Beating of man with alleged 'sexual torture chamber' leads to arrest of 3 Denver law enforcement officers
Published in News & Features
DENVER — A pair of married Denver sheriff’s deputies assaulted a man in a wheelchair in October because they believed he used sexual bondage devices on a 17-year-old — and a Denver police officer tried to cover up the assault, according to affidavits filed against the three law enforcement officers, who have all been arrested.
The Oct. 17 incident began when Sgt. Carla Gentempo, 43, and her husband, Deputy Jason Gentempo, 44, learned that the 17-year-old — with whom they were personally connected — was at a Denver apartment where the couple believed there to be a “sexual torture chamber,” according to the affidavits. The teen’s relationship to the couple was redacted in court records.
The Gentempos, who were not on duty, drove to the Denver home to pick up the 17-year-old. When they arrived, the teen and a man in a wheelchair met them in front of the man’s apartment. The Gentempos beat the man up in an attack captured on surveillance footage, according to the affidavits.
That video footage shows Carla Gentempo punch the man in a wheelchair in the head and kick him in the chest. Jason Gentempo also struck the man and stomped on the man’s cellphone, according to the court records. The couple then collected the teen and left with the teen, according to the affidavits.
Both of the Gentempos were arrested on suspicion of third-degree assault on an at-risk person, court records show. An attorney for Carla did not return a request for comment Wednesday; Jason could not be reached.
Carla Gentempo was hired by the Denver Sheriff Department in 2010, while Jason was hired in 2005, sheriff’s records show.
Jason Gentempo later told investigators that he believed the man in the wheelchair met the 17-year-old in a chatroom and took them to his home, where the man showed them “sexual bondage items” and put some of the items on the teen with their consent, though the man and the teen did not have sex, according to the affidavit.
The man in the wheelchair, whose identity was redacted in court records, told officers that he believed the teen was 18. He noted that he is a paraplegic.
On Wednesday, a Denver police spokesperson said officers are continuing to investigate the man’s interactions with the 17-year-old and whether those constituted a crime. The man has not been charged.
The man in the wheelchair reported the deputies’ attack to Denver police on the same day and told the responding officer, Denver police Officer Henry Soni, 26, that he believed the attackers were off-duty Denver officers.
At the man’s home that day, Soni reviewed surveillance video of the attack and gave the man in the wheelchair a case number — but then failed to file a report or enter the surveillance video as evidence in the case, according to the affidavit.
Instead, Soni deleted information about the assault allegation in his report filing system and told the man in the wheelchair that he would have to be arrested to pursue charges against the two deputies, investigators found.
The man in the wheelchair had an open warrant for his arrest in another matter, according to Soni’s arrest affidavit, but it was not clear whether Soni was referring to the man’s arrest on the open warrant or to the man’s potentially criminal actions with the 17-year-old.
In official records, Soni wrote that the man in the wheelchair “does not want to file a report at this time.” The officer’s body-worn camera footage of his response to the man’s home was automatically logged into the police evidence storage system as being connected to an assault call, but Soni manually changed the footage the next day to be classified as “All Other/Non-event,” according to an affidavit.
Those types of videos are automatically deleted after 60 days, investigators noted.
Soni was arrested on suspicion of attempting to influence a public servant, forgery, evidence tampering and misconduct.
The affidavits for the three law enforcement officers do not mention a pre-existing connection between Soni and the Gentempos.
Soni could not be reached for comment Wednesday. A woman who claimed to be associated with him but who refused to identify herself said the officer would not speak publicly about the allegations, which she said were a “family matter.”
Separately, Soni was also arrested on suspicion of sexually assaulting a woman in an unrelated incident. In that case, investigators allege he visited the woman’s home and sexually assaulted her while he was on duty.
Soni met the woman in September when he responded to a call about a noise complaint, according to the affidavit. Soni then began texting and calling the woman regularly on his work-issued cellphone. He took her for a ride in his car, and on another occasion again responded to her home for a noise complaint, according to an affidavit.
Then, just before 2 a.m. on Nov. 4, the woman said she woke up to Soni knocking on her window. She’d been drinking alcohol earlier in the night and was confused, but she let Soni inside her home, where he sexually assaulted her, she told police, according to an affidavit.
The woman shared videos of Soni inside her apartment on the night in question, and told a friend she was scared and “felt like she couldn’t say ‘no’ because the officer was in uniform” and carrying his gun.
Investigators found Soni was supposed to be responding to another call during the time of the assault but never did, according to an affidavit. Another officer who handled the call alone later confronted Soni about it, and Soni did not give a good explanation for why he did not respond, according to an affidavit.
In that case, Soni was arrested on suspicion of two counts of sexual assault and two counts of unlawful sexual conduct by a police officer. He was hired by the Denver Police Department in 2024 and was assigned to overnight shifts.
Soni has been suspended without pay pending the outcome of the criminal investigation. The Gentempos were placed on investigatory leave on Dec. 11.
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