Alleged Crime Boss Says He’s Being Thwarted From Preparing A Defense
A small cell, limited visits and few phone calls are making it difficult for Mike Miske to prepare for trial in what could be a death penalty case, his attorneys say.
Attorneys representing alleged racketeering kingpin Michael John Miske Jr., say their client has been held in solitary confinement in the Federal Detention Center for over 200 days, and has been told this will continue indefinitely, all without a hearing and without apparent concern for his procedural and constitutional rights.
Miske and 10 co-defendants were named in a 22-count indictment in July 2020 which includes a variety of offenses, ranging from drug trafficking and weapons offenses, to armed robbery, kidnapping and murder for hire. All but one of the defendants are also alleged to have been members or associates of an overarching racketeering conspiracy, controlled and directed by Miske, in which they each participated by committing at least two crimes.
During Miske鈥檚 extended time in solitary confinement, his attorneys say he has 鈥渂een in a small cell with extremely limited human contact, restricted visits and phone calls with his family, limited access to the commissary, and little time out of his cell.鈥 They say these conditions violate Miske鈥檚 constitutional rights, as they are affecting his health and hampering his ability to participate effectively in his own defense.
Miske鈥檚 attorneys say the extended term of solitary confinement is contrary to repeated representations made by FDC officials during a court hearing in January, when they assured Magistrate Judge Kenneth Mansfield he was to be returned to the general population within days. That did not happen. And limitations associated with being held in solitary confinement violate terms of an order issued by Mansfield at the conclusion of the January hearing, they say.
That order prohibited FDC and Federal Bureau of Prisons officials from taking any actions that interfere with Miske鈥檚 鈥渞ight to the effective assistance of counsel,鈥 required the facility to accommodate in-person contact visits and confidential telephone calls between Miske and his legal team during 鈥渁ll reasonable hours,鈥 and directed them to provide Miske with the computer equipment and time (up to eight hours a day) to review and comment on a mountain of evidence collected.
Now Miske鈥檚 attorneys are heading back to court. In a 59-page motion filed in Honolulu鈥檚 U.S. District Court last week, they ask the court to revisit and clarify Mansfield鈥檚 earlier order by specifically requiring that Miske be transferred back into the general population at the detention center; providing him access to a computer to be supplied by the defense that has the evidence files and word processing software loaded onto it so he can receive and review legal documents, and respond with confidential notes to assist in his own defense; and allowing in-person contact visits with his attorneys 鈥渁t all reasonable hours鈥 as provided by law and by the prior court order.
Alternatively, the motion requests the court require Warden Estella Derr to show cause why she should not be held in contempt.
Documents attached as exhibits, including correspondence and emails, show Miske鈥檚 attorneys have repeatedly complained about what they say are violations of Mansfield鈥檚 original order, including last-minute cancellation of scheduled meetings and telephone calls with his legal team, arbitrary one-hour limits on telephone calls with his legal team and imposing conditions that seriously interfere with Miske鈥檚 ability to assist his legal team.
Warden Derr took over the top spot in the Honolulu facility in May 2020, and will complete her initial year as warden next month.
Derr has worked her way up through the ranks during 26 years with the Bureau of Prisons, starting as a secretary, and eventually serving a total of five years and two months as associate warden at two different facilities before being promoted to warden here in Honolulu, . She previously served as case management coordinator at the Honolulu facility for six years after it first opened in 2001.
Confusion And Miscommunication
Problems arose immediately following Mansfield鈥檚 Jan. 15 court order, which were documented in emails from two of Miske鈥檚 attorneys.
Some of these problems could be attributed to the routine indignities of life in prison. But in a case involving a potential death sentence, they take on additional importance and constitutional relevance.
As the courts have long recognized, the prospect of the death penalty is different.
Miske鈥檚 attorneys cited a 1989 U.S. Supreme Court case to underscore the difference.
鈥淎s the Supreme Court has repeatedly emphasized, 鈥榯he Constitution places special constraints on the procedures used to convict an accused of a capital offense and sentence him to death. The finality of the death penalty requires a 鈥榞reater degree of reliability鈥 when it is imposed,鈥欌 they wrote.
Among the 17 charges against Miske are four capital crimes for which the maximum sentence is death.
On Jan. 24, San Francisco-based attorney Michael Burt wrote to Bureau of Prisons attorney Timothy Rodrigues 鈥渢o document problems we are already having with FDC鈥檚 compliance with the (court鈥檚) order.鈥 Burt explained he was writing to Rodrigues because the attorney had appeared at the January court hearing and spoke on behalf of the detention center.
Burt had been appointed by the court as 鈥渓earned counsel鈥 to assist Miske鈥檚 defense because of his extensive experience in death penalty cases.
