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Lockdown

By LANCE TAPLEY  |  December 14, 2006

But then, he says, he saw he could carry on the fight, that he still could be useful. He sees his human-rights activism as “redemption” for his past crimes. He abandoned his suicide plans and decided he could be an investigator within the Supermax. He had been a weekly prison “correspondent” by phone for a Rockland radio station as well as a source for the Phoenix.

Specifically, he wanted to see “what Ryan Rideout went through before he died.” Twenty-five-year-old Ryan Rideout, a severely mentally ill man in prison for robbery, committed suicide by hanging himself from a sprinkler head in a Supermax cell. (See “Death in the Supermax,” October 11, by Lance Tapley.) His suicide — as well as several others in the Supermax in recent years — had upset Brown greatly (he has been imprisoned since the mid-1990s). He thought Rideout’s treatment on suicide watch might have driven him to kill himself.

(Brown may have been mistaken about Rideout’s status in the Supermax. Warden Jeffrey Merrill has said publicly that Rideout was not considered a suicide risk, despite a long history of suicide threats.)

Brown apparently outfoxed himself: prison officials used his suicide-watch status to deny him access to the outside world, in spite of my requests to see him, while they prepared to send him 500 miles from family and friends — in spite, also, of being “cleared by five different mental-health people,” he says. It turned out he couldn’t get off suicide watch in Maine, though he was taken off suicide watch in Maryland. He had told me several times of threats from prison authorities to send him out of state.

Long investigations
Actually, this drama is more complicated, murky, and bizarre (welcome to the weird world of covering a prison). Brown says he was put in the Supermax on October 24 because he was mistakenly connected by prison authorities with an inmate, Gary Watland, 44, a murderer, whose wife, Susan Watland, has been charged with attempting to bring a gun into the prison on that day to help her husband escape.

Brown’s letter to Bethany Berry suggests the prison’s connection of him with Watland was made because of bad luck and judgment on his part and bad will on the part of prison officials. He says that on the previous day he had obtained what he believed to be proof of mail tampering: that the prison was opening and scanning prisoners’ outgoing mail without a search warrant or consent, which he thought to be a federal crime.

(Here, too, he may have been mistaken. The postal service gives prisons the right to “open, examine, and censor” mail, if the prison rules allow it, according to postal regulations.)

Brown says an inmate gave him the address of an Internet server that the inmate said contained Department of Corrections files, including copies of prisoners’ mail. Brown writes that he wanted to get this information to me so I could “get it to a federal prosecutor.” From his words, it appears that Brown never accessed the server. He believes some inmates cracked “the DOC mainframe.”

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Related: Lawmakers to probe prison, Death in the Supermax, Stonewalling is normal, More more >
  Topics: News Features , Politics, Culture and Lifestyle, Joseph Steinberger,  More more >
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Comments
Lockdown
Another expose by talented and courageous author Lance Tapley. Torture in the Maine Supermax is an example of how corruption oozes through so many aspects and institutions of Maine Government. The truth is the best protection we citizens have against the excesses of the current State Administration.
By Julian C. Holmes on 12/14/2006 at 12:53:47
Re: Lockdown
My name is Grizman Parker, author of, Prisons Of the Mind, Publish America, 2008. I have a new book being released on prison corruption in our country, Stairway To Terror. I am presently writing a book, License To kill, based on true stories of corrupted staff killing prisoners and their fellow staff if need be to cover their actions. If Maine Dept. of Corrections continues to cover up their corruption, it will eventually end up with murder on their hands. Then it is too late. I feel sad for the honest staff members and prisoners who want to see the system work. Their lives are constantly in danger. I know what I'm talking about because I lived it for many years. I was fortunant enough to have survived and changed my life. My first book talks of this change. I advise the system to change before it is too late to turn back. Innocent victims always become hurt because of corruption. Criminals need to be put behind bars for the safety of society and for themself. But when they come out worse than they went in, then it is on the back of the state of Maine. They are all accessory to any crime in the system and should be chraged for their crimes. The system is broken and needs to be fixed. A mere bandaide will not do it. Grizman Parker genetou2396@yahoo.com  
By Grizman Parker on 01/04/2009 at 3:43:07

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    This story has a bias. It’s in favor of human rights for all people.
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    A heavily tattooed, self-described Satanist serving a life sentence for savagely murdering two people in Augusta in 1998 — his 16-year-old stepdaughter and his 87-year-old former landlady — inmate John L’Heureux, 39, is probably not the man Maine’s gay-rights groups would choose to represent their cause in the state prison, if they were inclined to choose anyone there.
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    Vacillating between grit and despair — between aggressive lawsuits and suicide attempts — Deane Brown, the prisoner who in 2005 blew the whistle on the torture of mentally ill inmates at the Maine State Prison’s solitary-confinement “Supermax” unit, is struggling against prison conditions in Maryland, where he was exiled by the Baldacci administration.

 See all articles by: LANCE TAPLEY

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