client, Emanuel Sewell, of Chevy Chase, according officials at the union for the agents.
Sewell had been under their supervision since 2021 after serving 25 years in prison for sex assault and other crimes.
The slain agent, Davis Martinez, 33, had gone to see him for a routine home visit on May 31. Martinez was stabbed repeatedly in his head and face before his body was wrapped in plastic bags and stuffed under a bed, police say. Sewell, 54, was captured a day later in West Virginia and has been charged with murder.
His attorneys have declined to comment about the case.
The tragic death — and what safety procedures had been in place — are the source of growing controversy between front-line probation workers and their management at Maryland’s Division of Parole and Probation, which is part of the state’s Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services.
Union official Stuart Katzenberg said members “raised multiple concerns about Sewell” before Martinez’s killing.
He spoke Tuesday several hours after more than 50 members of the American Federation of State, County & Municipal Employees (AFSCME) rallied in Catonsville to call for enhanced safety procedures.
Among the union’s demands: safer staffing levels that would allow agents to conduct visits in pairs — not alone, as Martinez had.
The union also called for “a third-party investigation into the problems that led to the killing of Agent Davis Martinez.”
Officials at the Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services declined to comment Tuesday on the specific police radio traffic that cited Martinez’s concerns. But a spokesman there said that in the wake of Martinez’s death, the department is committed to fixing any safety deficiencies.
“The department has taken immediate and decisive action to reassess and enhance our current policies and practices,” the spokesman said. “This reassessment includes examining equipment and policies that affect every element of work done by Parole and Probation employees.”
Among the areas of focus are home visits and whether high-risk clients should be visited alone by agents.
The department earlier had announced a management shake-up in the parole and probation division and said it is continuing to investigate events around Martinez’s death.
Sewell’s criminal record goes back to at least the mid-1990s. In 1997, he pleaded guilty to first-degree sex offense amid accusations that he climbed through the ground-floor apartment window of a man he didn’t know and raped him at knifepoint.
After his release from prison in 2021, his status as a convicted sex offender made him subject to monthly home visits by probation agents. An agent who had this responsibility earlier this year grew concerned about going inside his home, according to Rayneika Robinson, president of the Parole and Probation employees’ AFSCME local.
“Agent Martinez came across the case because one of his co-workers didn’t want [it]. She felt unsafe,” Robinson said in an interview. “He didn’t want his co-worker to go out feeling unsafe. So he went ahead and stepped up and went to the home for her.”
Robinson said the case was officially transferred to Martinez on May 7.
It wasn’t immediately clear how much agency managers knew about the switch or the reason it was made.
Martinez went to Sewell’s apartment for a home visit on May 31. Based on a witness statement to police detailed in court charging papers, he appeared to have gotten there around 9 a.m. He wore a bulletproof vest but was not armed with a handgun. Probation agents are not armed, according to their union.
Court records do not say when Martinez was attacked. A witness indicated that Sewell left his apartment about 2 p.m., charging documents say.
Shortly before 6 p.m., Montgomery County Police received a request to go to Sewell’s apartment and check on the agent’s welfare. As they tried to piece together what was going on — looking for the agent’s car, trying to reach him on his phone, growing more concerned — an officer came on the radio and told his colleagues what he had learned about information reported into the Parole and Probation’s system:
“There’s an entry in the P and P system where this agent who’s missing had a phone call with this client and the client said he didn’t want to be harassed any longer by Parole and Probation, and he was not going to cooperate,” the officer said, according to openmhz.com. “That phone call took place on May 7th of this year.”
Officers eventually forced their way inside. Scanner recordings report that they found blood on the floor, discovered Martinez’s body and requested homicide detectives come to the scene.
Union workers rallied at 11:30 a.m. Tuesday in Catonsville about continued change they want to see after the killing of a parole agent. Under criticism last week, state leaders announced they named three interim leaders, including one to lead the parole and probation division, though it did not make clear what had become of those in the jobs previously.
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Maryland
Maryland family wants answers after boy with special needs breaks leg in class
HYATTSVILLE, Md. — The parents of a 7-year-old first grader with autism are demanding answers from Prince George’s County Public Schools after their son suffered a severe leg fracture while at school — an injury no one has been able to explain.
Daevian Donaldson, a student at Felegy Elementary School in Hyattsville, is recovering from surgery after his femur was snapped and displaced during class last Friday, according to his parents, Daechele Kaufman and Anthony Donaldson.
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Kaufman said the day began normally as she dropped Daevian and his twin brother off for first grade. Around 9 a.m., she received an alarming phone call from the school.
“They just said he was on the floor screaming and didn’t want anyone to touch him,” Kaufman said.
She rushed to the school and found her son with obvious trauma to his leg. Neither staff nor Daevian — who communicates differently because he is on the autism spectrum — could explain how the injury occurred, she said.
Doctors later confirmed the severity of the injury through X-rays.
“When I saw the X-ray and one of the nurses said he was going to need surgery, all these wheels started turning,” Kaufman said.
Daevian Donaldson, a student at Felegy Elementary School in Hyattsville, is recovering from surgery after his femur was snapped and displaced during class, according to his parents. (7News)
The parents said they later learned Daevian’s regular teacher was attending a meeting at the time, and the special-needs classroom was being supervised by a substitute. They said no clear explanation has been provided for how a child could suffer such a serious injury without staff noticing what happened.
“It’s definitely neglect,” Kaufman said. “You can’t turn away and come back and say, ‘Oh, you fell,’ for a major injury like that. That’s not acceptable.”
After the family raised concerns publicly, Prince George’s County Public Schools issued a statement saying the district is investigating the incident and has placed the staff member involved on administrative leave.
Anthony Donaldson said that response does not go far enough.
“It needs to be more than one person on administrative leave,” he said. “Several people need to be evaluated on how they’re trained, or they need to be fired.”
Daevian is continuing to recover after surgery but is still experiencing pain, his parents said. As the interview concluded, the 7-year-old quietly asked for his medication.
The family said they want accountability — and assurances that other children, especially those with special needs, will be kept safe.
Maryland
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