Melissa Turnage approached the 12-year-old girl with the imposing affect of a
cop: arms crossed, lips pursed, badge visible, tone skeptical.
“So, you don’t know how many times this has happened this week?”
Taylor Cadle slouched on a couch, staring at her lap and picking at her nails.
That morning, in the summer of 2016, she had gotten into a fight with her
adoptive parents when they took away her phone on the ride to church, on the
outskirts of Tampa, Florida. A minister’s wife, noticing Taylor’s tear-stained
face, pulled her into an office to ask what was going on. Taylor hadn’t been
planning to tell her everything, but it all came spilling out. The minister
called the police, and now Turnage, a detective with the Polk County Sheriff’s
Office, was standing before her.
Taylor spoke tentatively, in barely more than a whisper, as she told Turnage in
a recorded interview that her adoptive father, Henry Cadle, had been sexually
assaulting her for years. The inappropriate touching had started when she was 9
years old, shortly after Henry and Lisa, Taylor’s great uncle and his wife, had
adopted her. Over time, the abuse escalated. Now, he assaulted her “anytime he
gets the chance,” she said. She didn’t like going with him on errands because it
happened then, on the side of a quiet road that cut through a swamp. Standing
outside the car, he would put his privates inside of her privates, she told
Turnage. Taylor couldn’t say how many times he had raped her, but it had
happened just the night before. He did it whenever they drove to get milk, too,
which was three times a week.
“That’s a lot of driving,” Turnage said.
Taylor said nothing.
Turnage was embarking on the type of investigation that her boss, Polk County
Sheriff Grady Judd, had made a core mission of his agency. Judd is a beloved
figure in Polk County, where he has served as sheriff for the past two decades
and was just reelected to his sixth term. Known for his tough-on-crime rhetoric
and social media presence, Judd gives a near-daily “morning briefing” to his
700,000 TikTok followers, holding up mugshots of suspects, telling the stories
of crimes they allegedly committed—from stealing baby formula to driving
drunk—and welcoming them to jail, which he calls “Grady Judd’s Bed & Breakfast.”
Fans buy Grady Judd bobbleheads, Grady Judd mugs, and sweatshirts reading “God
Guns and Grady Judd.”
An old joke that has been repeated by Judd himself is that the most dangerous
place in Polk County is between Judd and a camera. He’s a regular guest on Fox
News, where he shares his outspoken views about subjects ranging from the
dangers of undocumented immigrants to the peril of looters after hurricanes, and
where the stories in Judd’s TikTok posts often find a national audience.
Sheriff Grady Judd is a beloved figure in Polk County, where he was just
reelected to his sixth term.Melanie Metz
But he claims his top priority is protecting children from sexual predators. The
county’s deputies have traveled to faraway places—from Colorado to Guatemala—to
extradite men accused of victimizing children in Polk County. “If you think that
you’re going to physically, sexually, or emotionally abuse a child and I’m not
going to get in there and protect them, you’re making a big mistake,” he told
MSNBC in 2015. In 2020, President Donald Trump appointed Judd to a federal
council overseeing all programs related to juvenile delinquency, and missing and
exploited children.
One might think that someone accused of the crimes Henry Cadle was accused of
would be a prime target for the Polk County Sheriff’s Office. But when Turnage
spoke with him, on a patio outside the church, she kept the interview brief and
light. Henry, who was 57, spoke about his relationship with Taylor with a breezy
confidence. She had anger issues and could be difficult—traits he attributed to
her rocky upbringing—but he loved her to death. “Does she have dad wrapped
around her finger? Yes. Everybody will tell you that,” Henry said.
Rather than asking him if he had sexually abused Taylor, Turnage floated a
theory: “Basically, Taylor, I guess, has made up these allegations, okay? That
you have been sexually abusing her.”
Henry brimmed with righteous indignation. “Why in the heck she would conjure up
something like this about me, I don’t know. Only thing I’ve ever did with that
kid is loved her.”
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To hear a clip from Detective Melissa Turnage’s interview with Henry Cadle,
listen below. A transcript for this audio can be found here.
https://www.motherjones.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Turnage-interviewing-Henry_made-up-allegations.mp3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lisa Cadle was also dumbfounded by the allegations against her husband. Taylor
adored Henry, Lisa told Turnage, and always begged to go with him on errands.
She was quick to point out that Taylor was “mouthy” and “has been known to say
things.” Turnage assured Lisa that kids had a way of making unfounded
accusations “when things don’t go the way that they want it to.”
“Back when we were younger, it was, you know, ‘We’ll call [the Department of
Children and Families] and say you abused me,’” Turnage said. “Now it’s, ‘We get
sexually abused.’”
By the time Turnage spoke to Taylor again, later that afternoon, her skepticism
sounded palpable. Turnage focused on one particular inconsistency: whether
Taylor actually liked going for rides with Henry. “If you’re mad because you got
your phone taken away, let’s say that now and be done with it,” she said in the
recorded interview. “Because I have three stories that say you like to be with
your dad, you’re daddy’s little girl, you love to go with him because you like
to get out of the house.”
Taylor went silent. By necessity, she had developed a keen sense of the unsaid
moods and whims of the adults around her. She had done the mental math when she
joined Henry on the car ride the night before to visit his sister in the
hospital. Taylor thought the somber occasion would keep her safe. But after the
hospital and a quick stop at Taco Bell, Henry pulled into the Handy gas station
and came out with a box of condoms stuffed into his front pocket, and she knew
she had miscalculated.
Now, faced with an irritated deputy, Taylor realized she miscalculated again:
She assumed the police would believe her.
> “They’re going to pull you from your mom and your brother, and you’re going to
> have to go back into foster care.”
“What’s going on, Taylor?” Turnage asked. “Because you understand, if your dad
goes to jail, he doesn’t come back.” There would be other consequences too,
Turnage said. Her dad’s mower repair business would shut down. Her mom would
lose the car while police checked it for DNA. She wouldn’t get the shoes she
wanted, or the braces she needed. “They’re going to pull you from your mom and
your brother, and you’re going to have to go back into foster care,” Turnage
said.
A moment passed, and then another. Finally, in a small, strained voice, Taylor
said, “Everything I told you earlier is not a lie.”
With that, Turnage told Taylor that she was going to the regional hospital “to
have a sexual assault kit done.” Taylor didn’t know what that was.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To hear a clip from Detective Melissa Turnage’s interview with Taylor Cadle,
listen below. A transcript for this audio can be found here.
https://www.motherjones.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Turnage-interviewing-Taylor.mp3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Later that night, she slipped her arms through the sleeves of a too-big hospital
gown and gingerly placed her feet into the stirrups. She shivered under the
bright, fluorescent lights, nauseated from hunger and exhaustion. Although a
doctor had walked her through what the examination would entail, Taylor was
still shocked by the cold, hard metal thing that she later learned was called a
speculum. As the doctor took one swab, and then another, and then another,
Taylor clenched the side of the hospital bed, knuckles white, tears streaming
down her cheeks.
Now 21 years old, Taylor has the same long hair and slight frame that she had
when she was 12, but she no longer holds herself like she’s trying to make
herself small. When we first met her in person, at an Airbnb for an interview in
front of cameras and lights, she walked in as if she did this all the time,
deftly setting her then-8-month-old daughter up for a nap in the bedroom before
speaking, for nearly five hours straight, with the self-assurance and confidence
of someone much older. She has a tattoo of the birthday of her son, who is 3
years old, in roman numerals on her left forearm, a nose ring, and dyed black
hair—all decisions, she notes with a trace of pride, that she made despite
Lisa’s disapproval soon after she turned 18.
Taylor at home with her two children. Melanie Metz
But perhaps the biggest act of defiance is that she has decided to speak
publicly about what happened to her when she was 12. Asked if she wanted to use
a pseudonym or just part of her name, she said no—she wants to use her full
name, and she wants to share her whole story.
The way Taylor was treated—as a victim, but also as a suspect—flies in the face
of best practices in handling sexual assault investigations. Her case isn’t an
isolated one. In a multiyear investigation, the Center for Investigative
Reporting identified hundreds of similar cases across the country in which
police criminalized the very people reporting sexual assault.
> “I think from the beginning—from our first interview—she had already had her
> mind made up about me. She made me feel like the monster.”
Armed with hours of recorded interviews, police reports and state records
stemming from her report eight years ago, Taylor simmers with fury about how
Turnage handled her allegation. “I think from the beginning—from our first
interview—she had already had her mind made up about me,” she says. “She made me
feel like the monster.”
But when she thinks about herself that night on the hospital bed, Taylor
crumples. In court records from her case is a photo from the sexual assault
exam, her 12-year-old self looking up at the camera from the hospital bed.
“Little me,” she said recently, her voice catching as she stared into her own
eyes. “Broken inside. With a look of ‘Are you listening yet? Do you believe me
yet?’”
Taylor’s earliest memories are of parenting her younger siblings. As a child,
she gave them baths, made them food, and tucked them into bed. She was her mom’s
“best friend,” she says. Taylor served as a lookout when her mom would steal
drugs from her boyfriend, and she knew to pee in a cup and leave it under the
bathroom sink when the probation officer came by.
“I worried about everything,” she says. “I stressed about everything that, quite
honestly, a child should never have to worry about.”
When she was 7, amid drug use and violence at home, DCF placed Taylor into
foster care, according to agency records. “I wasn’t relieved as much as I
probably should’ve,” Taylor says. “It was still hard because being a child, and
all you ever want is your mom.”
For the next year and a half, she bounced from foster home to foster home. It
was a “scary, confusing” time, Taylor says. She desperately wanted to be
reconnected with her parents and siblings, who had been placed in other homes.
Her birth father had been a source of normalcy and stability before she was
taken into state custody, but his drug use, too, precluded him from being
cleared by DCF.
Cows graze in a field near the Cadles’ Polk County home.Melanie Metz
Taylor’s tendency to assert control, key to her survival as a young child,
became a liability that was pathologized in reports and case notes. Foster
parents and case workers labeled her “defiant” and “bossy.” She had tantrums
often and was accused of lying about little things, like stealing peanuts from
the grocery store and taking another child’s phone. “Lying seems to have been a
defense mechanism that has worked in the past to keep her safe,” noted one
social worker in an assessment.
When Taylor was 8, Lisa and Henry “surfaced,” as it was described in a case
manager’s notes. They were relatives of her birth father—Taylor didn’t really
remember them—and were excited about adopting Taylor. They said their 6-year-old
adoptive son wanted a big sister.
Taylor soon began making regular visits to the Cadles’ home in Polk City,
partway between Tampa and Orlando. The family lived in a small mobile home
surrounded by pastures and swamps, 45 minutes from the nearest Walmart. Taylor
had reservations, telling staffers on her case that she was wary of moving again
and scared of being rejected.
But she had little say in the matter: Two days before Taylor’s ninth birthday,
her adoption was finalized. The Cadles had taken Taylor on shopping sprees and
trips to SeaWorld during her weekend visits, but after the adoption, the family
dynamic shifted. Discipline was harsh: Lisa was quick to smack Taylor across the
mouth if she talked back, Taylor says, “but when Henry got ahold of us, it was a
whole different story.” She still remembers having to wear jeans to school one
sweltering day because his beating with a cooking spoon on her calves had left
welts.
She felt claustrophobic in the cramped home, and begged Henry and Lisa to let
her get out of the house. Lisa and her adoptive brother were homebodies, but
Henry also liked to go for drives, so she went along.
It was on these long drives that he would assault Taylor, sometimes several
times in a week, she says. A turnoff on an isolated backroad became his go-to
spot. Across from a wilderness preserve, next to a cell tower access road, he
would pull over.
Taylor tried to predict and avoid situations where he would see opportunity for
abuse. “If I knew we were taking a back road or anything of the sort, I didn’t
want to go because I knew what would happen,” she says. “I had to be on all 10
toes, 24-7.”
Fearful of going back to foster care, Taylor didn’t tell any authority
figures—until that Sunday morning in July 2016, when she met Detective Melissa
Turnage.
A statue of a Polk County sheriff’s deputy outside the sheriff’s
departmentMelanie Metz
Turnage was in her ninth year with the Polk County Sheriff’s Office and
considered a model deputy, according to her performance reviews. Turnage’s
“integrity is above reproach,” wrote her supervisor in the spring of 2015.
But mistakes quickly followed. In November 2015, during an interview with a man
suspected of sexually assaulting a child, Turnage failed to read the suspect a
key part of his Miranda rights—an omission that resulted in the suppression of
the suspect’s confession. Turnage was suspended for eight hours, according to
department records.
The following month, Turnage interviewed children who alleged their father was
raping them, and then left for Christmas vacation without bringing the suspect
in for questioning or updating her supervisors on the status of the case. While
she was away, her colleagues found out about the seriousness of the accusations
and immediately arrested the suspect. “Your decision to not complete this
investigation or advise me of the interview results is inexcusable,” her
supervisor wrote in a letter that year. “Disclosures made by children in this
case must be acted upon immediately if the investigation allows for it.”
By August 2016, Turnage was in the middle of her investigation into Taylor’s
case, and she wanted to do a “clarification interview” with Taylor—at a noisy
truck stop parking lot. As cars whizzed by on the highway, Taylor thought it was
an odd location to meet. Perhaps, she thought, it was out of convenience—the
midpoint between the sheriff’s office and Tampa, where Taylor had been crashing
with Henry’s adult daughter ever since that day in church.
Leaning against her car, Turnage said she’d gone through Taylor’s phone records,
and saw that she was texting continuously at the time she said she was raped.
Taylor explained that she used her phone as a barrier so Henry wouldn’t talk to
her during the abuse. If that was the case, asked Turnage, why didn’t Taylor
alert someone to the abuse while it was occurring? Taylor said she didn’t know.
Turnage looked for Henry on surveillance footage from the gas station where he
supposedly bought condoms, she told Taylor, but he wasn’t there. Taylor had been
quiet, if skeptical, in her interactions with Turnage up to this point, but now
her temper flared. Henry was there, Taylor said, and it wasn’t her fault if
Turnage couldn’t find evidence. “I am telling the truth,” she insisted. She
stormed to her sister’s car and locked herself inside.
The Polk County Courthouse in Bartow, FloridaMelanie Metz
Turnage concluded that there wasn’t evidence to support a criminal charge
against Henry. The surveillance footage turned up nothing. The car hadn’t shown
any evidence of bodily fluids. The hospital exam hadn’t found evidence of
trauma. Taylor had said the abuse happened near a pile of tires on a quiet road
near the Cadles’ home, but Turnage only found a busy road with no tire pile in
sight.
Sexual assault investigations involve sensitive gathering of information by
trained professionals who understand the dynamics of abuse—ideally in neutral,
safe, quiet settings with no distractions, said Jerri Sites, an expert in child
abuse investigations who facilitates trainings on best practices. After
listening to recordings of Turnage’s interviews, Sites concluded that they
sounded like interrogations by a biased detective. “It seemed as though she was
trying to pressure the child to recant,” she said. “It was really, really hard
to listen to.”
Turnage didn’t bring the same skepticism to her interviews with Lisa and Henry.
Her interview with Henry outside the church—the only time he was officially
questioned—lasted just 20 minutes. During this time, he made a troubling
admission. When asked if he would take a polygraph test, Henry declined. “I’ve
had sex with a lot of people in the shower with my eyes closed, if you know what
I mean,” he explained. “I’m a man.”
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To hear a clip from Detective Melissa Turnage’s interview with Henry Cadle,
listen below. A transcript for this audio can be found here.
https://www.motherjones.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Turnage-interviewing-Henry_daydreaming.mp3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If Turnage was concerned about Henry acknowledging he had sexual thoughts about
his adoptive daughter, she didn’t show it. “Daydreaming about it and answering
questions in reference to the allegations are two totally different things,” she
told him.
There were other missed opportunities during the investigation. There is no
indication that Turnage asked for Henry to be forensically examined, even though
the suspect’s body sometimes provides more evidence than the victim’s. When
Turnage went looking for the remote road with the pile of tires, a location that
Taylor described with the uncertainty of a 12-year-old who doesn’t drive, she
never asked Taylor to join her to show her where it was.
Finally, Turnage erred in gathering a key piece of evidence: video of Henry
buying condoms at a gas station. Surveillance footage from Henry and Taylor’s
previous stop, Taco Bell, showed them leaving at 7:43 p.m. They should have
arrived at the gas station about a half hour later, but confoundingly, Turnage
requested footage starting 45 minutes later. In those missing 15 minutes, Henry
likely would have already come and gone.
Turnage’s investigation came to a head after five months, in December 2016. She
spoke with Taylor on the porch outside the Cadles’ home to deliver the news: The
final results from the rape kit had come back, and there was no evidence of
Henry’s DNA. “I’m not saying you’re lying,” Turnage told Taylor. “I just want to
know why, if everything you said is true, why am I not finding anything?”
Taylor’s voice came out as a whimper. “I don’t know,” she said. “I swear on my
life it happened.”
In fact, rape kits often don’t show evidence of abusers’ DNA, especially when
more than 24 hours have passed since the abuse occurred, or when a condom was
used—both of which applied in Taylor’s case.
“If it happened, there would be—there would be DNA found,” Turnage said. “And we
didn’t find anything.”
If Taylor lived in another county, perhaps her case would have ended there:
allegations made, no corroborating evidence found, no charge against the alleged
abuser. But in Polk County, no wrongdoing is too small for a consequence.
Sheriff Judd often quotes a phrase he learned from his late father: “Right is
right, and wrong is never right.”
“Polk County has a very pro-arrest outlook,” said Joel Dempsey, a detective with
the office until 2018. “If charges are deemed justifiable, then [suspects] are
likely going to be charged.”
Inside the house, Turnage told Lisa that the sheriff’s office planned to move
forward with a criminal charge against Taylor for lying to a law enforcement
officer about a felony. Lisa was on board. “We know she’s mouthy, and she tries
to act older than what she is,” she said.
Afterward, Turnage spoke with Taylor’s adoptive sister about what Taylor’s life
would look like if she were sent to the juvenile detention center.
