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Officials mum on serial killer's suicide

Posted: January 29, 2013 - 1:06am
FILE - This undated file photo provided by the FBI shows Israel Keyes.  Israel Keyes showed no remorse as he detailed how he'd abducted and killed an 18-year-old woman, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive. Keyes showed no remorse as he detailed how he'd abducted and the killed 18-year-old barista Samantha Koenig, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive.  His confession cracked the case, but prosecutors questioning him soon realized there was more, he has killed before.  Before divulging more details, Keyes committed suicide in his cell.  (AP Photo/FBI, File)  Uncredited
Uncredited
FILE - This undated file photo provided by the FBI shows Israel Keyes. Israel Keyes showed no remorse as he detailed how he'd abducted and killed an 18-year-old woman, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive. Keyes showed no remorse as he detailed how he'd abducted and the killed 18-year-old barista Samantha Koenig, then demanded ransom, pretending she was alive. His confession cracked the case, but prosecutors questioning him soon realized there was more, he has killed before. Before divulging more details, Keyes committed suicide in his cell. (AP Photo/FBI, File)

ANCHORAGE — Alaska prisons officials refuse to say how confessed serial killer Israel Keyes obtained a razor before his jail-cell suicide.

The state Department of Corrections denied a public records request from The Associated Press that seeks to determine why Keyes was able have a razor in his Anchorage cell. Keyes slit his wrist in December with the blade of a disposal razor that was imbedded in a pencil. He also strangled himself with a bedsheet.

At the time of his death, Keyes was awaiting trial in the 2012 slaying of an 18-year-old Anchorage barista. Under state policy, he would not have been authorized to have possession of a razor, according to a list of items allowed for pre-trial detainees. Razors can be possessed by convicted prisoners who have been cleared to have them.

In its denial, the state cites prisoner confidentiality. It also says information on the department’s internal investigation of Keyes’ death is denied “on the ground that the only investigation performed was conducted at the direction of Assistant Attorney General John K. Bodick in anticipation of litigation and is thus protected from release by the attorney-client privilege.”

Bodick said Monday he doesn’t know of any lawsuits planned over Keyes’ death, but his office wanted to be better prepared should litigation arise in this case or others involving other inmate deaths. He said Keyes was the kick-off point of a new approach to inmate deaths that had been discussed before his death. Earlier deaths have been handled with a variety of reports by different officials.

Keyes’ family or others have a two-year window to sue, Bodick said. But even if no one does, a lot about Keyes’ death may never be disclosed.

“There’s still a right to privacy involved regarding these kinds of sensitive topics,” Bodick said. “So I think, despite the fact there may be no lawsuit forthcoming, there’s still a right to privacy with the survivors, which would remain.”

John McKay, an Anchorage media law attorney, questioned placing a “blanket rule” of information restrictions on all inmate deaths. The death of an elderly inmate no one remembers, for example, can’t be compared with Keyes’ suicide, which essentially thwarted the investigation of a serial killer’s crime spree. McKay said it also seems like bad public policy to adopt a rule that could hide any culpability on the state’s part.

“I’m not saying that there was wrongdoing,” he said. “I’m just saying it seems wrong to adopt a policy that would shelter any public knowledge about possible wrongdoing.”

Keyes was found dead Dec. 2. Also found were two bloodied sheets of paper with illegible writings that have been analyzed by the FBI, which has not disclosed it findings, only that they did not include a list of Keyes’ other victims.

Keyes, 34, was set for a March trial in federal court in the abduction and killing of Anchorage barista Samantha Koenig. Before he died, Keyes also confessed to the killings of at least seven others across the country, including Bill and Lorraine Currier of Essex, Vt., in 2011. He also alluded to other possible victims. Koenig and the Curriers are the only victims named by Keyes because he knew authorities had tied him to their deaths.

He was in state custody in Anchorage because there are no federal prisons in Alaska.

