For more than an hour, he called for help as he was tortured to death in a California jail. ‘No one came,’ his family says.

Early last year, Brandon Yates was arrested on suspicion of burglary and booked into San Diego’s Central Jail. He had been found asleep in someone’s backyard shed.

Yates, who was 24 with a long history of mental illness, was dead within 24 hours.

He was beaten and tortured by his cellmate — even though Yates repeatedly pressed the panic button inside his cell, and even though other men in the jail yelled that he was in trouble, a new lawsuit against San Diego County and Sheriff Kelly Martinez alleges.

“The control tower deputies either ignored the desperate calls or put the intercom on ‘bypass,’ meaning they turned the sound off from Brandon’s cell,” the suit says. “No one came as Brandon was being tortured, stripped naked, bound, sexually assaulted and murdered.”

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Yates should never have been placed into the fourth-floor cell with Alvin Ruis, who is now charged with murder, the lawsuit says.

Ruis, who had been arrested by Chula Vista police in December 2023 after being accused of assaulting his wife and children, also had a history of mental illness and had repeatedly threatened other people in jail, including deputies, the lawsuit adds.

Due to violent behavior, Ruis was classified as “keep separate” — meaning he was not to be placed in a cell with another person, the complaint adds.

The allegations in the lawsuit filed by Yates’ parents, Dan Yates and Andrea Carrier, are the latest in a series of wrongful-death, misconduct and negligence lawsuits confronting San Diego County and its sheriff.

The county has paid more than $75 million in recent years to people who died or were injured in county jails, records show.

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The Yates family’s complaint cites the high mortality rate in San Diego County jails and says the county has failed to properly train deputies. It also accuses officials of deliberate indifference and refers to nearly a dozen other cases where people were not correctly housed or properly treated while in jail.

“All defendants had a legal duty to protect Brandon Yates from foreseeable harm,” the claim states. “They had an affirmative duty to protect Brandon from the conduct of would-be third-party attackers including Ruis.”

A spokesperson for the San Diego Sheriff’s Office declined to comment, citing the pending litigation.

Brandon Yates, 24, was tortured and killed by his cellmate in the Men's Central Jail earlier this year. Yates repeatedly pressed the panic button inside the cell, but no one responded. (Yates family)
Brandon Yates, 24, was tortured and killed by his cellmate in the Men’s Central Jail earlier this year. Yates repeatedly pressed the panic button inside the cell, but no one responded. (Yates family) 

In an interview with The San Diego Union-Tribune, Yates’ parents described their son as someone who was always concerned about the well-being of others.

“He would literally take the shirt off his back and give it to someone else,” his mother said.

Yates had struggled with drug addiction but had worked hard to get sober, his parents said. He had apprenticed to be a commercial fisherman.

“He was motivated to try to get on a good path,” Dan Yates said.

Yates’ parents met with Martinez two weeks after their son’s death but were unsatisfied by her answers to their questions.

“Every question led to more questions,” Dan Yates said. “Nothing made sense to me. I would never have put those two in the same cell.”

“I used to hear and believe that if you are mentally ill, going to jail could be a blessing, because you hope a judge will order mental health treatment,” Yates’ mom said. “I felt a brief moment of, ‘Maybe finally he’ll get the help he needs.’ It never occurred to me that his life was at risk.”

Andrea Carrier in Del Mar on Sunday, Feb. 23, 2025. (Photo by Sandy Huffaker for The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Andrea Carrier in Del Mar on Sunday, Feb. 23, 2025. (Photo by Sandy Huffaker for The San Diego Union-Tribune) 

The Sheriff’s Office announced Yates’ death Jan. 17, 2024. The news release extended sympathies and offered a liaison officer to support the family. But officials withheld most of the details from the public announcement.

“On Jan. 16, 2024, around 1:36 p.m., deputies were conducting a safety check and found Mr. Yates unresponsive and displaying signs of distress,” the news release said.

Nearly two weeks went by before the Sheriff’s Office announced Ruis’ arrest on a murder charge.

Since his initial arrest in late December, Ruis had been declared a danger to himself and others more than once, the lawsuit claims. He was repeatedly sent to the jail’s mental-health wing, known as enhanced observation housing, then returned to the general population without treatment.

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“Each time Ruis was placed in EOH, defendants would release him instead of treating or monitoring him for his serious mental health problems,” the complaint says.