“You’re in your pretty little blue jumpsuit, with your little flip flops, and
you’re housed with everybody else,” said Turnage. “She would come in and look
like the pretty girl.”
Hearing bits and pieces of the conversation through the sliding porch door,
Taylor had the distinct feeling that she was drowning.
Two days after meeting with Taylor at the Cadles’ home, Turnage filed an
affidavit. The real crime wasn’t the alleged sexual abuse—it was that Taylor had
given false information to a law enforcement officer, a first-degree
misdemeanor. The victim of this crime, according to the affidavit, was the Polk
County Sheriff’s Office.
Taylor Cadle, 21, wrote records requests to obtain documents and recordings from
her 2016 and 2017 cases.Melanie Metz
Taylor is one of hundreds of victims alleging sexual assault who have been
charged with false reporting nationwide. No federal agency tracks the prevalence
of false-reporting charges, but over a multiyear investigation, documented in
the Emmy Award–winning film Victim/Suspect, the Center for Investigative
Reporting (which produces Mother Jones and Reveal) identified more than 230
cases of reporting victims charged with crimes, originating from nearly every
state.
Most criminal justice experts estimate that 2 to 8 percent of sexual assault
allegations are actually false. But law enforcement officers tend to assume the
rate of false reporting is much higher—in part because police officers don’t
always receive training on how trauma can affect memory or behavior.
Through dozens of freedom of information requests, we amassed a
first-of-its-kind trove of audio and video evidence documenting the police
practice of criminalizing those who report sexual assault. We found examples of
police officers lying, deploying interrogation techniques meant for criminal
suspects that, when used on unsuspecting, traumatized people, can undercut their
credibility and even cause them to recant. Of 52 cases analyzed closely, nearly
two-thirds resulted in the alleged victim recanting. In nine cases, the
recantation was the only evidence cited by police.
Most cases centered on adults accusing other adults, largely because juvenile
arrests are not usually matters of public record. But a few examples emerged of
children being charged.
In 2008, after an 11-year-old girl in Washington, DC, twice reported being
sexually assaulted, she was charged with making a false report. But, as a
Washington Post investigation detailed, detectives didn’t follow basic
guidelines for how to treat victims of sexual assault. They lied to her, saying
there was evidence contradicting her account, despite two medical reports
confirming that she suffered genital injuries. Still, police and prosecutors
wanted her punished for fabricating her report. After a plea deal, she was taken
in as a ward of the District of Columbia, and spent more than two years in
residential mental health facilities.
In 2014, a 12-year-old Indiana girl told police that a boy forced her to have
sex with him. Phone records revealed that the boy apologized to her after the
incident. Still, a detective challenged her use of the word “force”—she told the
boy no, she said in a recorded police interview, but he didn’t hold her down.
The detective sent the case to prosecutors, who charged her with lying.
We also learned of a 12-year-old girl in Polk County, Florida: Taylor. Last
year, we sent Taylor a message on Facebook, explaining our investigation into
police turning the tables on victims and asking if she’d like to talk about what
happened to her. She immediately responded: “I’m sorry I’m shocked,” she wrote.
“Is this real?” Within an hour, she called to talk.
There were few public records tied to the case due to confidentiality laws meant
to protect children. So Taylor wrote records requests, signed release forms, and
notarized documents to obtain case files and recordings from the sheriff’s
office, the juvenile court, the circuit court, the Department of Children and
Families, and the Department of Juvenile Justice. Then she shared them with us.
The culture of consequences that permeates the Polk County Sheriff’s Office
applies to kids as well as adults. The same year as Taylor’s case, for example,
the sheriff’s office accused an 11-year-old girl of lying about an attempted
abduction. She, too, was charged with filing a false police report, which the
sheriff’s office wrote on Facebook would “help re-enforce the lesson” after she
wasted police resources.
Between 2019 and 2023, more children in Polk County were charged with
misdemeanor obstruction of justice—an umbrella category that includes false
reporting—than in any other Florida county. Children in Polk were twice as
likely to face the charge than children in the state overall, according to an
analysis of data from Florida’s Department of Juvenile Justice.
Such charges may be intended to make the community safer, but they can do the
opposite, said Sites, the child abuse expert. “It’s hard enough to come forward
in the first place,” she said, “and if the community feels that someone might be
charged, people aren’t going to come forward.” Even in cases when a child isn’t
telling the truth, she said, the response should be support services to help a
child understand that it’s not okay to lie—but also efforts to understand why
they did so in the first place. “Something is not right if somebody’s going to
go to those lengths to falsely accuse somebody,” she said.
Turnage’s conclusion that Taylor was lying had bigger ramifications: DCF was
supposed to conduct its own investigation, but it closed the case on the grounds
that Turnage hadn’t found evidence of abuse.
The agency also appears to have used Taylor’s years of records against her. DCF
records reference two allegations of sexual abuse before 2016. When Taylor was
5, her mother’s friend was arrested for sexually assaulting Taylor. And when
Taylor was 11, DCF investigated a report made by her school that her gym teacher
had touched her inappropriately. Taylor didn’t report the incident
herself—rather, it was a rumor started by a group of girls. Taylor denied the
rumor, and the case was closed with no indicators of abuse, according to the
report.
> “It’s hard enough to come forward in the first place, and if the community
> feels that someone might be charged, people aren’t going to come forward.”
But by 2016, the details didn’t seem to matter to DCF. In its report closing the
investigation into Henry’s alleged abuse, the agency noted, “There is a pattern
of...reports involving Taylor with allegations of sexual abuse and being touched
by other males.”
Richard Wexler, who leads the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform,
said that child protective services agencies often give adoptive families the
benefit of the doubt. “Whenever a child welfare agency investigates abuse in
foster care or in an adoptive home it is, in effect, investigating
itself—because they put the child there in the first place,” he said. “That
creates an enormous incentive to see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil and
write no evil in the casefile.”
Remarkably, the same day Turnage filed the affidavit accusing Taylor of lying,
she received a disciplinary letter from a lieutenant regarding another case.
After investigating the sexual assault of a minor, Turnage had arrested the
wrong person. A video of the assault showed the suspect had visible tattoos, but
the man she detained had none. “It is imperative that as a detective you look at
the totality of the circumstances and all evidence present in developing
probable cause to make an arrest,” the letter read. It concluded, “You are a
valued member of this agency and I am confident this will not recur.”
After four months with her adoptive sister, Taylor moved back in with the
Cadles. Henry was friendly with her, full of smiles. “It was like a sticky
sweet,” she says. He didn’t ask about the past four months or comment on the
investigation—instead, he acted as if nothing had happened.
Taylor kept to herself, holing up in her room. She wrote about her dreams in her
journal, like the one where she was trapped with an alligator in a locked room.
Sometimes, she’d get so upset that she’d crouch on the floor, rocking back and
forth, pulling out fistfuls of hair.
She vacillated between depression, fury, and exhaustion. She worried that if she
stuck to her story in the face of her criminal charge, she would be sent to
juvie. “I was basically like, I have no other choice,” she says. “I have to
recant my story.”
In a meeting in February 2017 with Lisa, Henry, and her probation officer,
Taylor said that she lied about being raped because she was mad about her
cellphone being taken away. A report from the meeting reads, “Father extremely
hurt by youth’s actions but forgives her.”
Three months later, on the way to the Polk County Courthouse for her
arraignment, Lisa told her to “take it on the chin,” Taylor remembers. The state
had offered Taylor a deal: If she pleaded guilty to her charge and completed the
terms of her probation, the charge would be dismissed. Lisa and Taylor both
signed a document agreeing for Taylor to “freely and voluntarily” waive her
right to a lawyer and represent herself. She pleaded guilty to giving false
information to a law enforcement officer.
Judge Mark Hofstad ordered probation, and signed an order for the terms: 15
hours of community service, a 7 p.m. curfew, and limits on leaving a tri-county
area without permission from Taylor’s probation officer.
Taylor also had to write two apology letters: one to an unspecified officer, and
the second to Henry. Without giving the words any thought, she scribbled in her
journal and tore the pages out.
“Dear dad,
im sorry for what i did. I didn’t stop and think of my consequences of these
actions. This will not happen again + im sorry.”
One evening in July 2017, a month after writing the apology letters, Taylor
accompanied Henry to pick up a mower that needed repairs.
The sun was setting as they made their way home, and Henry pulled into a Dollar
General to get something to drink. Taylor waited in the truck—now that she was
13, she could finally sit in front. As Henry walked out of the store, she saw
that he was empty-handed, but his front pocket was bulging.
She realized several things simultaneously. The first was that he had bought
condoms—which was confirmed when he got into the car and tossed a Lifestyles box
in her lap. The second: She had thought that Henry would be too scared to abuse
her again after all the scrutiny, but he had been emboldened. The third: She
didn’t have anyone to call for help. The adults in her life—and the
police—thought she was a liar.
Finally: She had to document what he did to her that night, so there would be no
question about what had happened.
“I had to find the evidence for them,” she says. “Because if I didn’t find the
evidence for them, I wasn’t too sure they would find it.”
As Henry drove, she made sure he could see that she was playing a game called
Piano Tiles, tapping black piano keys as they floated across the screen. About
15 minutes into their drive, Taylor tilted the screen away from Henry for a
moment and snapped a photo of the condom box.
Henry drove to the same spot as he had a year before, on the turnout of the
quiet road that cut through the swamp. It was dusk outside, the road empty, the
night quiet other than the chirping crickets and cows bellowing in a nearby
pasture. As Henry walked around the back of the truck, Taylor recorded a
six-second video panning to four crucial visuals: the radio clock reading 8:29
p.m., the back of Henry’s head, the condoms on the dashboard, and the view
outside her window.
Then, she says, Henry unzipped his pants and ordered her to pull down hers. “You
know what to do,” he said. Taylor’s Android allowed her to take photos by
swiping up anywhere on the screen. When Henry told her to hurry up with her
phone, she told him to wait a second—she was just closing applications. She
swiped up again and again, silently snapping photos.
After it was all over, when he turned around to check for cars, she shoved the
empty condom box under the seat. They began the drive home—AC pumping, pop music
playing on the radio—and Taylor mentally collected more evidence: the white
smear on the seat, the bushes where he threw a used tissue, the stretch of grass
where he tossed unused condoms out the window as they drove.
Once home, Taylor told Lisa she was taking the dogs for a walk. Standing in the
yard in the dark, she deliberated. She was terrified of calling the cops. If she
wasn’t believed again, surely she’d face an even harsher punishment than the
first time. But if she didn’t call the cops, nothing would change. The thought,
on repeat: Am I going to do it?
She dialed 911.
Taylor describes the next few hours like scenes in a movie: the cars driving up,
no lights or sirens, as Taylor had instructed, since Henry was sleeping. A cop’s
flashlight through the backdoor. Taylor standing outside with an officer,
showing the photos and video on her phone. The lights of cop cars bouncing off
Henry’s vacant face as he was escorted through the yard in handcuffs. Taylor
bawling after an officer asked her to go back to the godforsaken, freezing
hospital in the middle of the night for another rape kit exam.
> “I was fighting for my life, in a very quiet scream.”
At first, Henry denied any wrongdoing. “I don’t know what the hell—why is she
doing this again?” he told Polk County Detective Joel Dempsey in a recorded
interview. It was only when Dempsey showed Henry the photos that Henry admitted
that the photos were, in fact, of him.
Henry continued to deflect blame in recorded calls from jail, insisting that he
had been set up. “I was dealing with a venomous snake,” he told his sister. In
another call, he insisted, “It’s not all my fault neither. Yes, I’m the adult,
but it’s not all my fault.”
Two days after the assault, Taylor sat through a videotaped forensic interview
at a child advocacy center—the same child advocacy center and the same case
worker she spoke to the year before. She spoke with urgency as she explained the
evidence she had collected, still convinced that, somehow, Henry would work his
way out of this.
“I mean, I really hope that they actually, like, take the time to, like,
actually investigate and to listen to my side of the story before they just want
to accuse me of giving false information,” Taylor told the case worker. “I tried
everything. I did everything I could do.”
Video
TAYLOR CADLE’S 2017 FORENSIC INTERVIEW
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FBHPFQgLfSM
Today, Taylor remembers this moment in vivid detail. “I was fighting for my
life,” she says, “in a very quiet scream.”
The next day, Henry Cadle was charged with sexually assaulting Taylor.
“I don't remember any other case where the victim had the forethought or the
intelligence to collect their own evidence and to be so thorough,” Dempsey said
recently. “Just, unbelievable amount of presence of mind that she showed.”
Assistant State Attorney Joni Batie-McGrew, who approved the original
false-reporting charge against Taylor, filed a motion to vacate Taylor’s
probation and guilty plea. The information Taylor had provided to the police,
the motion said, “has since been determined to be true.”
The Department of Juvenile Justice sent Taylor a letter terminating her
supervision, adding that it was the department’s hope that the experience was
beneficial to her.
In February 2019, Henry pleaded no contest to the sexual battery of a child. He
was sentenced to 17 years in prison.
Taylor still lives in Polk County, just a half hour away from where she once
lived with Lisa and Henry. She stays at home with her two kids—a 3-year-old boy
and a 1-year-old girl—and the family’s massive pitbull mastiff while her fiancé
works at an auto glass repair shop.
Motherhood comes naturally to Taylor. In the moments of chaos—when she’s trying
to feed her baby and her toddler is climbing on her back and the dog is
barking—she laughs. When her baby cries, she coos, “What’s wrong, girlie?” In
her free time, Taylor vlogs about beauty and parenting in a way that’s
refreshingly real, talking, for example, about how to wax your armpits or how
dinner that night will be subs because the Walmart bread is getting stale.
In October, our interview with Taylor aired on PBS NewsHour. “Why punish me?”
she said on camera, with an unflinching gaze. “What did I do for you to punish
me?”
The video got millions of views on TikTok, and local and national publications
picked up the story. Viewers flooded the comments sections of the Polk County
Sheriff’s Office’s social media pages to demand justice for Taylor. But some of
those comments mysteriously disappeared from view, prompting more outrage.
Taylor decided to send Judd an email directly. She admired his work overall, she
wrote, but she was outraged.
“I thought you guys were supposed to help? Not silence a victim.”
Judd has often said that the key to being a good sheriff is transparency with
the public. One of his often-repeated phrases is: “If you mess up, then dress
up, fess up, and fix it up.” But records show Henry Cadle’s arrest didn’t prompt
any disciplinary action at the time. Judd has not responded to questions about
the case publicly, or to Taylor.
Turnage didn’t respond to our attempts to reach her, and Judd’s office declined
an interview. When we showed up at the sheriff’s office in August and asked to
speak with Judd, we were told that a public information officer would come down
to talk. Minutes later, we were told, she had been pulled into a meeting and
didn’t know when she would be available. (A spokesperson told the Lakeland
Ledger that the sheriff’s office wouldn’t speak to us because it “became clear
they were not interested in accurately reporting an investigation that occurred
in 2016.”)
Florida Senate Minority Leader Lauren Book, however, had more luck. A Democrat
from Broward County, Book sponsored recent legislation requiring law enforcement
to receive training in trauma-informed sexual assault investigations. After
listening to audio of Turnage’s interviews that we shared with her, an incensed
Book asked Judd for information about Taylor’s 2016 case.
A life-size display of Donald Trump and Grady Judd in Polk County, constructed
by a resident before the 2020 electionMelanie Metz
In a letter to Book last month, Polk County Captain Dina Russell defended
Turnage’s "thorough investigation” and doubled down on the same concerns with
Taylor that Turnage had back in 2016: Taylor had said she didn’t like going on
rides with Henry, but family members said otherwise. Henry wasn’t on the
surveillance video buying condoms. Taylor was texting during the abuse, but,
Russell wrote, “made no mention in her texts she was being abused.”
But after listening to a recording of an interview from the case, Russell
acknowledged that Turnage’s approach didn’t meet the department’s standards. She
sent Turnage a “letter of retraining” last month.
“Several of your questions and comments were inappropriate,” Russell wrote.
“While your intent may have been to elicit the truth and gather essential
information, referencing personal circumstances such as foster care or financial
hardships can create an environment of discomfort, fear, mistrust is simply
unacceptable.” The letter made no mention of the ramifications of these failures
for Taylor, or the fact that Taylor was later deemed to be telling the truth.
The captain’s demands of Turnage were minimal: Within a week, she was required
to complete an online course on interview and interrogation techniques. The
captain’s conclusion echoed the disciplinary letter Turnage received in 2016,
when she arrested the wrong suspect: “I am confident you will take the
appropriate steps to prevent any similar events in the future.”
Turnage is still a detective, though she’s no longer in the special victims
unit. Her latest performance review noted that she’s on track to become a
sergeant.
Batie-McGrew, who prosecuted Taylor’s first case, also didn’t respond to
multiple requests for comment. But the state attorney’s office said in an email
that after Taylor was proven to be telling the truth, they made a policy change:
They now require that the office be consulted before charging a juvenile who
claims to be a victim of sexual abuse, according to Jacob Orr, the chief
assistant state attorney for the 10th Judicial Circuit.
Since Taylor’s case, Orr said, the office has charged three other juveniles with
falsely reporting sexual abuse. He said those cases included “irrefutable
evidence proving the falsehood” of their claims, but he didn’t elaborate on how
police were able to irrefutably prove that the children were not sexually
abused.
For Taylor, three more children is far too many. “It should have stopped with
me,” she says. “It shouldn’t have even gotten to me, but it should have stopped
with me.”
Once in a while, Taylor drives on the quiet road through the swamp, past the
spot where Henry abused her. It’s still hard, but having her kids in the
backseat makes clear how much things have changed over the past seven years.
She’s no longer a child being driven there against her will, bracing herself for
the worst, preparing to crouch on the floorboard if anyone drives by.
Now, she is in the driver’s seat. “It’s a sense of relief, in a way,” she says.
“I’m going past this spot because this is the route I chose to take.”
Melissa Lewis contributed data analysis.
