Wednesday, May 9, 2018

Jail guard on trial with huge penis bragged to inmates he was nicknamed ‘horse’


A Brooklyn jail guard who’s on trial for forcing inmates to pleasure his huge, stinky, hooked penis also bragged that his nickname was “caballo” — “horse” in Spanish.
In closing statements Wednesday, federal prosecutors recounted how Metropolitan Detention Center correction officer Lt. Eugenio Perez crowed about his 12-inch tool before abusing the women.
He asked one inmate who was on cleaning duty near his office “if she knows what they call him. They call him ‘Caballo,’ the horse in Spanish,” said Assistant US Attorney Taryn Merkl.
“He bragged to her that it was 11, 12 inches long … He told [her] to ‘suck on it.’ She said no. He grabbed her hand to touch his penis.”
When that woman got away, Perez turned on a different inmate who was cleaning nearby — instructing her to give him oral sex then masturbating while staring at her privates, Merkl charged.
“He was not going to take no for an answer. He was The Caballo and he was aroused,” she said.
The feds infamously corroborated the stories of the five women who say Perez abused him while they were incarcerated at the Sunset Park lock-up by confirming their description of his massive, putrid member.
The FBI got a search warrant to take photos of the distinctive phallus — which Merkl showed to jurors Wednesday, noting that it wasn’t even erect in the images and “would have appeared even larger” to the women who saw it at full mast.
“There is no reason why any of the victims should know anything about his penis. They all remember things about his penis,” she said.
“How would we know these very personal and intimate details if they weren’t forced to live through it?”
In his closing statement, Perez’s lawyer countered that the inmates all had reason to “lie and fabricate” to get out of jail, noting that the case had no traditional evidence like DNA.
“It can’t simply be the stigma, that the allegations [are] enough, because then everybody would be guilty,” said attorney Kenneth Montgomery, telling jurors the feds wanted them to “convict simply because they said so and because of the stigma of these allegations.”
Prosecutors rebutted that it was “ridiculous” to suggest the women were all part of “some big scheme or plan.”
The jury is scheduled to begin deliberations Thursday. Perez faces up to life behind bars if convicted.
(Via NY Post)