"He Was Freaking" Friend says of Ebel's Isolation
Colorado Independent
DENVER– In the weeks before his death, Evan Ebel, suspected killer of
Colorado Department of Corrections Director Tom Clements, had broken
ties with white supremacist prison gang 211 Crew and was debilitated by
the transition from prolonged isolation to social contact, according to a
friend and former fellow inmate.
In a series of interviews conducted with The Colorado Independent,
parolee Ryan Pettigrew dismissed widespread media speculation that Ebel
shot Clements as part of an orchestrated 211 Crew “gang hit.” He said
that, over the course of the last few weeks, Ebel was growing
increasingly agitated in his adjustment to life outside of prison and
beyond the tiny “administrative segregation” cells in which he spent
years deprived of regular human contact.
“Trust me, this was no gang hit. This was about what was haunting Evan Ebel,” Pettigrew says. “Clements’ name never came up.”
Pettigrew supported his statements by producing dozens of text
messages he exchanged with Ebel over the last two months. The messages
reveal Ebel as wrestling with anxiety about his freedom and grappling
with the urge to ease that anxiety through violence. The texts span
from February 1, four days after Ebel’s release from prison on January
28, to March 5, less than two weeks before Ebel is alleged to have
killed pizza delivery man Nathan Leon and then murdered Clements before
he led Texas authorities on the high-speed highway gun battle that left
Ebel clinically dead last week.
Pettigrew, 33, is on parole and studying to become a real estate
investor. He was released in August from a ten-year sentence on a
witness intimidating conviction. He served most of his time in Colorado
State Penitentiary, the state’s highest security prison, where he
befriended Ebel.
Ebel was released from Sterling Correctional Facility at the end of
January after serving roughly nine years for a series of stick-ups and
assaults.
Both of the men served long periods of their sentences in solitary
confinement. As practiced in Colorado, so-called administrative
segregation isolates prisoners for months, years and even decades with
virtually no human contact other than with corrections officers who pass
meals through their food slot and escort them to a room where they
exercise alone.
Pettigrew and Ebel didn’t know each other face to face. But over
their years at the State Penitentiary, they exchanged frequent notes
called “kites” sent through an elaborate delivery system called
“fishing.” It entails a chain of prisoners passing notes through
plumbing and sliding them under doors in cell-block pods.
In their notes, Pettigrew and Ebel discussed books, philosophy, their
families, frustrations with the prison system and plans for businesses
they would start when they got out.
Life on the Outside
They kept in touch by mail while Pettigrew served out his last months
at Centennial Correctional Facility and Ebel served out his at Sterling
Correctional Facility. Once Ebel was released, they spoke by phone
almost every day during Ebel’s first several weeks on the outside.
“At first he was telling me how he was freaking out, just freaking
out,” Pettigrew recalls. “He was saying that he couldn’t sleep and [was]
having a hard time eating and being around people. He didn’t want to
have any associations with anybody. He was feeling extremely anxious. It
was all the same stuff I was experiencing when I got out. He was a lot
like me.”
In one text to Pettigrew from mid February, Ebel said he wanted to get into a fight as a form of coping.
“…im just feeling peculiar & the only way i know i know to remedy
that is via use of ‘violence’ even if that ‘violence’ be something as
petty & inconsequential as a fist fight which id prefer be with
someone i can trust as opposed to some renegade civilian who odds are
will tell.”
Pettigrew said that, coming from Ebel, he understood the sentiment.
“He told me that he needed to release some anxiety. He needed that
violence as a release so he could calm down. He didn’t know any other
way.”
The text messages between the two men — and obtained by The Independent
— detail Ebel’s plans to get a tattoo and his thoughts about setting up
a for-profit website for inmates and for members of the public
interested in news with “street cred” about contemporary prison culture.
He planned to post correspondence between prisoners and their
attorneys, columns authored by inmates, roundups of actions taken by
authorities against prisoners and resistance mounted by prisoners in the
form of hunger strikes, for example. Ebel’s promotional strategy was to
“advertise by way of regular mail and word of mouth (not a problem).”
“Maybe we’ll do a whiteboy discount as an additional selling point,” he
wrote.