Besides declining specifics on Keyes’ razor access, the state also declined to discuss policies for inmate razor use and how they apply to an inmate who confessed to numerous killings.

Corrections spokeswoman Kaci Schroeder said that even general discussions of razor possession are not public because they are a security issue.

“If an inmate reads on how we’re doing something,” she said, “then, you know, they can work around the system.”

Keyes was once on suicide watch. At the time of his death, he had been segregated from other inmates but was not on a suicide watch.

In its public records denial, the Corrections Department declined to say why Keyes was placed on suicide watch and for how long. The agency won’t say when and why he was taken off suicide watch or if he was always segregated from other inmates.

The state also declined to say when Keyes’ cell was last checked when he was alive, when he was found dead and who discovered the body.

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kpawsuh
10138
Points
kpawsuh 01/29/13 - 08:10 am
7
2

Who cares how he got it. If

Who cares how he got it. If they could identify the guard who gave it to him, I would personally mail him a check and a hearty Thanks!

Birchwood
380
Points
Birchwood 01/29/13 - 08:37 am
7
2

Automatic issuance

Guys like this dirtbag should automatically get a blade or two and a nice noose when they are admitted. The people of AK will save a pile of money.

ken dunker II
3341
Points
ken dunker II 01/29/13 - 08:42 am
3
4

kpawsuh: I am not comfortable with vigilante prison guards, at

worst, or broken chain of custody at best.
Keyes' death has left many family members without closure.
As an inmate I would be very concerned about the prison's lapse in visual control of their environment.
Alaska Prison Officials appear to have better control over public information.

kpawsuh
10138
Points
kpawsuh 01/29/13 - 08:52 am
6
3

Not a vigilante prison guard

Not a vigilante prison guard Ken. The guards didnt slash Keyes wrists, Keyes did. A vigilante guard would have done the killing. All they did was allow him to remove himself from society - A plus to society as a whole.

ken dunker II
3341
Points
ken dunker II 01/29/13 - 09:12 am
1
4

What they did was allow a razor into the mix and fail to see he

was constructing a knife and hanging himself. FYI he had been removed from society.
TSA could have done better.

JNUKara
8612
Points
JNUKara 01/29/13 - 09:10 am
6
2

I hate to say it - I really

I hate to say it - I really do - But kpawsuh, I agree with you wholeheartedly! It almost (almost) makes me feel like a bad person for not caring that this scumbag is dead. Thanks for saving the state all that cash - probably the only decent thing he's done in his whole life.

Concerned Citizen
428
Points
Concerned Citizen 01/29/13 - 09:19 am
2
5

No great loss, however

DOC has recently "Upgraded" its physical requirements of newly hired Correctional Officers.However, the older, "grandfathered" in guys (and women) didnt have such meet such rigorous physical standards as the new hires do. Thus, there are some incredibly unfit Correctional Officers in our prisons who are allowed to continue on in their employment despite the obvious safety risks associated. I visited the Anchorage facility and saw an officer so obese that he was literally unable to tuck his shirt into his pants. His gut hung down to mid thigh. It was disgusting. This man couldnt possibly have gotten out of his own way in an altercation with a prisoner or visitor. I also sat in the lobby of this facility for an hour and saw 7 staff members text messaging, playing games, and checking their e-mails on personal cell phones directly in front of the "absolutely no cell phones allowed" sign !!! I sat for an hour in the lobby without a single staff member questioning me on my business there. I had a large bag with me that I walked in and out of the front door with going around the metal detector (at the staff member's direction). Serious security issue.
LCCC has some unfit officers as well spanning from those with considerable hearing loss to those who couldnt possibly get up off the floor without assistance due to joint problems.
It is no wonder that Mr. Keyes could get hold of a weapon in a facility staffed with obese, inattentive security officers. We are fortunate that more of this (and worse) has not occured in these facilities. There are times when grandfathering in problems seems irresponsible. This is one of those times.

