Pubdate: Sun, 16 Dec 2007
Source: Day, The (New London,CT)
Copyright: 2007 The Day Publishing Co.
Contact:  http://www.theday.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/293
Author: Karen Florin
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/prison.htm (Incarceration)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?136 (Methadone)

WITHOUT HOPE IN A PRISON CELL

Family of Inmate Who Committed Suicide at Corrigan Receives 
Settlement but Not Peace

Michael Newlan left a suicide note on the bed in his cell at Corrigan 
Correctional Institution and hanged himself with the laces from his 
sneakers on March 14, 2002.

The 29-year-old Newlan, who grew up in Groton but was living in New 
London most recently, was taken off life support three days later, 
after doctors at The William W. Backus Hospital declared him brain dead.

The state recently awarded $550,000 to Newlan's mother, Nancy, to end 
a wrongful death lawsuit against the Department of Correction.

"We brought a lawsuit on the basis that his mother had repeatedly 
warned people, including the psychiatric staff, that he was 
suicidal," said New London attorney Robert I. Reardon.

Newlan, who had been arrested on marijuana charges, had a drug 
problem and mental illness due to a traumatic brain injury he 
received in a 1990 car crash. He had no history of violence and was, 
his mother said, "the most mellow guy." He was working as a pizza 
deliveryman and living in an apartment on Brainard Street in New 
London, under the supervision of the First Step community mental 
health program.

Nancy Newlan said funds from the settlement, which resulted from 
mediation as the case moved toward trial, are being put into a trust 
for Newlan's sister and two brothers.

"Nothing brings Michael back," she said. But she does hope to prevent 
the same thing from happening to others, so as painful as it is to 
talk about her son, she agreed to share his story with The Day.

Newlan initially was placed on suicide watch at the prison but was 
taken off cautionary status and given his clothing after he intimated 
he was OK and complained about the hospital gown he had been made to 
wear, Reardon said.

"They videotaped when they cut him down," Reardon said. "We watched 
them put him on a gurney and wheel him away."

The correctional staff that responded to his cell did not have the 
proper tool to cut away the laces or a heart defibrillator with which 
to attempt resuscitation, Reardon said.

Reardon said the correction department stopped issuing sneakers with 
laces as a result of the lawsuit.

"Now they give slip-ons," he said.

A correction department spokesman disputed Reardon's assertion that 
the lawsuit changed the procedure but acknowledged the department has 
made several changes as the result of a rash of suicides at the 
state's prisons.

"A death such as this is a tragedy for the inmate, his family and for 
the correctional staff whose custody he was in," said Brian Garnett, 
a prison spokesman. "The Department of Correction is committed to 
doing all it can to prevent occurrences of self harm such as this."

Garnett said staff takes shoelaces away from offenders when they 
first come into intake units, because that tends to be a very stressful time.

"That's typically only for the first two weeks or so until they're 
stabilized," he said. The department implemented measures to combat 
the occurrence of suicide after an unusually high number of suicides 
in 2004 (nine deaths) and 2005 (seven deaths), Garnett said.

Nancy Newlan knew her son was suicidal, because he had been 
hospitalized before for slitting his wrists and other attempts to 
kill himself. She had been unable to see him since he was arrested on 
marijuana charges a week earlier but had called prison officials 
several times to warn them. She was concerned also because the prison 
refused to administer methadone, a drug that her son had successfully 
used to combat a heroin addiction.

"I did speak to one social worker that was very nice and seemed as 
though she actually took an interest in Michael," the mother said in 
a phone interview Saturday afternoon. But she also spoke several 
times to a nurse who she said was "very curt."

"She said, 'This is not a hospital. This is a prison,' " Newlan 
remembered. "I was appalled."

Newlan was arrested on marijuana possession charges on March 7, 2003, 
when he returned to his apartment after celebrating his sister's 
birthday with his mother and sister at G. Willikers restaurant in Groton.

He was on probation for passing bad checks, and his probation officer 
had found marijuana in the apartment, which Newlan shared with another man.

"He had a problem with drugs, but he was really coming out of it 
successfully," Reardon said. Newlan claimed the marijuana was not 
his, but he was charged with possession of marijuana, possession of 
marijuana with intent to sell, possession of drug paraphernalia, 
possession of more than 4 ounces of marijuana and possession of more 
than four ounces of marijuana within 1,500 feet of a school. He was 
taken to New London Police Department and, at some point, to Lawrence 
& Memorial Hospital for treatment of a black eye and other injuries 
he suffered from intentionally banging his head against the wall of 
his cell, officials said.

Nancy Newlan went to court with Michael's social worker with the 
intent of posting his $10,000 bond. Assured by a bondsman that she 
had plenty of time to get the money before her son would appear, the 
mother left the courthouse to get the money. She returned a short 
time later with the money, only to be told her son had already 
appeared before the judge, who had raised his bond to $25,000.

She talked to a prosecutor and a public defender, who told her there 
was nothing they could do. Michael was taken to the Montville prison, 
and he was not allowed to have visitors.

"That was it," the mother said. "He was gone. I couldn't do anything. 
I never saw Michael again." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake