The third of four suspects, Brandon Dwayne Hayley, 28, was arrested Monday on warrants for aggravated battery, armed robbery and two counts of battery.

Marion County sheriff's deputies have arrested the third of four people wanted for forcibly tattooing a misspelled racial slur on a man's neck.

Brandon Dwayne Hayley, 28, of Fort McCoy, was arrested Monday on warrants for aggravated battery, armed robbery and two counts of battery. On Wednesday, he was being held in the Marion County Jail in lieu of a $40,000 bond.

A 41-year-old man told deputies in late January that, on Jan. 24, he was staying at a residence in the 17600 block of Southeast 17th Lane in Salt Springs when Hayley; Lucian “Luke” Evans, 40; Brett “Wolf” Singleton, 45; and Mary “Beth” Durham, 35, entered the home and shut the door, according to Sheriff's Office reports.

The man, who is white, said they told him they were going to cover a gang tattoo — the "CWB" patch for Crazy White Boys — on his neck with another one, according to an arrest report. Evans, he said, pulled a knife from a sheath on his belt.

Evans and Hayley held him down while Singleton began tattooing his neck, the report says. The man told deputies he was moving too much and fighting against being tattooed. At that point, he said, Hayley hit him with something and knocked him unconscious.

He woke up briefly, and Durham was tattooing his neck, he recalled. He heard her say, "I've never done this before." And someone answered, "It's OK. It doesn't matter."

An investigator described the resulting tattoo, which had failed to cover up the "CWB," according to the report. It was an expletive and then the N-word, except they got the N-word wrong, spelling it with only one "g," like the landlocked West African nation.

The man told deputies the intruders also took his cellphone.

Evans was arrested in February. He admitted being at the residence and gave the names of the others who were there, according to the Sheriff's Office. Evans said the incident lasted 30 to 45 minutes. He remains at the Marion County Jail on charges related to this case and to an unrelated one.

Durham was arrested April 18 on charges of aggravated battery and robbery with a firearm. She, too, remains at the jail.

Deputies are still searching for Singleton.

The battery charges against Hayley involve incidents that occurred after the tattoo.

On March 11, while deputies were looking for Hayley, a woman told them that he head-butted her, knocking her to the ground, and repeatedly punched her in the face and chest, and grabbed her neck, according to the Sheriff's Office. She told him she was calling 911 and he ran from the property.

On March 31, a different woman told deputies Hayley was upset he could not go to work because his vehicle had been repossessed. She said he grabbed her by the throat, pinned her against a wall and slapped and punched her in the face, according to MCSO. She woman said Hayley left before deputies arrived.

Anyone with information as to the whereabouts of Singleton is asked to call the Sheriff’s Office at 352-732-9111 or Crime Stoppers at 352-368-7867, or visit www.ocalacrimestoppers.com.