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.
“The guards knew Sheldon was being beaten while it was going on and they looked the other way,” Janet Weinstein’s lawyer, Scott Gardner, of Biddeford, said in a telephone interview. In addition, he said, “the medical staff did nothing in the face of obvious injury.”
In Gardner’s legal notice last month informing state officials about the impending suit, the allegations about inadequate medical treatment echo an account of Sheldon Weinstein’s last days by Sean Higgins, a Portland man in his mid-20s doing time at the Warren prison for robbery. In a letter to the Phoenix he identified himself as a suspect in Weinstein’s death.
Three employees were put on paid leave during the prison’s investigation of personnel actions in connection with the death, officials announced several months ago, but the completed investigation’s results have not been made public, though the Phoenix has asked for them under the state’s Freedom of Access (freedom of information) law.
The “notice of claim” served on officials on behalf of Weinstein’s widow, who lives in upstate New York, says Corrections personnel engaged in “grossly negligent” or “deliberately indifferent” conduct that was responsible for Weinstein’s death. The employees failed to protect him, the document says, from the “terrifying system of vigilante justice which is practiced openly at the prison.”
Weinstein was serving two years for sexual abuse of a young girl, a relative, in Berwick. Sex offenders are often at great risk in prison from attacks by violent inmates.
The document also says the prison failed to provide Weinstein with proper medical care despite “pleas for help” from the 64-year-old, wheelchair-bound diabetic who suffered “massive internal bleeding” from the beating. The suit will ask for “in excess of $1 million” in damages.
The victim moved around the prison “with a noticeable black eye for four days” after the beating, Higgins, the suspect, said. “In those four days Weinstein had been in and out of the medical department two times a day for his blood sugar testing, without being seen for any other injuries while clearly he had them.”
Then, Higgins claimed, when Weinstein was placed in Supermax solitary confinement to wait for an open cell in the protective custody unit, he was once again “denied any type of help from the medical staff.” Weinstein died on April 24, soon after being put in the Supermax. Other prisoners in the 100-man Supermax — officially known as the Special Management Unit — have told the Phoenix that Weinstein was not given proper medical treatment in spite of his appeals for help.
Higgins said he had been put in the Supermax as a suspect along with three other prisoners, but that two of them have now been “cleared” and are back in the prison’s general population.
The head criminal prosecutor in the state attorney general’s office, William Stokes, said in an e-mail the Weinstein investigation remains open, but wouldn’t comment further. Attorney General Janet Mills said in an e-mail that she would have no comment on the threatened lawsuit.
Related:
Prison ‘troublemaker’ confronts racism, medical abuse, Limiting Supermax solitary, Time for law to end torture, More
- Prison ‘troublemaker’ confronts racism, medical abuse
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.
- Limiting Supermax solitary
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.
- Time for law to end torture
In a collaborative effort between human-rights activists and incarcerated Mainers, a bill to end the use and abuse of solitary confinement has been drafted and will be submitted to legislators soon.
- Less than equal
This story has a bias. It’s in favor of human rights for all people.
- Injustice everywhere
Thank you for the timely interview with Harvey Silverglate.
- Another Supermax hunger strike
Protesting that nothing had been done by prison authorities to relieve the torture of prolonged solitary confinement, on August 17 inmates of the Maine State Prison’s 100-man Special Management Unit or “Supermax” reprised a hunger strike that had been abandoned last May.
- Prison in turmoil
Will reform have to wait for a new governor?
- Pressure rising
Four months ago, a Phoenix investigative series revealed abuses of inmates at the “Supermax,” a 100-bed, solitary-confinement, maximum-security facility inside the Maine State Prison in Warren; since our articles were published, several important developments have taken place.
- Lawmakers to probe prison
For years controversy has churned over the Maine State Prison's treatment of both inmates and correctional officers. For the first time, legislators have taken action.
- Putting an end to the hunger strike
Maine State Prison officials ended a hunger strike involving at least 10 inmates of the solitary-confinement Supermax unit in Warren by threatening to withhold the strikers’ psychotropic medications, according to allegations by an inmate who participated in the strike.
- Falling down
Critics of the state Department of Corrections say the hostage-taking last June at the Maine State Prison dramatically illustrates that the concrete, high-tech lockup in Warren is showing cracks from stress on the prison guards.
- Less

Topics:
This Just In
, Health and Fitness, Criminal Sentencing and Punishment, Medical Treatments and Procedures, More
, Health and Fitness, Criminal Sentencing and Punishment, Medical Treatments and Procedures, Prisons, Trials, Civil Trials, Supermax, Maine State Prison, Janet Mills, Janet Mills, Less