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State sued over inmate’s death

Silencing alarms
By LANCE TAPLEY  |  March 5, 2008

As severely mentally ill Maine State Prison inmate Ryan Rideout prepared to hang himself from a sprinkler in his cell on the night of October 5, 2006, other inmates frantically pressed panic buttons in their cells. But guards had turned off the cellblock alarm system, which was “the direct cause” of Rideout’s death, according to a wrongful-death suit recently filed in federal court.

In the suit, Rideout’s mother, Brenda Choate of Mount Vernon, alleges Warden Jeffrey Merrill and other prison employees violated federal and state civil-rights and disabilities laws. Specific monetary damages will be sought later, the suit says.

The suit also alleges that guard Robert Beard, who found Rideout hanging while making his regular rounds, taunted him instead of immediately sounding an alarm. Before Rideout was cut down and futilely given medical aid, the suit says, guards took time to put him in handcuffs and shackles.

Warden Merrill and the Corrections Department’s lawyer, Assistant Attorney General Diane Sleek, would not comment on the suit. It was filed by Bowdoinham attorney Andrews Campbell in US District Court in Bangor.

The suit also includes allegations that the prison’s mental-health staff had taken away Rideout’s needed psychiatric medications, and that a laboratory found in his body both cocaine and oxycodone (a narcotic painkiller), though he was being held in the Warren prison’s supposedly maximum-security, solitary-confinement “Supermax” unit.

Rideout, 24, a convicted burglar, was a notorious suicide risk long before he went to prison for burglary (see “Death in the Supermax,” October 13, 2006, and “Sluggish Response to Suicide,” January 5, 2007, both by Lance Tapley).

In Rideout’s first prison suicide attempt, in March 2006, guards responded, the suit says, by “extracting” him from his cell using Mace and dragging him naked through the cellblock to put him in a restraint chair for hours.

After a second attempt, the suit says, the prison charged Rideout with criminal mischief for breaking the sprinkler from which he had tried to hang himself. He was fined $130. He killed himself on his third try.

Related: Stonewalling is normal, Lockdown, Hunger strike at Maine's Supermax Prison, More more >
  Topics: This Just In , Health and Fitness, Criminal Sentencing and Punishment, Mental Health,  More more >
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Comments
State sued over inmate’s death
Prison reform is kept on the front burner by The Phoenix and Lance Tapley. Someday, perhaps the Governor and the Legislature will be forced to face the truth, namely that torture is not appropriate -- even if condoned by democrats and republicans in Augusta. Thank you for your courage and persistence.
By Julian C. Holmes on 03/05/2008 at 5:05:12

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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