The Duval County jail.The Duval County jail.
The Duval County jail. | Andrew Pantazi, The Tributary

Feds will lead investigation of Duval jail death

Published on September 19, 2025 at 2:04 pm
Free local news and info, in your inbox at 6 a.m. M-F.

The FBI and U.S. Attorney’s Office will take the lead investigating the controversial death of an inmate in the Duval County Jail in April, according to State Attorney Melissa Nelson’s office.

The scope of the federal investigation into the death of Charles Faggart, 31, is unclear, and Nelson did not say what conclusions her own office has drawn about the case. This latest development happened “after consultation” with the U.S. Attorney’s Office, she said.

Jacksonville Today thanks our sponsors. Become one.

The FBI declined to comment.

Faggart arrived at UF Health from the Duval County jail on April 7 in a badly injured condition, two days after he had been booked on two misdemeanor charges.

It remains unclear why Faggart was in such a poor state. The Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office has said sparingly little about the case, though in its immediate aftermath Sheriff T.K. Waters stripped nine jail staffers of their corrections authority. Those officers have since been reassigned.

The Medical Examiner’s Office finished a report about Faggart’s death over the summer, but its contents remain a secret.

Jacksonville Today thanks our sponsors. Become one.

The attorney representing Faggart’s family did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Nelson’s office generally conducts criminal investigations into alleged criminal acts by sheriff’s officers. Her office has worked “in parallel” with the FBI on the Faggart case, her office said. In the days after Faggart’s death, Waters said he’d asked the FBI for its assistance, though he did not say what he expected from federal investigators.

It’s exceedingly rare for federal prosecutors to deeply scrutinize the Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office, an agency that has come under fire from local criminal justice advocates repeatedly in recent years both for its allegedly brutal handling of suspects and conditions in its aging jail.

Faggart’s family believe he was beaten to death.

Although the Sheriff’s Office sometimes rolls out information about investigations quickly, in the Faggart case, the agency has been reticent.

An ‘incident’ at the jail

More than 24 hours after Faggart had arrived at UF Health unresponsive and bloodied, Waters called an evening news conference to deliver the news that an unidentified person had been seriously injured in an “incident” at the jail.

The Sheriff’s Office acknowledged Faggart’s identity only after The Tributary identified him through court records, and police have released only a heavily redacted report about his violent clash with jail guards that left him unresponsive.

Key elements of that document — written by one of the jail guards Waters stripped of duty — were contradicted by reams of UF medical records that detailed Faggart’s extensive injuries. Doctors found no fentanyl in his system, even though the police report claimed Faggart told the guards he’d taken the drug. Doctors also did not believe he’d suffered a seizure, which a guard says he witnessed.

Medical staff also removed a barb from a stun gun in his back — JSO has not previously disclosed that Faggart was stunned — and noted multiple fractures on his face and ribs, bruises throughout his body, and serious damage to his kidneys and liver.

This story is published through a partnership between Jacksonville Today and The Tributary.


author image email Nate Monroe is executive editor of The Tributary. He has been a beat reporter, investigative reporter and columnist for newspapers in the Southeast for the past 15 years. Most recently, he wrote a column about Florida for the USA Today Network. He was previously a metro columnist, beat reporter and investigative reporter for the Florida Times-Union in Jacksonville, where he focused on covering the largest municipal government in Florida. Prior to arriving in Jacksonville in 2013, Nate was a reporter for newspapers in the Florida Panhandle and South Louisiana. You can reach him at nate.monroe@jaxtrib.org. author image Nichole Manna is The Tributary’s senior investigative reporter. You can reach her at nichole.manna@jaxtrib.org.