“Throughout his time at San Diego Central Jail, it was clear that Ruis suffered from a significant mental illness that manifested in violent outbursts toward inmates and deputies,” it says. “Ruis engaged in non-stop, compulsive talking about God and spoke in indecipherable nonsense.”

Yates was initially placed in a cell along with two other people on the jail’s fourth floor. But his mental health issues caused his cellmates to demand that he be moved or “there would be trouble,” the complaint says.

A deputy placed Yates in Ruis’ cell. Ruis later told investigators that he believed Yates was possessed by the devil and told Yates he was going to kill him, the complaint says.

“Other inmates heard Ruis threatening Brandon and Brandon screaming for help,” the complaint says. “The deputies who entered the module ignored those screams.”

Ruis strangled Yates until he was unconscious. When he saw Yates was still alive, Ruis poured liquid soap into his nose and mouth and smothered him with a blanket.

Once Yates was dead, Ruis removed his clothes and put a bar of soap in Yates’ anus. He secured Yates’ hands with a strip of clothing and was in the process of securing a strip around Yates’ neck to the cell’s metal stool when deputies arrived to conduct an hourly cell check.

“Ruis timed his torture because he knew that the deputies only did rounds once every hour at 60-minute intervals,” the complaint says.

Dan Yates sits in Del Mar on Sunday, Feb. 23, 2025. (Photo by Sandy Huffaker for The San Diego Union-Tribune)
Dan Yates sits in Del Mar on Sunday, Feb. 23, 2025. (Photo by Sandy Huffaker for The San Diego Union-Tribune) 

For years, San Diego County deputies have been accused of placing arrestees into housing that is not appropriate for their condition, or of failing to properly monitor people in custody.

In 2010, a 70-year-old man named Russell Hartsaw was beaten to death by a group of men in George Bailey Detention Facility, even though he was classified as “Keep Separate All” due to his age, small stature and early signs of dementia.

Six years later, a Black man named Lyle Woodward was strangled to death in his Central Jail cell by Clinton Thinn, a member of the Aryan Brotherhood, a white supremacist prison gang.

Woodward had a history of mental illness, and a deputy had tried to place him on the jail’s psychiatric floor. But getting anyone assigned there was “a feat of strength,” Deputy Curtis Stratton told a homicide investigator in an interview that became part of the Woodward family’s lawsuit.

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Woodward and Thinn ended up in the same cell, Stratton said, “because everyone else kind of corralled them, the two crazy guys together.”

In 2021, on the very day a court ordered his release from custody, Dominique McCoy was murdered by a man who was known to be violent and a threat to others, according to an investigation by the independent Citizens’ Law Enforcement Review Board.

Earlier this year, John Medina pleaded guilty to second-degree murder for McCoy’s Dec. 29, 2021, death. Medina was in jail on suspicion of assault with a deadly weapon and felony animal abuse.

He told homicide investigators that he was hearing voices that told him to kill McCoy. Deputies had also placed the men in a cell with only one mattress, sparking a fight.

On Dec. 2, 2023, Walt Mehran attacked Eric Van Tine in a Central Jail cell, leaving him with permanent brain damage. Still hospitalized in October, Van Tine developed a severe lung infection and ended up on life support. His family chose to withdraw care on Nov. 6.

Eric Van Tine, right, is seen with his mother Carole, older brother Brian and Brian's husband Josh. (Matthew Van Tine)
Eric Van Tine, right, is seen with his mother Carole, older brother Brian and Brian’s husband Josh. (Matthew Van Tine) 

Mehran and Van Tine, who both struggled with serious mental illness, had been placed with another man in a 75-square-foot cell that was designed to house no more than two people — a practice the Sheriff’s Office has been told multiple times to stop.

Two years ago, San Diego County agreed to pay almost $8 million to Frankie Greer, who was assigned to a top bunk inside county jail even though deputies knew he suffered from seizures. Greer tumbled from the top bunk and suffered life-altering brain trauma.

Last summer, the county agreed to a $15 million settlement with the family of Elisa Serna, a 24-year-old pregnant woman who died from drug- and alcohol-withdrawal symptoms after jail staff did not provide proper medical care.

And in November, the county paid nearly $5 million to the mother of Michael Wilson, who went nine days in jail without being given the prescription heart medications he relied on to live.

No trial date has been scheduled in the Yates civil case. A hearing is set for April 8 in the criminal case against Ruis.

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