Pubdate: Wed, 08 Apr 2009 Source: Revelstoke Times Review (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Black Press Contact: http://drugsense.org/url/EZOeBibj Website: http://drugsense.org/url/ujMTHNZu Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2139 Author: Brandon Adams POLICE REPORT ON SAM BROWN'S IN-CUSTODY DEATH REVEALS CO-CONSPIRATOR A report released last week by Spokane Police has detailed the last hours of 24-year-old Revelstoke resident Samuel Brown, who died while in a Spokane jail after he was caught flying marijuana into northern Washington. The report confirmed many of the details released by police in the month following Brown's Feb. 27 death. According to the report, Brown had been held in the Spokane County Jail for three days before his death. Brown, the report notes, had been booked into the jail "...on a U.S. Marshal hold for distribution of Marijuana." At this time, prison intake documents note that Brown "did not appear suicidal to the intake Deputy ... and that [Brown] answered 'no' to the relevant questions about being suicidal or planning to harm himself." The report revealed the existence of an individual named Leonard J. Johnson, who is referred to as a "co-conspirator" in the case. Johnson, the report notes, was specifically separated from Brown "...because they were co-conspirators in the same on going crime." Previous releases-including RCMP and DEA press releases detailing those arrested in 'Operation Blade Runner', the operation which netted Sam Brown-make no mention of a Leonard J. Johnson, nor do they mention any individuals arrested at the same time as Brown. Calls to the Spokane Police Department to further identify Johnson were not returned. As for Brown's death, dozens of reports from jail staff confirm that Brown was found hanged to death in his cell at 1:15 p.m. on Feb. 27th. The 24-year-old was pronounced dead by paramedics half an hour later. After Brown's death, investigators treated the jail cell as a crime scene, carefully cataloguing the cell and its contents. Investigators did not, the report indicates, find anything resembling a suicide note. Investigators from the Spokane County Sheriff's Office also reviewed calls made by inmates from the sections in which Brown was held. An investigator noted: "I found many conversations but I found none that I could identify as belonging to [Brown] and none that discussed suicide or coercion to commit suicide." - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart