
xxWilliamson County Jailers Assault and Restraint Chair Incident – AntiChrist
Williamson County jailers assault — six jailers entered my cell, took my religious materials, threw them in the trash, and placed me in a restraint chair for approximately two and a half hours.
This was not discipline. It was not policy. It was force.
What Happened
- Six Williamson County jailers entered my cell
- They removed my religious materials without justification
- Those materials were thrown in the trash
- I was physically restrained and placed into a restraint chair
- I remained restrained for approximately 2.5 hours
- During the restraint, they laughed about what they had done
No weapon. No threat. No emergency condition.
Just force used to take something I refused to give up.
Religious Property Was the Trigger
This incident began with refusal to surrender religious materials. That refusal resulted in escalation, physical control, and prolonged restraint.
A religious text is not contraband. It is not a weapon. It does not justify force.
The sequence is clear:
- Refuse to surrender religious property
- Force is applied
- Restraint is used to enforce compliance
That is not management. That is coercion.
Use of Force and Restraint Chair
A restraint chair is one of the most extreme control devices used in detention settings. It immobilizes the body, restricts movement, and applies pressure through physical confinement.
Being placed in a restraint chair for 2.5 hours is not minimal force. It is sustained physical control.
Using that level of force to take religious materials crosses from control into punishment.
Reference: Texas Commission on Law Enforcement
Observed Conduct
During the restraint, the jailers involved laughed about the situation. The tone was not corrective. It was not procedural.
It reflected awareness of control, not enforcement of safety.
This Was Not an Isolated Action
This incident aligns with broader patterns of control inside detention environments where compliance is enforced through pressure rather than policy.
Related documentation: Williamson County jailers assault timeline
Final Statement
Six jailers entered a cell.
They took religious materials and threw them away.
They restrained a person for 2.5 hours.
And they laughed.
This record exists so that event is not lost, minimized, or rewritten.