Tag - Polk County
Melissa Turnage approached the 12-year-old girl with the imposing affect of a
cop: arms crossed, lips pursed, badge visible, tone skeptical.
“So, you don’t know how many times this has happened this week?”
Taylor Cadle slouched on a couch, staring at her lap and picking at her nails.
That morning, in the summer of 2016, she had gotten into a fight with her
adoptive parents when they took away her phone on the ride to church, on the
outskirts of Tampa, Florida. A minister’s wife, noticing Taylor’s tear-stained
face, pulled her into an office to ask what was going on. Taylor hadn’t been
planning to tell her everything, but it all came spilling out. The minister
called the police, and now Turnage, a detective with the Polk County Sheriff’s
Office, was standing before her.
Taylor spoke tentatively, in barely more than a whisper, as she told Turnage in
a recorded interview that her adoptive father, Henry Cadle, had been sexually
assaulting her for years. The inappropriate touching had started when she was 9
years old, shortly after Henry and Lisa, Taylor’s great uncle and his wife, had
adopted her. Over time, the abuse escalated. Now, he assaulted her “anytime he
gets the chance,” she said. She didn’t like going with him on errands because it
happened then, on the side of a quiet road that cut through a swamp. Standing
outside the car, he would put his privates inside of her privates, she told
Turnage. Taylor couldn’t say how many times he had raped her, but it had
happened just the night before. He did it whenever they drove to get milk, too,
which was three times a week.
“That’s a lot of driving,” Turnage said.
Taylor said nothing.
Turnage was embarking on the type of investigation that her boss, Polk County
Sheriff Grady Judd, had made a core mission of his agency. Judd is a beloved
figure in Polk County, where he has served as sheriff for the past two decades
and was just reelected to his sixth term. Known for his tough-on-crime rhetoric
and social media presence, Judd gives a near-daily “morning briefing” to his
700,000 TikTok followers, holding up mugshots of suspects, telling the stories
of crimes they allegedly committed—from stealing baby formula to driving
drunk—and welcoming them to jail, which he calls “Grady Judd’s Bed & Breakfast.”
Fans buy Grady Judd bobbleheads, Grady Judd mugs, and sweatshirts reading “God
Guns and Grady Judd.”
An old joke that has been repeated by Judd himself is that the most dangerous
place in Polk County is between Judd and a camera. He’s a regular guest on Fox
News, where he shares his outspoken views about subjects ranging from the
dangers of undocumented immigrants to the peril of looters after hurricanes, and
where the stories in Judd’s TikTok posts often find a national audience.
Sheriff Grady Judd is a beloved figure in Polk County, where he was just
reelected to his sixth term.Melanie Metz
But he claims his top priority is protecting children from sexual predators. The
county’s deputies have traveled to faraway places—from Colorado to Guatemala—to
extradite men accused of victimizing children in Polk County. “If you think that
you’re going to physically, sexually, or emotionally abuse a child and I’m not
going to get in there and protect them, you’re making a big mistake,” he told
MSNBC in 2015. In 2020, President Donald Trump appointed Judd to a federal
council overseeing all programs related to juvenile delinquency, and missing and
exploited children.
One might think that someone accused of the crimes Henry Cadle was accused of
would be a prime target for the Polk County Sheriff’s Office. But when Turnage
spoke with him, on a patio outside the church, she kept the interview brief and
light. Henry, who was 57, spoke about his relationship with Taylor with a breezy
confidence. She had anger issues and could be difficult—traits he attributed to
her rocky upbringing—but he loved her to death. “Does she have dad wrapped
around her finger? Yes. Everybody will tell you that,” Henry said.
Rather than asking him if he had sexually abused Taylor, Turnage floated a
theory: “Basically, Taylor, I guess, has made up these allegations, okay? That
you have been sexually abusing her.”
Henry brimmed with righteous indignation. “Why in the heck she would conjure up
something like this about me, I don’t know. Only thing I’ve ever did with that
kid is loved her.”
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To hear a clip from Detective Melissa Turnage’s interview with Henry Cadle,
listen below. A transcript for this audio can be found here.
https://www.motherjones.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Turnage-interviewing-Henry_made-up-allegations.mp3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lisa Cadle was also dumbfounded by the allegations against her husband. Taylor
adored Henry, Lisa told Turnage, and always begged to go with him on errands.
She was quick to point out that Taylor was “mouthy” and “has been known to say
things.” Turnage assured Lisa that kids had a way of making unfounded
accusations “when things don’t go the way that they want it to.”
“Back when we were younger, it was, you know, ‘We’ll call [the Department of
Children and Families] and say you abused me,’” Turnage said. “Now it’s, ‘We get
sexually abused.’”
By the time Turnage spoke to Taylor again, later that afternoon, her skepticism
sounded palpable. Turnage focused on one particular inconsistency: whether
Taylor actually liked going for rides with Henry. “If you’re mad because you got
your phone taken away, let’s say that now and be done with it,” she said in the
recorded interview. “Because I have three stories that say you like to be with
your dad, you’re daddy’s little girl, you love to go with him because you like
to get out of the house.”
Taylor went silent. By necessity, she had developed a keen sense of the unsaid
moods and whims of the adults around her. She had done the mental math when she
joined Henry on the car ride the night before to visit his sister in the
hospital. Taylor thought the somber occasion would keep her safe. But after the
hospital and a quick stop at Taco Bell, Henry pulled into the Handy gas station
and came out with a box of condoms stuffed into his front pocket, and she knew
she had miscalculated.
Now, faced with an irritated deputy, Taylor realized she miscalculated again:
She assumed the police would believe her.
> “They’re going to pull you from your mom and your brother, and you’re going to
> have to go back into foster care.”
“What’s going on, Taylor?” Turnage asked. “Because you understand, if your dad
goes to jail, he doesn’t come back.” There would be other consequences too,
Turnage said. Her dad’s mower repair business would shut down. Her mom would
lose the car while police checked it for DNA. She wouldn’t get the shoes she
wanted, or the braces she needed. “They’re going to pull you from your mom and
your brother, and you’re going to have to go back into foster care,” Turnage
said.
A moment passed, and then another. Finally, in a small, strained voice, Taylor
said, “Everything I told you earlier is not a lie.”
With that, Turnage told Taylor that she was going to the regional hospital “to
have a sexual assault kit done.” Taylor didn’t know what that was.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To hear a clip from Detective Melissa Turnage’s interview with Taylor Cadle,
listen below. A transcript for this audio can be found here.
https://www.motherjones.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Turnage-interviewing-Taylor.mp3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Later that night, she slipped her arms through the sleeves of a too-big hospital
gown and gingerly placed her feet into the stirrups. She shivered under the
bright, fluorescent lights, nauseated from hunger and exhaustion. Although a
doctor had walked her through what the examination would entail, Taylor was
still shocked by the cold, hard metal thing that she later learned was called a
speculum. As the doctor took one swab, and then another, and then another,
Taylor clenched the side of the hospital bed, knuckles white, tears streaming
down her cheeks.
Now 21 years old, Taylor has the same long hair and slight frame that she had
when she was 12, but she no longer holds herself like she’s trying to make
herself small. When we first met her in person, at an Airbnb for an interview in
front of cameras and lights, she walked in as if she did this all the time,
deftly setting her then-8-month-old daughter up for a nap in the bedroom before
speaking, for nearly five hours straight, with the self-assurance and confidence
of someone much older. She has a tattoo of the birthday of her son, who is 3
years old, in roman numerals on her left forearm, a nose ring, and dyed black
hair—all decisions, she notes with a trace of pride, that she made despite
Lisa’s disapproval soon after she turned 18.
Taylor at home with her two childrenMelanie Metz
But perhaps the biggest act of defiance is that she has decided to speak
publicly about what happened to her when she was 12. Asked if she wanted to use
a pseudonym or just part of her name, she said no—she wants to use her full
name, and she wants to share her whole story.
The way Taylor was treated—as a victim, but also as a suspect—flies in the face
of best practices in handling sexual assault investigations. Her case isn’t an
isolated one. In a multiyear investigation, the Center for Investigative
Reporting identified hundreds of similar cases across the country in which
police criminalized the very people reporting sexual assault.
> “I think from the beginning—from our first interview—she had already had her
> mind made up about me. She made me feel like the monster.”
Armed with hours of recorded interviews, police reports and state records
stemming from her report eight years ago, Taylor simmers with fury about how
Turnage handled her allegation. “I think from the beginning—from our first
interview—she had already had her mind made up about me,” she says. “She made me
feel like the monster.”
But when she thinks about herself that night on the hospital bed, Taylor
crumples. In court records from her case is a photo from the sexual assault
exam, her 12-year-old self looking up at the camera from the hospital bed.
“Little me,” she said recently, her voice catching as she stared into her own
eyes. “Broken inside. With a look of ‘Are you listening yet? Do you believe me
yet?’”
Taylor’s earliest memories are of parenting her younger siblings. As a child,
she gave them baths, made them food, and tucked them into bed. She was her mom’s
“best friend,” she says. Taylor served as a lookout when her mom would steal
drugs from her boyfriend, and she knew to pee in a cup and leave it under the
bathroom sink when the probation officer came by.
