In 2006, Emmanuel was placed under arrest at
Miami International Airport after flying from
Trinidad to
Miami. He carried a passport that he received after falsifying his father's name on the application. The
Domestic Security Section of the
United States Department of Justice accused Emmanuel of passport fraud. That December, he pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 11 months in prison. Around the same time, he was then charged for participating in torture in Liberia. Emmanuel's trial was the first case where a U.S. citizen was prosecuted under a 1994 law that prohibits American citizens from participating in
torture outside of the United States. Elise Keppler, a counsel for the International Justice Program of
Human Rights Watch, said that the "Demon Forces" "did things like beating people to death,
burying them alive,
rape – the most horrible kind of
war crimes." In January 2009, Judge
Cecilia Altonaga sentenced Taylor to 97 years in prison. He planned to appeal his conviction. According to the
Department of Justice, Taylor tortured victims with various means, including "burning victims with molten plastic, lit cigarettes, scalding water, candle wax and an iron; severely beating victims with firearms; cutting and stabbing victims; and shocking victims with an electric device." That same day, the World Organization for Human Rights USA filed a civil suit in the
United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida on behalf of five of Taylor Jr.'s victims pursuant to the
Alien Tort Statute and the
Torture Victims Protection Act. The plaintiffs won by a default judgment on all counts. The civil trial to determine damages took place in late December 2009 and January 2010. , Emmanuel was incarcerated in a federal prison in Florida. As of 2019 he, under the name Roy M Belfast Jr. (
Bureau of Prisons (BOP)#76556-004), is serving his sentence at the
United States Penitentiary in Lee County, Virginia. His release date is June 18, 2090. ==References==