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Lockdown

By LANCE TAPLEY  |  December 14, 2006

But Brown made the mistake of bragging to two correctional officers on October 24 — at a time when he didn’t know about the alleged breakout plot, he says — that his next “news release” would be “an atomic bomb.” That evening he was placed in the Supermax “pending investigation,” he writes.

There is certainly more to be discovered about these events. But I — the Phoenix, the press — can’t fill in some details because I have not been allowed access to Brown for weeks, and the Corrections Department refuses to explain Brown’s Supermax incarceration or his transfer from Maine other than in hazy words about security threats.

Brown’s argument that the prison made an erroneous connection with Watland would seem to be bolstered by the unlikelihood that he would have been shipped to another state if he were under investigation, although Magnusson says “we can bring him back if we need to.”

Preventing dissent
Brown sums up the investigation, his Supermax stay, and his transfer to Maryland as payback by the officials and a means to shut him up. His extended Supermax suicide watch he sees as, partly, torture to extract a false confession of involvement in the Watland affair. His pro bono lawyer, Lynne Williams, calls him a “political prisoner.” He says he is now locked in a Maryland cell 23 hours a day, as he was in the Maine Supermax. “They sent me here to die,” he writes.

But shouldn’t I discount what Brown writes, since he, too, is a criminal? In this case, a man serving 59 years for a long string of burglaries. Yet he supplied me with a great amount of disturbing information that did indeed check out. And he demonstrated courage, now at great cost, in defying the prison. Truth and bravery are a lot more than I get from some prominent Maine politicians in my other journalistic role as a political reporter. In fact, nothing I have been told by any inmate about prison conditions has been proven false.

“He’s a good man,” says Camden attorney Christopher Maclean, who once briefly represented Brown. “Obviously, the authorities have singled him out to punish and shut him up.”

Nevertheless, a reporter should be able to closely question Brown and other prisoners in person on their claims. But for a month and a half corrections officials have kept me out of the prison, declaring all but one of the prisoners I want to see off-limits, for various reasons. For a long time, they didn’t even bother to respond to my e-mail messages listing prisoners I wished to visit. For weeks, they did not send me the new paperwork they said was necessary for a media visit to the one prisoner they said they would permit me to see, the brother of suicide victim Rideout. Like Deane Brown, I suspect retribution.

The latest stonewalling by prison officials is an e-mailed form with some new restrictions added specifically for me as a result of my reporting work. These new rules require I be monitored by prison staff while interviewing inmates, and would bar me from asking prisoners questions about other inmates. Beyond that, I would have to agree not to publish certain information — determined by prison authorities — even if the inmate said it in the interview. And I would have to agree to have my notebook confiscated if it contained information “not authorized” by prison officials. No respectable journalist would ever agree to these conditions.

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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

ARTICLES BY LANCE TAPLEY
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  •   SUSPECT SPEAKS; VICTIM’S FAMILY BEGINS $1-MILLION-PLUS LAWSUIT  |  November 04, 2009
    The widow of Sheldon Weinstein, the Maine State Prison inmate who died in April several days after allegedly being beaten by inmates, has taken the first step toward filing a wrongful-death lawsuit against prison guards, Department of Corrections “policy-making personnel,” and prison medical-care providers.
  •   LIMITING SUPERMAX SOLITARY  |  October 08, 2009
    Representative James Schatz, a Blue Hill Democrat, has proposed legislation to tightly limit when prisoners can be kept in the solitary confinement of the 100-man Supermax unit of the Maine State Prison in Warren.
  •   LESS THAN EQUAL  |  October 02, 2009
    This story has a bias. It’s in favor of human rights for all people.
  •   DANGEROUS SLURS  |  October 01, 2009
    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.
  •   PRISON ‘TROUBLEMAKER’ CONFRONTS RACISM, MEDICAL ABUSE  |  September 09, 2009
    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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