In one text, Ebel said he was spending most of his evenings since his release “reading & talking to folks on the phone.”
Pettigrew said Ebel was living in a house in Commerce City and that
Ebel’s father Jack, an attorney, paid at least part the rent. Pettigrew
also said Ebel was working as a researcher at a law office.
He said Ebel and several gang members recently had broken with the
211 Crew over disagreements that Pettigrew, who is still a member, would
not discuss. Ebel’s apparent suicide-by-cop was motivated by his own
struggles, he said, not out of allegiance to his former gang.
Pettigrew sensed early on that Ebel and he didn’t share the same goals for their lives after incarceration.
“I’m trying to get on with my life, leave [the Department of
Corrections] behind me and make a living. [Ebel] seemed still pretty
focused on what happened in prison.”
Clements Anxious about Abrupt Transitions
Pettigrew laments the death of Clements, a reform-minded chief who
was particularly concerned with the negative effects of solitary
confinement.
“It sucks for the inmates he was changing the system for,” he wrote last week in a text to The Independent.
“I’d say there [would be] something pretty ironic [if Ebel] killed
the guy who was trying to fix things. It’s unfortunate, because Clements
was in a position to help,” Pettigrew elaborated in a phone interview
Monday.
Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper, in revealing his longtime friendship
with Ebel’s father, said in a statement last week that Evan Ebel had a
“bad streak” and, assuming he in fact murdered Clements, was “hell-bent
on causing evil.”
It’s exactly that kind of violent tendency that Clements was
hell-bent on preventing, especially among prisoners being released from
solitary.
In an exclusive interview last spring, Clements said that,
immediately after Hickenlooper recruited him from Missouri to run the
Colorado corrections department, he found disturbing “one very alarming
statistic” he said kept him up at night — that 47 percent of Colorado
prisoners being released from isolation were walking directly out onto
the streets without help reintegrating into social environments and
interacting with people.
Clements wanted longer transition periods and step-down programs
before setting isolated prisoners free. As Pettigrew tells it, Ebel said
he had little help making that transition. He said altercations during
his brief period in a step-down program landed him back in isolation.
“You have to ask yourself the question – How does holding inmates in
administrative segregation and then putting them out on a bus into the
public, [how does that] square up?” Clements said.
“We have to think about how what we do in prisons impacts the
community when [prisoners] leave,” Clements continued. “It’s not just
about running the prison safely and securely. There’s a lot of research
around solitary and isolation in recent years, some tied to POWs and
some to corrections. My experience tells me that long periods of
isolation can be counter-productive to stable behavior and long-term
rehabilitation goals.”
Soon after taking office, Clements launched a study of solitary
confinement and decided to close Colorado State Penitentiary II, the
state’s two-year-old supermax prison, which was designed and built
entirely for isolation. By last spring’s interview, Clements said he had
reduced the 47 percent isolation-to-streets release to 22 percent. His
goal, he noted, was to drive to zero the number of isolated prisoners
being released without step-down programs.
Pettigrew said he thought many corrections officers weren’t receptive to the reforms Clements was making.
“The old school guards in there, they just hated what he has doing
and would come down even harder on us. You develop such a hatred not
only from being in solitary but from having been pocked with a stick
that long.”
‘It’s Hate that’s Building up in You’
Those sentiments were echoed by Colorado State Penitentiary prisoner Josue Gonzales in National Geographic Channel documentary that showed him walking into freedom after five years in isolation.
“I think 90 percent of the people that are locked up here, if they
ran into a staff member on the streets, they’d hurt ‘em,” Gonzales was
quoted to say in the film.
“It’s hate that’s been building up in you. And you kind of just kind
of try to just swallow it down. That stuff builds up. The tension builds
up, builds up, builds up, and I still have them thoughts still, though,
that I want to basically get into it with somebody.
“Those are the things that I want to get away from. But I still deal with them all the time.”
1 comment:
The cruel irony that the very policy policy--solitary confinement--Tom Clements sought to change played a role in his murder is tragic beyond words.
Let's hope that all who mourn Tom Clements will honor him by redoubling his commitment to reducing the excessive use of isolation.
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