“I worried about everything,” she says. “I stressed about everything that, quite
honestly, a child should never have to worry about.”
When she was 7, amid drug use and violence at home, the Department of Children
and Families placed Taylor into foster care, according to agency records. “I
wasn’t relieved as much as I probably should’ve,” Taylor says. “It was still
hard because being a child, and all you ever want is your mom.”
For the next year and a half, she bounced from foster home to foster home. It
was a “scary, confusing” time, Taylor says. She desperately wanted to be
reconnected with her parents and siblings, who had been placed in other homes.
Her birth father had been a source of normalcy and stability before she was
taken into state custody, but his drug use, too, precluded him from being
cleared by DCF.
Cows graze in a field near the Cadles’ Polk County home.Melanie Metz
Taylor’s tendency to assert control, key to her survival as a young child,
became a liability that was pathologized in reports and case notes. Foster
parents and case workers labeled her “defiant” and “bossy.” She had tantrums
often and was accused of lying about little things, like stealing peanuts from
the grocery store and taking another child’s phone. “Lying seems to have been a
defense mechanism that has worked in the past to keep her safe,” noted one
social worker in an assessment.
When Taylor was 8, Lisa and Henry “surfaced,” as it was described in a case
manager’s notes. They were relatives of her birth father—Taylor didn’t really
remember them—and were excited about adopting Taylor. They said their 6-year-old
adoptive son wanted a big sister.
Taylor soon began making regular visits to the Cadles’ home in Polk City,
partway between Tampa and Orlando. The family lived in a small mobile home
surrounded by pastures and swamps, 45 minutes from the nearest Walmart. Taylor
had reservations, telling staffers on her case that she was wary of moving again
and scared of being rejected.
But she had little say in the matter: Two days before Taylor’s ninth birthday,
her adoption was finalized. The Cadles had taken Taylor on shopping sprees and
trips to SeaWorld during her weekend visits, but after the adoption, the family
dynamic shifted. Discipline was harsh: Lisa was quick to smack Taylor across the
mouth if she talked back, Taylor says, “but when Henry got ahold of us, it was a
whole different story.” She still remembers having to wear jeans to school one
sweltering day because his beating with a cooking spoon on her calves had left
welts.
She felt claustrophobic in the cramped home, and begged Henry and Lisa to let
her get out of the house. Lisa and her adoptive brother were homebodies, but
Henry also liked to go for drives, so she went along.
It was on these long drives that he would assault Taylor, sometimes several
times in a week, she says. A turnoff on an isolated backroad became his go-to
spot. Across from a wilderness preserve, next to a cell tower access road, he
would pull over.
Taylor tried to predict and avoid situations where he would see opportunity for
abuse. “If I knew we were taking a back road or anything of the sort, I didn’t
want to go because I knew what would happen,” she says. “I had to be on all 10
toes, 24-7.”
Fearful of going back to foster care, Taylor didn’t tell any authority
figures—until that Sunday morning in July 2016, when she met Detective Melissa
Turnage.
A statue of a Polk County sheriff’s deputy outside the sheriff’s
departmentMelanie Metz
Turnage was in her ninth year with the Polk County Sheriff’s Office and
considered a model deputy, according to her performance reviews. Turnage’s
“integrity is above reproach,” wrote her supervisor in the spring of 2015.
But mistakes quickly followed. In November 2015, during an interview with a man
suspected of sexually assaulting a child, Turnage failed to read the suspect a
key part of his Miranda rights—an omission that resulted in the suppression of
the suspect’s confession. Turnage was suspended for eight hours, according to
department records.
The following month, Turnage interviewed children who alleged their father was
raping them, and then left for Christmas vacation without bringing the suspect
in for questioning or updating her supervisors on the status of the case. While
she was away, her colleagues found out about the seriousness of the accusations
and immediately arrested the suspect. “Your decision to not complete this
investigation or advise me of the interview results is inexcusable,” her
supervisor wrote in a letter that year. “Disclosures made by children in this
case must be acted upon immediately if the investigation allows for it.”
By August 2016, Turnage was in the middle of her investigation into Taylor’s
case, and she wanted to do a “clarification interview” with Taylor—at a noisy
truck stop parking lot. As cars whizzed by on the highway, Taylor thought it was
an odd location to meet. Perhaps, she thought, it was out of convenience—the
midpoint between the sheriff’s office and Tampa, where Taylor had been crashing
with Henry’s adult daughter ever since that day in church.
Leaning against her car, Turnage said she’d gone through Taylor’s phone records,
and saw that she was texting continuously at the time she said she was raped.
Taylor explained that she used her phone as a barrier so Henry wouldn’t talk to
her during the abuse. If that was the case, asked Turnage, why didn’t Taylor
alert someone to the abuse while it was occurring? Taylor said she didn’t know.
Turnage looked for Henry on surveillance footage from the gas station where he
supposedly bought condoms, she told Taylor, but he wasn’t there. Taylor had been
quiet, if skeptical, in her interactions with Turnage up to this point, but now
her temper flared. Henry was there, Taylor said, and it wasn’t her fault if
Turnage couldn’t find evidence. “I am telling the truth,” she insisted. She
stormed to her sister’s car and locked herself inside.
The Polk County Courthouse in Bartow, FloridaMelanie Metz
Turnage concluded that there wasn’t evidence to support a criminal charge
against Henry. The surveillance footage turned up nothing. The car hadn’t shown
any evidence of bodily fluids. The hospital exam hadn’t found evidence of
trauma. Taylor had said the abuse happened near a pile of tires on a quiet road
near the Cadles’ home, but Turnage only found a busy road with no tire pile in
sight.
Sexual assault investigations involve sensitive gathering of information by
trained professionals who understand the dynamics of abuse—ideally in neutral,
safe, quiet settings with no distractions, said Jerri Sites, an expert in child
abuse investigations who facilitates trainings on best practices. After
listening to recordings of Turnage’s interviews, Sites concluded that they
sounded like interrogations by a biased detective. “It seemed as though she was
trying to pressure the child to recant,” she said. “It was really, really hard
to listen to.”
Turnage didn’t bring the same skepticism to her interviews with Lisa and Henry.
Her interview with Henry outside the church—the only time he was officially
questioned—lasted just 20 minutes. During this time, he made a troubling
admission. When asked if he would take a polygraph test, Henry declined. “I’ve
had sex with a lot of people in the shower with my eyes closed, if you know what
I mean,” he explained. “I’m a man.”
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
To hear a clip from Detective Melissa Turnage’s interview with Henry Cadle,
listen below. A transcript for this audio can be found here.
https://www.motherjones.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/11/Turnage-interviewing-Henry_daydreaming.mp3
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
If Turnage was concerned about Henry acknowledging he had sexual thoughts about
his adoptive daughter, she didn’t show it. “Daydreaming about it and answering
questions in reference to the allegations are two totally different things,” she
told him.
There were other missed opportunities during the investigation. There is no
indication that Turnage asked for Henry to be forensically examined, even though
the suspect’s body sometimes provides more evidence than the victim’s. When
Turnage went looking for the remote road with the pile of tires, a location that
Taylor described with the uncertainty of a 12-year-old who doesn’t drive, she
never asked Taylor to join her to show her where it was.
Finally, Turnage erred in gathering a key piece of evidence: video of Henry
buying condoms at a gas station. Surveillance footage from Henry and Taylor’s
previous stop, Taco Bell, showed them leaving at 7:43 p.m. They should have
arrived at the gas station about a half hour later, but confoundingly, Turnage
requested footage starting 45 minutes later. In those missing 15 minutes, Henry
likely would have already come and gone.
Turnage’s investigation came to a head after five months, in December 2016. She
spoke with Taylor on the porch outside the Cadles’ home to deliver the news: The
final results from the rape kit had come back, and there was no evidence of
Henry’s DNA. “I’m not saying you’re lying,” Turnage told Taylor. “I just want to
know why, if everything you said is true, why am I not finding anything?”
Taylor’s voice came out as a whimper. “I don’t know,” she said. “I swear on my
life it happened.”
In fact, rape kits often don’t show evidence of abusers’ DNA, especially when
more than 24 hours have passed since the abuse occurred, or when a condom was
used—both of which applied in Taylor’s case.
“If it happened, there would be—there would be DNA found,” Turnage said. “And we
didn’t find anything.”
If Taylor lived in another county, perhaps her case would have ended there:
allegations made, no corroborating evidence found, no charge against the alleged
abuser. But in Polk County, no wrongdoing is too small for a consequence.
Sheriff Judd often quotes a phrase he learned from his late father: “Right is
right, and wrong is never right.”
“Polk County has a very pro-arrest outlook,” said Joel Dempsey, a detective with
the office until 2018. “If charges are deemed justifiable, then [suspects] are
likely going to be charged.”
Inside the house, Turnage told Lisa that the sheriff’s office planned to move
forward with a criminal charge against Taylor for lying to a law enforcement
officer about a felony. Lisa was on board. “We know she’s mouthy, and she tries
to act older than what she is,” she said.
Afterward, Turnage spoke with Taylor’s adoptive sister about what Taylor’s life
would look like if she were sent to the juvenile detention center.
