Thomas Silverstein, Inmate With Longest Solitary Confinement, Dies In Colorado

(CNN) - Thomas Silverstein, a triple murderer who spent decades in solitary confinement in federal prison, died at a Colorado hospital this month, officials said Wednesday. Silverstein died May 11, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons. He was 67.

(credit: Long Beach Police/CNN)

He had lived in solitary confinement since killing a prison guard in 1983, a span of more than 35 years. Much of that time he was subject to an unusual no-contact order in which he had little interaction with other people.

Silverstein is believed to have served the longest term in solitary confinement in the federal penitentiary system.

He was first sent to prison in 1978 after a robbery conviction. While at a facility in Kansas, he was accused of killing an inmate and moved to a maximum-security prison in Marion, Illinois. His first murder conviction was overturned, but while in Marion he killed two inmates and fatally stabbed a guard.

Silverstein was rumored to be part of the Aryan Brotherhood prison gang and was targeted by other inmates, according to his former attorney Daniel Manville.

Authorities had deemed him a hazard and transferred him to a federal prison in Atlanta, where he was confined in a 6-by-7-foot cell. Bright lights in the cell were never turned off, and he was monitored continuously by surveillance cameras.

Before moving to the Supermax prison in Colorado, Silverstein also spent time at Leavenworth in Kansas.

This photo taken on February 13, 2019 shows a view of the United States Penitentiary Administrative Maximum Facility, also known as the ADX or "Supermax", in Florence, Colorado. The facility, also known as ADX (administrative maximum), has been dubbed the "Alcatraz of the Rockies" because of its remote location and harsh security measures. (credit: JASON CONNOLLY/AFP/Getty Images)

In Supermax, Silverstein watched television, wrote letters, drew, crocheted, practiced yoga and meditated.

"It's almost more humane to kill someone immediately than it is to intentionally bury a man alive," he wrote in a 2008 letter to a friend.

His attorneys in 2007, in a lawsuit against the prison bureau, said his tight conditions amounted to cruel and unusual punishment.

Solitary confinement was used broadly in the 19th century, but the punishment was then largely abandoned because of the view that "it was doing more harm than good," said Craig Haney, director of the program in legal studies at the University of California, Santa Cruz.

Correctional practice began to reincorporate solitary confinement in the late 1970s and 80s, as prisons began to get overcrowded, Haney said.

Roughly 80,000 are people being held in some sort of solitary confinement in the United States, Haney said.

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