AlaskaMama08
325
Points
AlaskaMama08 01/29/13 - 09:18 am
5
0

I also agree. Good riddance.

I also agree. Good riddance.

Latitude58
14447
Points
Latitude58 01/29/13 - 10:02 am
8
2

Hey Empire!

PLEASE! Please don't publish this creeps face again. I know it gets you web hits, but it also gives him the publicity he craved. Let's not reward this POS even posthumously.

And it might encourage future creeps.

skirkz
6682
Points
skirkz 01/29/13 - 11:05 am
4
0

Right with you on this one, Lat!

This POS has gotten way more face time than he deserves! I am sick of the media immortalizing his image for future headline resources. He's gone, thank God! No good comes from his media induced beatification. No more closure will result in his never ending parade of unanswered questions. The answers are 6 feet under. Give it a rest. Give us a rest!

Juno_Baby
41
Points
Juno_Baby 01/29/13 - 11:11 am
6
1

John McKay...

Should probably read the Statutes and Administrative Code that governs the conduct of the Department of Corrections. 22 AAC 05.095 is quite clear on who has access to an inmate’s records and why.

And, Concerned Citizen... What does the physical prowess of Correctional Officers at Lemon Creek have to do with what happened in a jail facility in Anchorage? You say you've been in Lemon Creek and seem to know a lot about its staff. I suspect you've been booked there a time or two and simply have a bone to pick with guards who locked you up.

Dev_mom
319
Points
Dev_mom 01/29/13 - 11:19 am
2
3

Good riddance!

He's dead, the end. In my opinion, Vigilante is sometimes the only way things get done. Our state justice system seems to me to be skewed On occasion at least. And by killing himself he saved the state so much money. Life in prison how ridiculous,

Concerned Citizen
428
Points
Concerned Citizen 01/29/13 - 01:26 pm
1
5

JunoBaby

My knowledge is NOT as an inmate. I have no beef with the DOC facilities. If you read my post' I clearly mention a most illuminating PROFESSIONAL visit to the Anchorage facility. I have an impeccably clean record and am vigorously offended at your inability to read and grasp clearly stated concepts about a very important security issue in the Alaska prison system. Your assumptions are an unfortunate consquence of a larger cognitive issue, I am sure.
Physical prowess of correctional officers has EVERYTHING to do with facility safety and controlling access to implements that may be used as weapons in the facility.

AKJarhead
27
Points
AKJarhead 01/29/13 - 02:55 pm
2
0

Took the words out of my mouth

Dev_mom, you should try your hand at mind reading. He is exactly where he belongs. End of story.

beardscratcher
13
Points
beardscratcher 01/30/13 - 09:09 am
1
0

its all crooked in the system....they make the law as they go to

protect negligence...did i say something.....

Juno_Baby
41
Points
Juno_Baby 01/30/13 - 09:49 am
1
0

Consequence...

Concerned,
Your prior post said nothing of being a “professional” visit. You clearly do have issue with DOC as your narcissistic rhetoric relentlessly criticizes Correctional Officer for their physique and diminishes their abilities for their size and perceived age. I would wager that you also believe that a person of small stature is equally as impaired to perform the duties. You would err in that assumption as well. There are many large individuals who are quick, agile, and strong (e.g., football linebackers) and they are more capable of meeting the physical and mental demands of correctional work than someone as narrow-minded as you seem to be. You clearly have no factual knowledge of correctional facility security, policies, or procedures. Inmates often obtain contraband items from other inmates. Keyes likely bartered for or stole the razor. Your belief that a Correctional Officer’s size or age makes a facility less secure and is the source of inmates obtaining contraband is obtuse. And, its spelled consequence

Concerned Citizen
428
Points
Concerned Citizen 01/30/13 - 10:59 am
1
1

Juno_Baby

I will concede only that you have the right to be ill-informed and incorrect at your discretion.

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