Two former sheriff’s deputies will not face federal criminal civil rights charges for their involvement in the 2021 death of a 31-year-old Black man in a South Carolina jail, the Justice Department announced Wednesday.

Jamal Sutherland died in January 2021 after he was “forcibly extracted” from his cell at the Sheriff Al Cannon Detention Center, which is just outside of Charleston, the DOJ said in a news release.

Federal prosecutors decided there was not enough evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the deputies “willfully violated” federal law, according to the release. Proving an officer willfully deprived a person of their constitutional rights is the highest legal standard of intent, the department said.

“Neither accident, mistake, fear, negligence nor bad judgment is sufficient to establish a willful federal criminal civil rights violation,” the Justice Department said. “Accordingly, the review of this incident has been closed without a federal prosecution.”

Sutherland’s mother, Amy, said at a news conference Wednesday that she felt she had done everything possible to get justice for her son.

“I wanted to scream again,” she said when asked about her response to the decision. “But screaming days is over, there is no more screaming.”

South Carolina prosecutor:No charges for jail employees in death of mentally ill Black man

Sutherland, who had a long history of schizophrenia, was arrested on Jan. 4, 2021, for misdemeanor assault after damaging property and assaulting a staff member at a mental health and substance abuse center, according to a report from the Ninth Circuit Solicitor’s Office.

The next morning, Sutherland refused to leave his cell for a bond hearing and ignored repeated orders to kneel, videos released by the county showed.

Official policy allowed inmates to refuse to appear without force being used unless a judge ordered them to appear. But a directive from the detention center’s upper ranks instructed deputies to use an emergency restraint chair if an inmate refused to go to a bond hearing “the first time,” the solicitor’s office report found.

Videos showed deputies used pepper spray and repeatedly fired their stun guns while attempting to handcuff Sutherland. One deputy knelt on Sutherland’s back for more than two minutes and Sutherland could be heard on video saying “I can’t breathe.”