Two Denver Sheriff Department deputies were suspended for 30 days after they failed to respond quickly enough to an inmate’s suicide threats, and another deputy will serve a 10-day suspension for using excessive force.

Finally, a captain will be suspended for four days after losing his temper and insulting a juvenile at the Lindsey-Flanigan Courthouse.

Deputy Daniel Trujillo and Deputy Thomas Trujillo were working in November 2015 in a unit for problem inmates at the Downtown Detention Center when an inmate tried to hang himself from a security camera in his cell, according to disciplinary letters obtained by The Denver Post.

The inmate repeatedly told the deputies he wanted to kill himself, and they saw him twisting a sheet into a noose. But neither called to ask about space in a suicide prevention cell for at least 40 minutes after the inmate first told a deputy he planned to hang himself, the disciplinary letter said.

The inmate survived.

Daniel Trujillo, who was hired in 2014, was suspended in March, and Thomas Trujillo, who was hired in 2008, was disciplined in February. The Trujillos are not related.

Deputy Thao Nguyen, a five-year department veteran, used his Taser to zap the fingers of an inmate through a door flap in August 2015, his disciplinary letter said. He will serve a 10-day suspension.

Nguyen could have walked away and avoided the conflict, the disciplinary letter said. He also violated the department’s rules, which prohibit deputies using their stun guns to force inmates to comply with orders.

Finally, Capt. Deric Wynn failed to ignore curse words and insults from a juvenile who was acting unruly after a court hearing, his letter said.

As he was addressing the child about his behavior, Wynn repeatedly referred to the boy as “son.” After the child used an expletive to tell the captain he was not his father, Wynn replied, “Your mom didn’t tell you? I am your father.”

Wynn could have been suspended for 14 days, but he received a break because of his lack of other disciplinary problems during his 17-year career, the letter said.

Wynn’s disciplinary letter said he failed to maintain the level of integrity and judgment expected of the department’s command staff.

“By making these inappropriate comments to a juvenile, Captain Wynn set a poor example and he failed to adhere to the expectations that the department and community place on law enforcement officers,” his letter said.