“You’re in your pretty little blue jumpsuit, with your little flip flops, and
you’re housed with everybody else,” said Turnage. “She would come in and look
like the pretty girl.”
Hearing bits and pieces of the conversation through the sliding porch door,
Taylor had the distinct feeling that she was drowning.
Two days after meeting with Taylor at the Cadles’ home, Turnage filed an
affidavit. The real crime wasn’t the alleged sexual abuse—it was that Taylor had
given false information to a law enforcement officer, a first-degree
misdemeanor. The victim of this crime, according to the affidavit, was the Polk
County Sheriff’s Office.
Taylor Cadle, 21, wrote records requests to obtain documents and recordings from
her 2016 and 2017 cases.Melanie Metz
Taylor is one of hundreds of victims alleging sexual assault who have been
charged with false reporting nationwide. No federal agency tracks the prevalence
of false-reporting charges, but over a multiyear investigation, documented in
the Emmy Award–winning film Victim/Suspect, the Center for Investigative
Reporting (which produces Mother Jones and Reveal) identified more than 230
cases of reporting victims charged with crimes, originating from nearly every
state.
Most criminal justice experts estimate that 2 to 8 percent of sexual assault
allegations are actually false. But law enforcement officers tend to assume the
rate of false reporting is much higher—in part because police officers don’t
always receive training on how trauma can affect memory or behavior.
Through dozens of freedom of information requests, we amassed a
first-of-its-kind trove of audio and video evidence documenting the police
practice of criminalizing those who report sexual assault. We found examples of
police officers lying, deploying interrogation techniques meant for criminal
suspects that, when used on unsuspecting, traumatized people, can undercut their
credibility and even cause them to recant. Of 52 cases analyzed closely, nearly
two-thirds resulted in the alleged victim recanting. In nine cases, the
recantation was the only evidence cited by police.
Most cases centered on adults accusing other adults, largely because juvenile
arrests are not usually matters of public record. But a few examples emerged of
children being charged.
In 2008, after an 11-year-old girl in Washington, DC, twice reported being
sexually assaulted, she was charged with making a false report. But, as a
Washington Post investigation detailed, detectives didn’t follow basic
guidelines for how to treat victims of sexual assault. They lied to her, saying
there was evidence contradicting her account, despite two medical reports
confirming that she suffered genital injuries. Still, police and prosecutors
wanted her punished for fabricating her report. After a plea deal, she was taken
in as a ward of the District of Columbia, and spent more than two years in
residential mental health facilities.
In 2014, a 12-year-old Indiana girl told police that a boy forced her to have
sex with him. Phone records revealed that the boy apologized to her after the
incident. Still, a detective challenged her use of the word “force”—she told the
boy no, she said in a recorded police interview, but he didn’t hold her down.
The detective sent the case to prosecutors, who charged her with lying.
We also learned of a 12-year-old girl in Polk County, Florida: Taylor. Last
year, we sent Taylor a message on Facebook, explaining our investigation into
police turning the tables on victims and asking if she’d like to talk about what
happened to her. She immediately responded: “I’m sorry I’m shocked,” she wrote.
“Is this real?” Within an hour, she called to talk.
There were few public records tied to the case due to confidentiality laws meant
to protect children. So Taylor wrote records requests, signed release forms, and
notarized documents to obtain case files and recordings from the sheriff’s
office, the juvenile court, the circuit court, the Department of Children and
Families, and the Department of Juvenile Justice. Then she shared them with us.
The culture of consequences that permeates the Polk County Sheriff’s Office
applies to kids as well as adults. The same year as Taylor’s case, for example,
the sheriff’s office accused an 11-year-old girl of lying about an attempted
abduction. She, too, was charged with filing a false police report, which the
sheriff’s office wrote on Facebook would “help re-enforce the lesson” after she
wasted police resources.
Between 2019 and 2023, more children in Polk County were charged with
misdemeanor obstruction of justice—an umbrella category that includes false
reporting—than in any other Florida county. Children in Polk were twice as
likely to face the charge than children in the state overall, according to an
analysis of data from Florida’s Department of Juvenile Justice.
Such charges may be intended to make the community safer, but they can do the
opposite, said Sites, the child abuse expert. “It’s hard enough to come forward
in the first place,” she said, “and if the community feels that someone might be
charged, people aren’t going to come forward.” Even in cases when a child isn’t
telling the truth, she said, the response should be support services to help a
child understand that it’s not okay to lie—but also efforts to understand why
they did so in the first place. “Something is not right if somebody’s going to
go to those lengths to falsely accuse somebody,” she said.
Turnage’s conclusion that Taylor was lying had bigger ramifications: DCF was
supposed to conduct its own investigation, but it closed the case on the grounds
that Turnage hadn’t found evidence of abuse.
The agency also appears to have used Taylor’s years of records against her. DCF
records reference two allegations of sexual abuse before 2016. When Taylor was
5, her mother’s friend was arrested for sexually assaulting Taylor. And when
Taylor was 11, DCF investigated a report made by her school that her gym teacher
had touched her inappropriately. Taylor didn’t report the incident
herself—rather, it was a rumor started by a group of girls. Taylor denied the
rumor, and the case was closed with no indicators of abuse, according to the
report.
> “It’s hard enough to come forward in the first place, and if the community
> feels that someone might be charged, people aren’t going to come forward.”
But by 2016, the details didn’t seem to matter to DCF. In its report closing the
investigation into Henry’s alleged abuse, the agency noted, “There is a pattern
of...reports involving Taylor with allegations of sexual abuse and being touched
by other males.”
Richard Wexler, who leads the National Coalition for Child Protection Reform,
said that child protective services agencies often give adoptive families the
benefit of the doubt. “Whenever a child welfare agency investigates abuse in
foster care or in an adoptive home it is, in effect, investigating
itself—because they put the child there in the first place,” he said. “That
creates an enormous incentive to see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil and
write no evil in the casefile.”
Remarkably, the same day Turnage filed the affidavit accusing Taylor of lying,
she received a disciplinary letter from a lieutenant regarding another case.
After investigating the sexual assault of a minor, Turnage had arrested the
wrong person. A video of the assault showed the suspect had visible tattoos, but
the man she detained had none. “It is imperative that as a detective you look at
the totality of the circumstances and all evidence present in developing
probable cause to make an arrest,” the letter read. It concluded, “You are a
valued member of this agency and I am confident this will not recur.”
After four months with her adoptive sister, Taylor moved back in with the
Cadles. Henry was friendly with her, full of smiles. “It was like a sticky
sweet,” she says. He didn’t ask about the past four months or comment on the
investigation—instead, he acted as if nothing had happened.
Taylor kept to herself, holing up in her room. She wrote about her dreams in her
journal, like the one where she was trapped with an alligator in a locked room.
Sometimes, she’d get so upset that she’d crouch on the floor, rocking back and
forth, pulling out fistfuls of hair.
She vacillated between depression, fury, and exhaustion. She worried that if she
stuck to her story in the face of her criminal charge, she would be sent to
juvie. “I was basically like, I have no other choice,” she says. “I have to
recant my story.”
In a meeting in February 2017 with Lisa, Henry, and her probation officer,
Taylor said that she lied about being raped because she was mad about her
cellphone being taken away. A report from the meeting reads, “Father extremely
hurt by youth’s actions but forgives her.”
Three months later, on the way to the Polk County Courthouse for her
arraignment, Lisa told her to “take it on the chin,” Taylor remembers. The state
had offered Taylor a deal: If she pleaded guilty to her charge and completed the
terms of her probation, the charge would be dismissed. Lisa and Taylor both
signed a document agreeing for Taylor to “freely and voluntarily” waive her
right to a lawyer and represent herself. She pleaded guilty to giving false
information to a law enforcement officer.
Judge Mark Hofstad ordered probation, and signed an order for the terms: 15
hours of community service, a 7 p.m. curfew, and limits on leaving a tri-county
area without permission from Taylor’s probation officer.
Taylor also had to write two apology letters: one to an unspecified officer, and
the second to Henry. Without giving the words any thought, she scribbled in her
journal and tore the pages out.
“Dear dad,
im sorry for what i did. I didn’t stop and think of my consequences of these
actions. This will not happen again + im sorry.”
One evening in July 2017, a month after writing the apology letters, Taylor
accompanied Henry to pick up a mower that needed repairs.
The sun was setting as they made their way home, and Henry pulled into a Dollar
General to get something to drink. Taylor waited in the truck—now that she was
13, she could finally sit in front. As Henry walked out of the store, she saw
that he was empty-handed, but his front pocket was bulging.
She realized several things simultaneously. The first was that he had bought
condoms—which was confirmed when he got into the car and tossed a Lifestyles box
in her lap. The second: She had thought that Henry would be too scared to abuse
her again after all the scrutiny, but he had been emboldened. The third: She
didn’t have anyone to call for help. The adults in her life—and the
police—thought she was a liar.
Finally: She had to document what he did to her that night, so there would be no
question about what had happened.
“I had to find the evidence for them,” she says. “Because if I didn’t find the
evidence for them, I wasn’t too sure they would find it.”
