The Phoenix Network:
 
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 

A threat, but not to security

Deane Brown battles on
By LANCE TAPLEY  |  September 3, 2008

Maine prisoner Deane Brown, 44, who was shipped to Maryland in 2006 after blowing the whistle on prisoner abuse in the Maine State Prison’s Supermax unit, is no longer in solitary confinement, though he remains far from Maine.

In July, Brown was transferred from Maryland’s supermax in Baltimore to the maximum-security Western Correctional Institution in Cumberland, in the Maryland mountains. After a month he was released from "administrative segregation" into the general population — the first time he has enjoyed this status in nearly two years. Among his new privileges, he can make phone calls several times a week. His latest home is “cleaner and newer,” Brown said in a call to the Portland Phoenix. He added: “I’m surviving, battling.”

He even has won a small victory. In his federal-court fight to be returned to Maine, in which he is pressing freedom-of-speech, due-process, and excessive-punishment complaints, a judge, while dismissing several of his complaints, in late August kept alive a key First-Amendment claim — that Maine Corrections Commissioner Martin Magnusson had responsibility in denying Brown access to the news media and then transferring him from the Warren prison to Maryland in retaliation for his whistle-blowing.

In court documents, Maine prison authorities accuse Brown of “providing confidential information to the news media.” They also call him “one of the greatest threats ever to the security of the prison.”

“I’m a threat, but not to security,” he responded, in a May interview with the Phoenix in Baltimore. (For background on Brown’s whistle-blowing, see “Torture in Maine’s Prison,” by Lance Tapley, November 11, 2005.)

A bright, feisty individual, Brown, serving 59 years for burglary, alternates between principled but practical actions asserting his and his fellow prisoners’ rights as human beings against the totalitarian prison system and, on the other hand, gestures that on the surface seem almost suicidal.

Brown is diabetic, and not taking insulin might kill him; he is fighting in Maryland courts, though, for the right to refuse it. He claims that the way insulin is administered to him is unsafe; he wants to control his treatment. But a judge, at the request of Maryland Corrections, has ordered insulin be given to him by force, if necessary. Brown said he is resisting the injections “passively and verbally.”

He can chalk up a small victory in these protests, too: His state-paid Maryland lawyer, Joseph Tetrault, said a prison nurse was fired for incorrectly administering insulin to him.

Maine’s Corrections Department disclaims any responsibility for his treatment in Maryland. The Maine Attorney General’s Office wouldn’t comment on the latest developments in the federal case; it is defending Corrections.

  Topics: This Just In , Health and Fitness, Criminal Sentencing and Punishment, Medicine,  More more >
| More


[ 05/24 ]   Ra Ra Riot + Magic Man + Other Bones  @ Port City Music Hall
[ 05/24 ]   Rosie Schaap  @ SPACE Gallery
ARTICLES BY LANCE TAPLEY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   FAITH-BASED TAXATION  |  May 23, 2013
    It's gospel under the State House dome — dogma in what could be called the trickle-down religion — that if taxes on the rich and the corporations were reduced, lots of moneyed people would make their residence in Maine instead of places like Florida, contributing massively to tax collections; and lots of businesses would move to Maine or start up here, hiring workers right and left.  
  •   MAINE’S ENVIRONMENTAL MOVEMENT REINVENTS ITSELF FOR A NEW ERA OF CHALLENGES  |  May 10, 2013
    Maine's cherished environment may be threatened as never before by the gargantuan forces of economic globalization. In reaction, the state's environmental movement is coalescing into a force stronger than ever. There are new players in the game — including Occupy — augmenting the old guard
  •   YOU ARE THE PROBLEM, NOT RICH + CORPORATIONS  |  April 24, 2013
    Stop believing that Big Money has a big effect on politicians. That's not the problem with Washington. You are the problem.
  •   DEATH PENALTY SOUGHT FOR MAINE PRISONER  |  April 10, 2013
    Escape-Artist Watch
  •   STORY-TELLING: HOW TO PASS (OR DEFEAT) A BILL  |  March 27, 2013
    Humans haven't advanced much beyond the hunter-gatherer tribe around the campfire. That includes legislators.

 See all articles by: LANCE TAPLEY



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2013 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group