In a message dated 09/21/2001 1:14:49 PM Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< Subj:     [The_Spike] Activist Berrigan  confined alone after terrorist 
attacks
 Date:  09/21/2001 1:14:49 PM Eastern Daylight Time
 From:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Judith Hill)
 Reply-to:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To:    [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Spike List)
 
 
 
 
 
 Activist Berrigan confined alone after terrorist attacks
 
 By Carl Schoettler
 Sun Staff
 Originally published September 21, 2001
 http://sunspot.net/news/nationworld/bal-te.prisoner21sep21.story
 
 The 77-year-old peace activist Philip F. Berrigan was immediately shifted
 into solitary confinement at a federal penitentiary Sept. 11 when terrorists
 crashed hijacked airliners into the Pentagon and World Trade Center.
 
 Berrigan was among a number of "high-profile" inmates segregated from the
 general population in federal prisons across the nation, according to
 Internet messages received Wednesday at Jonah House, the Roman Catholic
 anti-war community that Berrigan helped found in Baltimore nearly 30 years
 ago.
 
 "Phil's in lockdown," said Elizabeth McAlister, Berrigan's wife, who is also
 a founder of Jonah House. "We don't even know if he's getting mail. We know
 he's not writing."
 
 Berrigan is confined in the Federal Correctional Institution at Elkton,
 Ohio, a low-security prison.
 
 Jonah House members believe that on Sept. 11 federal prison authorities also
 segregated Leonard Peltier, the Native American activist in prison for the
 killing of two FBI agents in 1975, and Marilyn Buck, convicted of joining a
 Black Liberation Army robbery of an armored truck during which two police
 officers and a Brink's guard were killed.
 
 Berrigan has about three months to go on a sentence of a year and a day for
 violation of parole in connection with an anti-war demonstration at a naval
 base in Maine.
 
 McAlister says she made about 15 phone calls to the prison Wednesday before
 she learned that Berrigan was in segregation.
 
 In a letter asking for help from Maryland Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski, she said
 that her husband was not allowed visitors or phone calls.
 
 "I was not told why or for how long," she said. She was assured he was
 permitted to write letters. But she said she has not received any mail from
 him since before Sept. 11.
 
 An aide to the senator was told that Berrigan was placed in segregation as a
 result of the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, and that
 it was "for his own protection."
 
 Officials at the Elkton prison referred questions to the federal Bureau of
 Prisons.
 
 Traci Billingsley, a Bureau of Prisons spokeswoman, said: "All institutions
 have taken appropriate security measures to make sure the institutions and
 inmates are secure."
 
 Copyright © 2001, The Baltimore Sun >>







Activist Berrigan confined alone after terrorist attacks

By Carl Schoettler
Sun Staff
Originally published September 21, 2001
http://sunspot.net/news/nationworld/bal-te.prisoner21sep21.story

The 77-year-old peace activist Philip F. Berrigan was immediately shifted
into solitary confinement at a federal penitentiary Sept. 11 when terrorists
crashed hijacked airliners into the Pentagon and World Trade Center.

Berrigan was among a number of "high-profile" inmates segregated from the
general population in federal prisons across the nation, according to
Internet messages received Wednesday at Jonah House, the Roman Catholic
anti-war community that Berrigan helped found in Baltimore nearly 30 years
ago.

"Phil's in lockdown," said Elizabeth McAlister, Berrigan's wife, who is also
a founder of Jonah House. "We don't even know if he's getting mail. We know
he's not writing."

Berrigan is confined in the Federal Correctional Institution at Elkton,
Ohio, a low-security prison.

Jonah House members believe that on Sept. 11 federal prison authorities also
segregated Leonard Peltier, the Native American activist in prison for the
killing of two FBI agents in 1975, and Marilyn Buck, convicted of joining a
Black Liberation Army robbery of an armored truck during which two police
officers and a Brink's guard were killed.

Berrigan has about three months to go on a sentence of a year and a day for
violation of parole in connection with an anti-war demonstration at a naval
base in Maine.

McAlister says she made about 15 phone calls to the prison Wednesday before
she learned that Berrigan was in segregation.

In a letter asking for help from Maryland Sen. Barbara A. Mikulski, she said
that her husband was not allowed visitors or phone calls.

"I was not told why or for how long," she said. She was assured he was
permitted to write letters. But she said she has not received any mail from
him since before Sept. 11.

An aide to the senator was told that Berrigan was placed in segregation as a
result of the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, and that
it was "for his own protection."

Officials at the Elkton prison referred questions to the federal Bureau of
Prisons.

Traci Billingsley, a Bureau of Prisons spokeswoman, said: "All institutions
have taken appropriate security measures to make sure the institutions and
inmates are secure."

Copyright © 2001, The Baltimore Sun






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