The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
 
News Features  |  Talking Politics  |  This Just In
Best2012Vote-1000x50

Sluggish response to suicide

Supermax watch
By LANCE TAPLEY  |  January 3, 2007

070105_inside_tji

 

An eyewitness to the suicide of Ryan Rideout, a 25-year-old, severely mentally ill Augusta man who hanged himself with his bedding in his Maine State Prison Supermax cell on October 5, calls into question the official version of events. He described the response of guards as sluggish and cruel.

Joseph Bradley, 26, who was recently released from the Warren prison, told the Phoenix in an interview that it took a long time for a guard to respond to the alarm Bradley had sounded when he saw Rideout prepare to hang himself. Bradley said his cell in the solitary-confinement facility was opposite Rideout’s.

“I watched him tie the noose,” he said.

When Rideout started fixing it to a sprinkler head, Bradley said, he pressed an alarm buzzer, but, “No one came down for half an hour.”

Then the guard who came taunted the “already hanging” Rideout for a couple of minutes as he sipped his coffee, Bradley said. He quoted the guard: “Come on, Rideout, you can do better than that.”

Bradley said the guard then went to the cellblock gate and called “Code Blue,” an emergency signal, into his radio.

But then, Bradley said, the team that responded first put handcuffs and feet shackles on Rideout before he was cut down — “before medical could do anything.” This took several minutes, he said. Rideout “was gray,” he added. Then he said the medical team tried to resuscitate him.

Warden Jeffrey Merrill’s account is considerably different. He “praised the efforts of the staff to save the man,” according to an October 9 article on the Rockland Courier-Gazette’s Web site.

The warden also told the newspaper that Rideout’s suicide was discovered on a guard’s normal rounds. He said Rideout, who was serving a sentence for burglary, was in the Supermax because he had been verbally abusive to prison staff. (See “Death in the Supermax,” by Lance Tapley, October 13, 2006.)

Since then, Department of Corrections officials have refused comment on the suicide, citing a state police investigation that in October they said they expected would be wrapped up quickly. The state police automatically investigate prison deaths.

Bradley said he told his story several days after the suicide to corrections investigator John Scheid and another man he thought was from the state police. He said he has received threats from guards “to keep my mouth shut.”

Now living in Augusta with friends, Bradley is bright and articulate but appeared dazed at being let out of solitary confinement directly to the streets — and without, he said, proper equipment to deal with his diabetes or any money. The last four months of his 27-month sentence for burglary and theft were spent in the Supermax because, he said, of his “mouthing off” to guards.

In December, Ryan Rideout’s mother and brother filed a legal notice that they will pursue a wrongful-death suit seeking monetary damages against the state, warden Merrill, and unnamed guards at the Supermax.

The Rideout family’s attorney, Andrews Campbell, of Waldoboro, said he interviewed a Supermax prisoner, Jesus Rodriguez, who repeated what the Phoenix had earlier reported — that he had heard a guard taunt Rideout, saying he “didn't have the balls” to go through with his threats to commit suicide.

1  |  2  |   next >
  Topics: This Just In , Health and Fitness, Criminal Sentencing and Punishment, Mental Health,  More more >
| More

 Friends' Activity   Popular   Most Viewed 
[ 02/15 ]   The Addams Family  @ Shubert Theatre
[ 02/15 ]   "Aphrodite and the Gods of Love"  @ Museum of Fine Arts
[ 02/15 ]   Green Eyes  @ Ames Hotel
ARTICLES BY LANCE TAPLEY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   ANTI-GANG BILL DUMPED  |  February 01, 2012
    After a January 27 public hearing featuring a rare insinuation by one legislator that a fellow lawmaker lied, Criminal Justice Committee members were ready to throw out LD 1707, a bill that piles heavy sentences onto people convicted of involvement with criminal street gangs.
  •   GANG-BUSTER BILL GETS DISSED  |  January 25, 2012
    A controversial legislative proposal developed by a secretive police group would send an individual to prison for up to 40 years if he or she is convicted of asking someone to join a criminal street gang.
  •   CHOMSKY TO OCCUPY: MOVE TO THE NEXT STAGE  |  December 23, 2011
    Noam Chomsky has advice for the Occupy movement, whose encampments all over the country are being swept away by police.
  •   PRIVATIZED PRISON MEDICAL CARE IS SICK  |  December 14, 2011
    For years complaints that the privatized medical care at the state's prisons was inadequate and abusive have poured into the mail and email boxes of prisoner advocates, the state's Corrections commissioner, and the press.
  •   ‘BLAINE HOUSE NINE’ BANNED FROM CAPITOL PARK, STATE HOUSE  |  December 07, 2011
    Bet you didn't know that the police, without going to court or giving a reason, can order you not to enter public property like the State House — and if you disobey you could spend up to six months in jail.

 See all articles by: LANCE TAPLEY

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed