Prisoner Strangled on Bus, Returning From Court
Only in America. Prison Nation. In Maryland, a 20 year old prisoner was killed on the prison bus on the way back to the jail from the courthouse. The murdered inmate had testified at another prisoner's sentencing hearing earlier in the day.
A state prison inmate was killed early Wednesday while riding on a bus with about 35 other inmates, authorities said. Phillip E. Parker Jr., 20, was slain by one or more of the other prisoners, state corrections officials said, but they would not divulge how he was killed or any possible motive.Parker was being returned to the maximum-security Maryland Correctional Adjustment Center in downtown Baltimore after testifying in Hagerstown Tuesday at the sentencing of a fellow inmate.
Officals said the inmates were handcuffed and in leg irons, and that there were five guards on the bus. And still, one inmate gets killed right under their noses? Friday's Baltimore Sun reports Mr. Parker was strangled in his seat by another inmate who was later found to have blood on his wrists.
While a spokeswoman for the Maryland Division of Correction said the 35 inmates on the bus from Hagerstown to Baltimore should have all been in handcuffs and leg irons, Philip E. Parker Sr. said he couldn't understand how a properly shackled inmate could have committed a murder, how no one heard anything and how no one knew his son was dead until the bus was unloaded and he didn't get off.
"There is no way in this world," said Parker Sr., who has ridden that route as a prisoner himself. "Once you're shackled down properly, it is very hard to scratch your nose."
Parker -- who was 6-foot-6 and 200 lbs. -- had been in Hagerstown on Tuesday to testify in the sentencing hearing for Kevin G. Johns Jr., a convicted killer from Baltimore who strangled his 16-year-old cellmate at the Maryland Correctional Training Center near Hagerstown in January 2004.
Even stranger, is that Parker was testifying for the other inmate, not against him. It's still not known if the other inmate was on the same bus, but he was back at Maryland's Supermax Thursday night.
At the hearing, where Johns received a life sentence, he vowed to kill again unless he received psychiatric treatment. Parker was one of four inmates from the Maryland Correctional Adjustment Center in Baltimore, known as Supermax, who had gone to testify in Johns' defense.
"DOC can't give him the treatment he needs for all his mental problems," Parker told the court, according to a Hagerstown newspaper. "He gets really paranoid. He gots a really short temper, right."
Parker was serving a three year sentence for unarmed robbery.
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