Several of us have known Dennis for over 20 years. It is hard to
describe everything that makes up a person on a webpage, but here is
some information about Dennis anyway.
Independent filmmakers Richard Searls and Molly O'Neill have produced a
17 minute tape of excerpts from an interview with Dennis in prison on
22 March 2004. If all goes well, they plan to produce a quality,
independent film.
The 36 Megabyte video clip can be viewed with Apple's Quicktime (which
works on PCs or Macs) or other video viewing software. The file
is large, so this option is realistically only available for those
with broadband Internet connections. Click
here for video. Quicktime can be downloaded here.
If you want to see the entire video and want to see the VHS version,
contact Trial and Error about borrowing a copy. If you would like
just the audio from the clip, click here for the audio from the video clip. If you just
want to see Dennis' words, click here for the transcript
of the video.
From Human
Sacrifice: "Brannon [a former corrections guard at Maine State prison]
said, 'Dechaine gets more room and leeway than anybody I've ever seen
in prison. He's the only inmate I ever witnessed come and get keys.
They don't allow anybody to even view keys, much less touch them.
Except for Dechaine."
"Top guards had a list, Brannon told me - prisoners they'd
release if the power was theirs. 'There were three inmates on that
list. One of them was Dennis Dechaine.'" (HS p. 322)
Letter from Jeffrey D. Merrill , Warden of Maine State Prison, sent to
Dennis 8/27/97.
"Dear Mr. Dechaine:
Captain Groton had told me about the
extend of the work and sacrifice of free time that you men have put
into the garden project this year. The results are truly amazing. I am
sure that everyone, staff and inmates alike, appreciates the beauty of
the flowers and this expression of thoughtfulness, things that are
sorely needed in this environment.
We all know that the Maine State Prison is a unique place in
many ways. Hopefully, each of us contribute to this community in a
positive way. The garden project is certainly a major contribution and
I want to thank you for it.
Sincerely Jeffrey D. Merrill, Warden" (letter contributed by Carol
Waltman)
From Carol Waltman: "The news letter [Article from Maine State
Prison Quarterly, July 1997. Titled " MSP's FLOWER SHOW SPECTACULAR"]
was even printed in color to show some of the flower beds around the
prison. If I recall, way back then, Dennis had begged for years to let
him grow flowers. They never wanted to contribute to the project.
[The article states: "Have you ever seen anything like this? Everbody
at MSP says 'thank you' to Dennis Dechaine, Dennis Nile, and all the
others who volunteered their time and helped make this extravaganza
possible. Thoughtful planning and planting will supply vivid color from
now until frost. The variety rivals floral landscaping of any place in
the area." (page 1, MSP Quarterly, Vol 16, No. 2)]
So Dennis started to order flowers through me and I would have
them sent to the prison. That was too costly. Finally, Dennis and I
started to solicit flower companies from all over the world. Never
thought to hear from them but we were persistent and finally all these
boxes of bulbs, shrubs, etc. were being delivered to the prison. There
was nothing more but let Dennis plant what was coming in. Some
companies were sending boxes of stuff. Dennis was in heaven. The yards
grew to be so beautiful. One of the Captains even went out of his way
to take pictures to give to Dennis so he could show me what he had
accomplished. Before you knew it, they let him build a little garden
shack and he had 10,000 seedlings in this 10'x66' space. Dennis would
really get excited about the rose bushes. I remember one company had
sent him over 50 in one shot. The gardens grew from there." as
summarized by Carol Waltman in a 6 Feb 2003 email.)
From Human Sacrifice: letter from Dennis Dechaine to lawyer
Tom Connolly, September, 1990. "… This place keeps getting smaller, the
company keeps getting worse and the feelings of hopelessness and
abandonment loom ever larger. I seem to be drifting through life rather
than living it… Sometimes I think I'll die in here, an ocean of
frustration wells up in me at my total impotence to change my lot in
life. Only one thing could frustrate me more - to have to fill your
shoes and be saviour to a bunch of hopeless wretches….
Take care of yourself, Tom, and give my regards to Ida [secretary to
Tom]" (HS p. 181)
From Human Sacrifice, descrbing his prison life: "In the year
2000, Dennis Dechaine's cell in the West Block faced south into the
prison compound. His corridor housed eight men and a shower. l Every
morning at 6:30, a scratchy recording of reveille blared through the
prison loudspeakers. Guards lumbered thunderously across the grated
walkway above his cell on their way to the dorms and the mental health
unit.
