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CA: Defense in Aryan Brotherhood trial probes secret prison unit - Supermax "H Unit"
ap on Riverside Press Enterprise ^ | 6/7/06 | Linda Deutsch - ap

Posted on 06/07/2006 10:02:37 PM PDT by NormsRevenge

SANTA ANA

Within the forbidding walls of the Supermax federal prison, where high-profile inmates live in heavily guarded isolation, a section was created in 1998 called "H Unit," where six special prisoners could mingle, use a computer and share information, a prison official testified Wednesday.

The six men, dropouts from the notorious Aryan Brotherhood prison gang, were known as "cooperators" or in slang as "snitches."

Danny Shoff, a Bureau of Prisons official now assigned to Washington, D.C., said he was one of the few staff members at the Florence, Colo., facility allowed entry to "H Unit" during the period that the inmates were helping the government in an investigation designed to crack the heart of the Aryan Brotherhood.

Shoff testified on the second day of the defense phase of a racketeering case in which the alleged ringleader of the Aryan Brotherhood is on trial with three others. The trial follows arrests of 40 people in 2002 after a six-year investigation. Nineteen struck plea bargains, one person died, and trials of the remainder are pending.

The defense in the current trial is seeking to show that prosecution witnesses have exaggerated their own importance or had the opportunity to manufacture incriminating stories about the defendants.

Shoff said that he was aware that "H Unit" inmates were using a computer and were producing documents, but he said he couldn't say for sure whether they had access to internal prison databases which could have given them information that they would then represent as their own.

Under questioning by attorney Mark Fleming, who represents lead defendant Barry "The Baron" Mills, Shoff was asked whether he ever sat down and talked to one of the informants separately from the others.

"You never sat down specifically with one because they were all out and about, so you talked to all of them," Shoff said.

Fleming presented Shoff with various documents produced by inmate Danny Weeks, one of the key informants, which included information about another case involving major Mexican drug dealers. He suggested the detailed notes made by Weeks in tiny handwriting contained numbers taken from one or more prison databases.

"Can you think of any explanation of why Danny Weeks would have such information?" asked Fleming.

"No," said the witness.

But Shoff added that "Danny Weeks was sending copies of this stuff out. ... How he got this I don't know. I'd sure like to know."

Shoff was not asked where Weeks was sending the copies.

Another defense lawyer, Michael V. White, who represents defendant T.D. "The Hulk" Bingham, asked how the unit was staffed and who was allowed entry.

The witness acknowledged that the unit was supposed to be kept a secret and was open only to a very few staff members.

"The unit was new," he said. "... There were no policies."

Shoff repeatedly claimed a faulty memory of events that transpired in the unit even though he acknowledged he had testified previously in the trial and during pretrial hearings.

"You're asking me to respond to something seven, eight years ago," he said. "I don't recall."

He said that "H Unit," also known as "the bubble," ultimately was closed down after Weeks made complaints within the institution about its operation and the men who were housed there were transferred to "D Unit," which was more restricted and in which inmates were locked down 23 hours a day.

"There had been other complaints about H Unit as well?" asked White.

"Not that I'm aware of," said the witness.

Shoff denied knowledge of a letter written by a psychiatrist who had access to the unit and who made complaints about it. The psychiatrist is expected to testify as a defense witness.

Shoff testified that Weeks' activities ultimately caused the shutdown of the H Unit. After having made his entry as a dropout from the Aryan Brotherhood, Shoff said Weeks later claimed he was a mole, not a dropout.

"Didn't he once say, 'I was sent here to infiltrate H Unit and see if I could disrupt the government investigation of the Aryan Brotherhood?'" asked Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Wolfe.

"Yes," said the witness.

"And Danny Weeks recanted his allegations and said, 'I was a mole.' Isn't that how it ended?'" Wolfe asked.

"Yes," said the witness.

After weeks of prosecution testimony, the defense opened its case Tuesday by calling a federal agent who helped build the government's case against the Aryan Brotherhood.

The agent testified that many of the gang's former members were promised reduced sentences and sometimes released in exchange for their help. One inmate received $150,000 when he was released and placed into a witness-protection program, the witness said.

The case is one of the largest capital murder cases in U.S. history. The government alleges the defendants now on trial ordered or committed many of the 32 murders and attempted murders in the indictment.

Mills, the chief defendant, is serving two life terms for the 1979 killing of a fellow inmate. In the current trial, he faces a possible death sentence for allegedly orchestrating the 1997 killings of two black inmates in Pennsylvania.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Government; US: California
KEYWORDS: aryan; brotherhood; california; defense; hunit; prison; probes; secret; supermax; trial

1 posted on 06/07/2006 10:02:41 PM PDT by NormsRevenge
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To: NormsRevenge

Not sure what to say...I don't follow these people at all and know little about them.


2 posted on 06/07/2006 10:16:08 PM PDT by sageb1 (This is the Final Crusade. There are only 2 sides. Pick one.)
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