Woman sent undercover into drug house was raped twice and police failed to intervene
The assault on 13 January 2021 went unnoticed by sheriff deputies who were down the street during the alleged rape
A woman working undercover was raped while conducting an operation for law enforcement and wearing a hidden microphone and camera. Not only did her handlers not intervene or protect her from the attack, but she was also charged with an unrelated crime mere weeks later.
The heinous assault on 13 January 2021 went unnoticed by Louisianaās Rapides Parish Sheriffās Office deputies who were down the street from the alleged rape. The assailant was reportedly Antonio Jones ā an accused meth dealer known as āMississippiā ā who the woman had been tasked to buy drugs from, the Associated Press first reported.
The victim was sent inside the home by herself and without any police backup, even though Jones, 48, has been a repeat offender for nearly three decades. As the suspect allegedly forced the woman to perform oral sex on him, her cries and pleas for the attack to stop were recorded but not transmitted in real time to authorities.
The AP reports that Jones even briefly stopped to carry out a drug deal before resuming the brutal attack. It is unclear how long the assault lasted but Jones was only arrested after the distraught victim exited the house and alerted law enforcement.
āWeāve always done it this way,ā former Lieutenant Mark Parker told the AP, seemingly trying to justify the blatant disregard for the informantās integrity that may have directly led to her rape. āShe was an addict and we just used her as an informant like weāve done a million times before. Looking back, itās easy to say, āWhat if?āā

Mr Parker also said that deputies monitoring the home thought the victim was safe because another person had entered after her. An official speaking under condition of anonymity said they had listened to the recording of the rape and it was āone of the worst depictions of sexual abuse [they] have ever seen.ā
āJust the audio from it is enough to turn your stomach,ā the official told the AP. āItās a female being sexually brutalized while sheās crying and whimpering.ā
Responding to APās inquiries, the Rapides Parish Sheriffās Office largely dismissed criticism on why the victim wasnāt monitored in real-time, saying the department has since āchanged the way [they] do business.ā
Only after the rape did the sheriffās office begin using real-time recording equipment during sting operations despite such technology being available for decades.

Itās unclear what the victim was promised in exchange for her cooperation as an informant but nearly a month after her assault she was charged with drug possession regarding a previous arrest.
She has also been reportedly pulled over and ābooked on possession charges at least twiceā since the assault. The AP report notes that she pled guilty āto possessing drug paraphernalia last year and was placed in behavioral health court in lieu of jail time.ā
When contacted by The Independent, the victimās attorney, Harold Murry, declined to comment on the incident, citing respect for his clientās wishes. He did tell the AP that the audio was āabsolutely horrible.ā
āShe has a drug problem and I donāt know if sheās going to be able to beat it or not,ā Mr Murry said. āBut when you become a snitch, they keep your drug problem going and then they arrest you for it.ā
The operation and the resulting rape have not led to any internal reviews.
Jones was initially charged with second-degree rape, false imprisonment and distribution of meth after the January arrest. Following the APās reporting of the case in August, the rape charge was downgraded to third-degree.
His trial is scheduled for mid-October.