As Henry drove, she made sure he could see that she was playing a game called
Piano Tiles, tapping black piano keys as they floated across the screen. About
15 minutes into their drive, Taylor tilted the screen away from Henry for a
moment and snapped a photo of the condom box.
Henry drove to the same spot as he had a year before, on the turnout of the
quiet road that cut through the swamp. It was dusk outside, the road empty, the
night quiet other than the chirping crickets and cows bellowing in a nearby
pasture. As Henry walked around the back of the truck, Taylor recorded a
six-second video panning to four crucial visuals: the radio clock reading 8:29
p.m., the back of Henry’s head, the condoms on the dashboard, and the view
outside her window.
Then, she says, Henry unzipped his pants and ordered her to pull down hers. “You
know what to do,” he said. Taylor’s Android allowed her to take photos by
swiping up anywhere on the screen. When Henry told her to hurry up with her
phone, she told him to wait a second—she was just closing applications. She
swiped up again and again, silently snapping photos.
After it was all over, when he turned around to check for cars, she shoved the
empty condom box under the seat. They began the drive home—AC pumping, pop music
playing on the radio—and Taylor mentally collected more evidence: the white
smear on the seat, the bushes where he threw a used tissue, the stretch of grass
where he tossed unused condoms out the window as they drove.
Once home, Taylor told Lisa she was taking the dogs for a walk. Standing in the
yard in the dark, she deliberated. She was terrified of calling the cops. If she
wasn’t believed again, surely she’d face an even harsher punishment than the
first time. But if she didn’t call the cops, nothing would change. The thought,
on repeat: Am I going to do it?
She dialed 911.
Taylor describes the next few hours like scenes in a movie: the cars driving up,
no lights or sirens, as Taylor had instructed, since Henry was sleeping. A cop’s
flashlight through the backdoor. Taylor standing outside with an officer,
showing the photos and video on her phone. The lights of cop cars bouncing off
Henry’s vacant face as he was escorted through the yard in handcuffs. Taylor
bawling after an officer asked her to go back to the godforsaken, freezing
hospital in the middle of the night for another rape kit exam.
> “I was fighting for my life, in a very quiet scream.”
At first, Henry denied any wrongdoing. “I don’t know what the hell—why is she
doing this again?” he told Polk County Detective Joel Dempsey in a recorded
interview. It was only when Dempsey showed Henry the photos that Henry admitted
that the photos were, in fact, of him.
Henry continued to deflect blame in recorded calls from jail, insisting that he
had been set up. “I was dealing with a venomous snake,” he told his sister. In
another call, he insisted, “It’s not all my fault neither. Yes, I’m the adult,
but it’s not all my fault.”
Two days after the assault, Taylor sat through a videotaped forensic interview
at a child advocacy center—the same child advocacy center and the same case
worker she spoke to the year before. She spoke with urgency as she explained the
evidence she had collected, still convinced that, somehow, Henry would work his
way out of this.
“I mean, I really hope that they actually, like, take the time to, like,
actually investigate and to listen to my side of the story before they just want
to accuse me of giving false information,” Taylor told the case worker. “I tried
everything. I did everything I could do.”
Video
TAYLOR CADLE’S 2017 FORENSIC INTERVIEW
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FBHPFQgLfSM
Today, Taylor remembers this moment in vivid detail. “I was fighting for my
life,” she says, “in a very quiet scream.”
The next day, Henry Cadle was charged with sexually assaulting Taylor.
“I don't remember any other case where the victim had the forethought or the
intelligence to collect their own evidence and to be so thorough,” Dempsey said
recently. “Just, unbelievable amount of presence of mind that she showed.”
Assistant State Attorney Joni Batie-McGrew, who approved the original
false-reporting charge against Taylor, filed a motion to vacate Taylor’s
probation and guilty plea. The information Taylor had provided to the police,
the motion said, “has since been determined to be true.”
The Department of Juvenile Justice sent Taylor a letter terminating her
supervision, adding that it was the department’s hope that the experience was
beneficial to her.
In February 2019, Henry pleaded no contest to the sexual battery of a child. He
was sentenced to 17 years in prison.
Taylor still lives in Polk County, just a half hour away from where she once
lived with Lisa and Henry. She stays at home with her two kids—a 3-year-old boy
and a 1-year-old girl—and the family’s massive pitbull mastiff while her fiancé
works at an auto glass repair shop.
Motherhood comes naturally to Taylor. In the moments of chaos—when she’s trying
to feed her baby and her toddler is climbing on her back and the dog is
barking—she laughs. When her baby cries, she coos, “What’s wrong, girlie?” In
her free time, Taylor vlogs about beauty and parenting in a way that’s
refreshingly real, talking, for example, about how to wax your armpits or how
dinner that night will be subs because the Walmart bread is getting stale.
In October, our interview with Taylor aired on PBS NewsHour. “Why punish me?”
she said on camera, with an unflinching gaze. “What did I do for you to punish
me?”
The video got millions of views on TikTok, and local and national publications
picked up the story. Viewers flooded the comments sections of the Polk County
Sheriff’s Office’s social media pages to demand justice for Taylor. But some of
those comments mysteriously disappeared from view, prompting more outrage.
Taylor decided to send Judd an email directly. She admired his work overall, she
wrote, but she was outraged.
“I thought you guys were supposed to help? Not silence a victim.”
Judd has often said that the key to being a good sheriff is transparency with
the public. One of his often-repeated phrases is: “If you mess up, then dress
up, fess up, and fix it up.” But records show Henry Cadle’s arrest didn’t prompt
any disciplinary action at the time. Judd has not responded to questions about
the case publicly, or to Taylor.
Turnage didn’t respond to our attempts to reach her, and Judd’s office declined
an interview. When we showed up at the sheriff’s office in August and asked to
speak with Judd, we were told that a public information officer would come down
to talk. Minutes later, we were told, she had been pulled into a meeting and
didn’t know when she would be available. (A spokesperson told the Lakeland
Ledger that the sheriff’s office wouldn’t speak to us because it “became clear
they were not interested in accurately reporting an investigation that occurred
in 2016.”)
Florida Senate Minority Leader Lauren Book, however, had more luck. A Democrat
from Broward County, Book sponsored recent legislation requiring law enforcement
to receive training in trauma-informed sexual assault investigations. After
listening to audio of Turnage’s interviews that we shared with her, an incensed
Book asked Judd for information about Taylor’s 2016 case.
A life-size display of Donald Trump and Grady Judd in Polk County, constructed
by a resident before the 2020 electionMelanie Metz
In a letter to Book last month, Polk County Captain Dina Russell defended
Turnage’s "thorough investigation” and doubled down on the same concerns with
Taylor that Turnage had back in 2016: Taylor had said she didn’t like going on
rides with Henry, but family members said otherwise. Henry wasn’t on the
surveillance video buying condoms. Taylor was texting during the abuse, but,
Russell wrote, “made no mention in her texts she was being abused.”
But after listening to a recording of an interview from the case, Russell
acknowledged that Turnage’s approach didn’t meet the department’s standards. She
sent Turnage a “letter of retraining” last month.
“Several of your questions and comments were inappropriate,” Russell wrote.
“While your intent may have been to elicit the truth and gather essential
information, referencing personal circumstances such as foster care or financial
hardships can create an environment of discomfort, fear, mistrust is simply
unacceptable.” The letter made no mention of the ramifications of these failures
for Taylor, or the fact that Taylor was later deemed to be telling the truth.
The captain’s demands of Turnage were minimal: Within a week, she was required
to complete an online course on interview and interrogation techniques. The
captain’s conclusion echoed the disciplinary letter Turnage received in 2016,
when she arrested the wrong suspect: “I am confident you will take the
appropriate steps to prevent any similar events in the future.”
Turnage is still a detective, though she’s no longer in the special victims
unit. Her latest performance review noted that she’s on track to become a
sergeant.
Batie-McGrew, who prosecuted Taylor’s first case, also didn’t respond to
multiple requests for comment. But the state attorney’s office said in an email
that after Taylor was proven to be telling the truth, they made a policy change:
They now require that the office be consulted before charging a juvenile who
claims to be a victim of sexual abuse, according to Jacob Orr, the chief
assistant state attorney for the 10th Judicial Circuit.
Since Taylor’s case, Orr said, the office has charged three other juveniles with
falsely reporting sexual abuse. He said those cases included “irrefutable
evidence proving the falsehood” of their claims, but he didn’t elaborate on how
police were able to irrefutably prove that the children were not sexually
abused.
For Taylor, three more children is far too many. “It should have stopped with
me,” she says. “It shouldn’t have even gotten to me, but it should have stopped
with me.”
Once in a while, Taylor drives on the quiet road through the swamp, past the
spot where Henry abused her. It’s still hard, but having her kids in the
backseat makes clear how much things have changed over the past seven years.
She’s no longer a child being driven there against her will, bracing herself for
the worst, preparing to crouch on the floorboard if anyone drives by.
Now, she is in the driver’s seat. “It’s a sense of relief, in a way,” she says.
“I’m going past this spot because this is the route I chose to take.”
Melissa Lewis contributed data analysis.