鈥淗ighly skilled and experienced counsel is critical at every stage of a federal death penalty proceeding, and it is important from the outset of a case that death-qualified counsel be appointed to provide representation to defendants charged with a capital crime,鈥 according to of the federal Defender Services Office, part of the federal court system.
Burt complained that telephone calls on Jan. 20 and Jan. 21 had been arbitrarily cut off after one hour.
鈥淭his is a violation of the court鈥檚 order,鈥 Burt wrote, explaining that he had brought the order to the attention of Unit Manager Kris Robl, who 鈥渋ndicated that although he was aware of the court鈥檚 order allowing calls at all reasonable times, he was too busy to allow Mr. Miske to continue the conversation beyond one hour.鈥
Despite this early complaint, the one-hour time limit has continued to be enforced, according to the show cause motion.
Burt also noted the detention center鈥檚 failure to provide Miske access to a computer with word processing capability, as called for by Mansfield鈥檚 order. Instead, it provided access to a computer and an electric typewriter with a tiny display for 鈥渨ord processing.鈥 But the typewriter had to be plugged in, and no electrical outlet was initially available.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think an electric typewriter, even if plugged in and made available to Miske, satisfies the letter or spirit of the Court鈥檚 order,鈥 Burt wrote.
The memo to 鈥渟how cause鈥 restates what should be obvious: 鈥淎n electric typewriter is not word processing.鈥
鈥淲hile it is slightly better than the rubber pencil that Mr. Miske has been forced to use, in most ways it is no different from only having a pen and paper, since it still involves physical sheets of paper that counsel must scan in and cannot copy and paste any of Mr. Miske鈥檚 notes to allow them to be used in a meaningful way.鈥
Further, Miske was required to purchase typewriter ribbon cartridges through the detention center commissary. But at the beginning of March, he was notified that the commissary 鈥渞an out鈥 of the ribbons, and he learned none would be available for at least a month.
Similarly, in a declaration filed in court, Miske said he had been informed he would not be able to obtain paper through the detention center, and it would instead have to be provided by his defense attorneys. Then, on March 4, all of his blank paper was seized as 鈥渃ontraband鈥 during a 鈥渟hakedown鈥 of his cell, and he was 鈥渢old that I couldn鈥檛 have it.鈥
This despite an admonition in Mansfield鈥檚 January order: 鈥淟ogistical challenges, pandemic issues, or disciplinary sanctions … do not provide a basis to provide Mr. Miske anything less鈥 than what the law requires.
Singled Out For Shackles
Attorney Lynn Panagakos, a former federal prosecutor, sent an email to Rodrigues objecting to Miske鈥檚 hands being shackled to his waist during a contact visit with two members of the defense team in mid-January.
鈥淭his materially restricted the effectiveness of the consultation, particularly due to the complex, document intensive nature of the case … If he were in the general population, he would not be shackled,鈥 Panagakos wrote.
But despite her objections, and email follow-ups, Miske has continued to be shackled through at least 20 visits since that time, his attorneys now say.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think an electric typewriter, even if plugged in and made available to Miske, satisfies the letter or spirit of the Court鈥檚 order.鈥 – Michael Burt, lawyer appointed by the court to help in Miske’s defense
The problem is further described in the pending motion: 鈥淢r. Miske has been brought to the visitation room with shackles around his wrists that are attached to a belly chain that goes around his waist. These shackles and belly chain have remained on for the entirety of each visit. Being shackled this way results in Mr. Miske not being able to move his hands more than a few inches from his waist and makes reviewing documents or paperwork during the visits very difficult.鈥
鈥淪ince Mr. Miske鈥檚 hands are chained to his belly, he can鈥檛 freely pass documents back and forth with counsel nor can he flip through the pages himself. Counsel must turn pages for him and place documents on the table in front of him so that he may view them,鈥 according to the motion.
Given the document-intensive nature of the case, which has already prompted its designation as a 鈥渃omplex case鈥 requiring extended deadlines to deal with some 500 gigabytes of evidence in digital form to date, these are not minor inconveniences.
In his sworn declaration, Miske said he had not seen any other detainee in chains during the more than five months he had been held in the Special Housing Unit.
Solitary Confinement
Miske has been confined in the Special Housing Unit since Nov. 2. Initially, detention center officials said he was placed in solitary confinement while he was being investigated for a suspected security violation. A month later, he was told that the investigation had been completed, and that he was set to be returned to the general population, where he previously had more privileges.
During the short period he was housed in the general population, he was in a housing unit with detainees who had work assignments requiring them to be out of their cells at various times, often for long periods. He met with his attorneys without being shackled, and he was able to use a telephone in a counselor鈥檚 office for calls with his attorneys and a court-assigned death penalty mitigation investigator, where he was able to spread out the documents being discussed.