At seven o'clock, his cell door opened. Sometimes he'd go to
breakfast. More often, he'd eat a banana in his cell and take a morning
shower before work. At eight, he'd head to his job as a clerk in the
upholstery shop where ten men worked, 'a good group,' he says, 'happy
to have something creative to do and comfortable with each other.' He
prepared job packets for upholsterers and refinishers from assignments
received through the prison store. He helped keep track of backlogs and
inventory. He ordered supplies.
And, he said, he earned 'enough to cover living expenses with
a bit left over to bank. I also get to keep a few houseplants there
which pleases me more than I say - a huge spider plant, a variegated
philodendron, Christmas and Pond Lily cacti, an ancient poinsettia, a
kalanchoe and several shorter-lived species. To have such beautiful
things to care for is good for my soul.'
But inmates were awaiting transfer to a new prison [built in
nearby Warren], currently under construction. 'Sadly,' Dechaine said at
the time, 'shop plants will have no place at the new prison. Our
production will be more streamlined in a building that has no windows.'
His persistent complaints and suggestion to the warden
regarding the housing arrangements planned at the new prison earned him
several write-ups, but the only 'charge' thus far was that of being 'an
administrative burden.' Although later dropped, the threat of it
persists.
He worked a six-hour day and considered work 'a gift in
a place like this. The mind-numbing monotony, the stress and ignorance
- all of it often makes me wonder how in 'God's name anyone can exist
here for any length of time.'
And yet, immediately after this brief detour into the misery
of his surroundings, he'd say, 'This place also gave me the chance to
tinker with flowers and especially rose bushes, which I love (probably
comes from growing up where only a handful of varieties could survive
the sub-arctic winters). I am conflicted when it comes to growing
anything in here. Beauty in such an ugly place is sometimes unsettling
and my rebellious streak makes it hard for me to participate in
anything that make my keepers look good.... Some day I hope to lay to
rest the pettiness that causes me to think like this and enjoy a rose
for its sake instead of mine. I've got a ways to go.'
But he could also describe the reality of prison life.
'The truth is that the day to day drudgery of prison does not begin to
express the myriad of emotions evoked by being in a place that is at
once intensely social and cruel. I struggle to find balance here, never
knowing how human to be, who to trust, who to avoid. Every day, I know
the stress of surviving a day in prison and I am so weary of it, so
indescribably weary. When I open my eyes from a night's sleep to see
the bars that cage me into my 42 square feet, I feel anger, sadness and
sorrow. What a damn waste, what damn shame it is to suffer years of
diminished opportunity, friendships lost and never known. I try not to
dwell. I open my eyes every morning, beat back the cascade of emotion
and begin occupying myself in any way so I don't have to think about
the tragedy of my imprisonment. Thankfully, most of my dreams are a
satisfying departure from this place.'
He kept a picture in his cell titled, 'Brooklyn Boat
Dock Window.' Inscribed beneath the photo are the words, 'How wonderful
the window is that frees our sight to find, the country all behind the
wall that otherwise is blind...'
Twelve years: 4380 days, 4380 nights. Twelve Christmases.
Twelve birthdays. He was thirty when he entered the state system. He
had a loving wife, friends, a beautiful home, a farm, a good life. He
turns forty-three in 2002. He has new friends - felons convicted of
almost every crime imaginable who've come to give Dennis Dechaine more
respect, more kindness, more protection from harm than have our
official organs of virtue and integrity. While guards once allowed him
to soften the iron and concrete habitat with flower beds, that work
generated antagonism among those corrections officers who didn't
believe a prison should harbor anything that wasn't harsh and ugly.
Dennis Dechaine had come to terms with his fate. He could
hate those who did this to him, but he said hatred only hurts the
hater. So he works at forgiving them.
How far he's come from the 'Mouse' he once was. Today,
he has an inner strength like steel. I admire him enormously. After
making a career in dealing with mobsters, murderers and terrorists,
taking guns and bombs away from the vicious predators I could find, I
thought I was tough. Until I came to know Dennis Dechaine." (HS pp
369-371)