However, for most of the time he has been in the Special Housing Unit, Miske has been locked in his cell for 24 hours a day.
鈥淢y cell consists of a bed, a toilet/sink combo, and a small desk that is welded to the bunk,鈥 Miske wrote in his declaration. 鈥淭he only times I leave my cell are for legal visits and the law library, both of which are located in similar small cells.鈥
鈥淟aw library鈥 conjures up images of a library with stacks of legal resources. The reality of the law library in the Special Housing Unit is something very different.
鈥淭he law library is an empty cell with a computer and a typewriter in it,鈥 Miske wrote. If he is working in the law library and has to use the bathroom, or retrieve a document from his cell, he must gather up all of his materials, including the ribbon from the typewriter, wait for a guard, who patrols only every 30 minutes, pass out his belongings and sanitize the room. He is then required to submit to a strip search, 鈥渟quat and cough,鈥 then dress, be put in handcuffs, have a plastic face shield put on his head, and escorted back to his cell.
Telephone calls with his defense lawyers are equally problematic. A telephone secured to a rolling cart must be brought over to his cell.
Related
鈥淭he receiver is fed through the food slot in my cell door,鈥 Miske said in his declaration. 鈥淭he cord attaching the headset to the base of the phone is a metal cord, like you would find on a payphone and is not flexible 鈥 (and) only extends approximately 12-14 inches into my cell past the food slot.鈥
Miske鈥檚 cell has no chair, so in order to talk with his lawyers on the phone, he is tethered by the short phone cord and has to 鈥渃rouch or squat on the floor at my door next to my toilet and lean my head against the door.鈥
Miske says he was advised by his attorneys to keep records of his interactions with detention center staff and officials.
His declaration describes a brief conversation with a Captain Miller on an early morning in February. Miske asked if Miller knew when he would be getting out of solitary, and Miller reportedly referred back to the hearing before Magistrate Judge Mansfield.
鈥淲hen he stopped at my cell, he (Miller) said, ‘Huuuuuuu weeee. Your attorneys gave us a-lickin. We had to flex back,鈥欌 Miske wrote in his declaration.
Miske鈥檚 attorneys point out that no valid justification for keeping him in solitary confinement has been offered by FDC officials, and they point to Captain Miller鈥檚 statement as evidence that it is simply retaliation for taking their complaints to court. Indeed, when defense counsel made a Freedom of Information Act complaint for records of the disciplinary investigation that supposedly justified Miske鈥檚 initial transfer into solitary confinement, no records were produced and they were told 鈥渢here are no disciplinary records on your client.鈥
鈥淩etaliation against prisoners for their exercise of this (First Amendment) right is itself a constitutional violation, and prohibited as a matter of 鈥榗learly established law,鈥欌 Miske鈥檚 attorneys argue, quoting from a prior federal case.
Effects Of Solitary Confinement
The show cause motion is accompanied by a declaration by Dr. George Woods, a well-regarded specialist in neuropsychiatry, which summarizes the available scientific literature on the psychological effects of long-term solitary confinement.
Woods points to a range of psychological effects of prison isolation, including 鈥渁nxiety, withdrawal, hypersensitivity, ruminations, cognitive dysfunction, hallucinations, loss of control, irritability, aggression, rage, paranoia, hopelessness, a sense of impending emotional breakdown, self-mutilation, and suicidal ideation and behavior.鈥
Woods reported: 鈥淏y way of summary, it is my expert opinion that being housed in a SHU under the conditions described in Mr. Miske鈥檚 present motion 鈥 especially over a long period of time 鈥 can produce a number of negative psychological effects and, therefore, places prisoners at significant risk of serious psychological harm. I believe that these effects are now well understood and described in the scientific literature.鈥
Miske himself has reported losing 30 pounds, despite eating everything provided to him, and reported also losing 鈥渟ignificant muscle tone and mass because I cannot exercise.鈥 And during his brief conversation with Miller in February, Miske says he told Miller, 鈥淚鈥檓 going mental in here.鈥
No date has yet been set for a hearing on the motion. However, a motion seeking additional computer access for Miske鈥檚 younger brother and co-defendant, John Stancil, and a second co-defendant, Jarrin Young, is scheduled for a May 28 hearing, at which time many of these same issues regarding adequate computer access will be at issue.
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About the Author
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Ian Lind is an award-winning investigative reporter and columnist who has been blogging daily for more than 20 years. He has also worked as a newsletter publisher, public interest advocate and lobbyist for Common Cause in 贬补飞补颈驶颈, peace educator, and legislative staffer. Lind is a lifelong resident of the islands. Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.