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What a horrible story, step mom deserves repeated kicks to the crotch - Mark DeFriest

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_DeFriest

I can't help but think that this guy was failed/wrong by everyone, his stepmother, the justice system, the prison system, etc...


Not the entirety of the Wikipedia page. But wow, this guy has been totally screwed. This is the sort of thing that needs to be made into a movie where someone tracks down all of the folks that did this guy wrong over the years and delivers a bit of karma.
Quote:
Mark DeFriest (born August 18, 1960), known as the Houdini of Florida, is an American man known for his repeated escapes from prison, having successfully done so 7 times. Born in rural Florida, he was arrested for the first time in 1978, serving for a year. In 1980, DeFriest was sentenced to four years in prison for violating probation via illegal firearms possession, having initially been arrested for retrieving work tools that his recently deceased father had willed him before the will had completed probate. His sentence has since been repeatedly extended for having attempted to escape 13 times (including one count of armed robbery during one attempt), as well as collecting hundreds of disciplinary reports for minor infractions, leading to a cumulative stay of 34 years in prison.

DeFriest has cumulatively spent 27 years in solitary confinement. Following publicity, DeFriest was granted parole and released on 5 February 2019. Ten days later, he was rearrested as he checked into a mental health facility.
Early life

DeFriest grew up in rural Gadsden County, near Tallahassee, Florida,[3] where he worked with his father. He was a known savant[4] who could not quite understand people, but was able to build or fix just about anything. At six years old, he was disassembling and reassembling watches and engines. He often devised and conducted elaborate science experiments in his family's basement, saying he blew himself up a few times.[5] While his mechanical knowledge was rapidly increasing, his psychological wellbeing continued to worsen.

DeFriest was close with his father, who encouraged his mechanical abilities, and the two had what filmmaker Gabriel London called "a mechanical connection."[5] His father had served in World War II with the OSS, a predecessor to the CIA.[5] This experience likely prompted Mark's father to teach his son the avoidance tactics, survival, and defense techniques that Mark describes as guerilla warfare. DeFriest's father died suddenly in 1979.[1] In his will, the elder DeFriest left his tools to his son, Mark.
Initial arrest

DeFriest, who was struggling with mental health issues at the time, collected the tools. However, the will had not completed probate, which meant that, in the eyes of the law, the tools had been stolen.[6] DeFriest's stepmother called the police and he was arrested. When the police came for DeFriest, he ran from them out of panic. He took a gun with him, but never used it or even brandished it before the officers.[5] For the theft, DeFriest was sentenced to four years in prison.[7] Subsequent escapes led to a life sentence as well as years of emotional and physical abuse within the prison system.[8]

Mental state and legal competence

DeFriest had always behaved erratically. Highly intelligent but lacking in social skills, he stood out in prison. This outsider mentality may have fueled his decision to attempt escape from every facility that ever housed him.[8]

Five out of six psychiatrists deemed DeFriest incompetent and mentally ill.[9] At the time, the dissenting psychiatrist, Dr. Robert Berland, believed DeFriest's behavior (which included assumption of false identities as well as his compulsive escape attempts) was intentional.[10] Based on Berland's assessment, the court allowed DeFriest to stand trial and he accepted a life sentence.[8] Berland reversed his assessment decades later.[11]

Today, professionals think DeFriest's behavioral problems are likely associated with autism spectrum disorder,[12] which may impair the development of social skills and cause an inability to judge the emotions of others.[13]
Prison escapes

DeFriest made his first escape after a month at Florida State Hospital in Chattahoochee.[2] He put LSD-25 from the hospital's pharmacy into the staff's coffee,[5] in a plan to slip out while the staff was under the drug's influence. The plan fell apart when security arrived and the ward was locked down. He and a few other prisoners attempted to scale the facility's boundary wall. DeFriest got over the fence, hot-wired a car, and made a successful escape before being recaptured and sent to Bay County Jail.[14] He has made use of various creative inventions and methods throughout his various escape attempts, such as replicating keys from any available material after memorising their patterns and fashioning a zip gun out of a toothpaste tube.[5] During one of these escapes, DeFriest stole a car using a gun, for which he would later be charged with armed robbery.[5]
Treatment in prison

DeFriest was subject to abuse by prison guards throughout his time in prison,.[8] He cumulatively spent 27 years in solitary confinement.[15]

He experienced the bulk of the abuse at the Florida State Prison (FSP), having been transferred there in 1982. Ron McAndrew, who served as warden from 1996 to 1998, described the northern Florida prison as "ungovernable",[5] describing situations where squads "composed of correctional officers roamed the cell blocks, beating and degrading prisoners with impunity", with these officers additionally turning a blind eye to violence between inmates.[5] He was a target of abuse due to his character: according to Bill Cornwell, DeFriest was a "walk alone", refusing to align with any gangs in the prison and mostly keeping to himself: "Anyone familiar with the inner workings of a penal institution will tell you that an inmate who stands out, who is a loner, who is troubled and vulnerable, is imperiled."[5]

Florida State Prison's solitary confinement served as an "escape-proof" cell, one that The Miami Herald reported held the only nonviolent inmate in the solitary confinement ward—one floor above the electric chair. There, prison officials deprived DeFriest of books, magazines, radio, TV, windows, sunlight, water and toiletries for 11 days.[16]

Although 209 disciplinary reports have been filed against DeFriest, McAndrew doubted the veracity of many of them: although he was aware of DeFriest engaging in less flagrant displays of rule breaking, he asserted in an interview with Cornwell that many of them were false accusations designed to prolong his time in prison.[5]

DeFriest's attorney John Middleton told the Miami Herald that "He's not shanking or stabbing anyone. The reports are for possessing contraband. He's made his own alcohol. He's had weapons, usually defensive. He has not hurt people."[16]

In 1999, DeFriest witnessed the fatal beating of Frank Valdes[17] who had been convicted of murdering a correctional officer. DeFriest was a few cells away and confirmed the medical examiner's conclusion that Valdes was beaten to death. For his protection, DeFriest was transferred to a prison in California.[5]

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Old 09-26-2025, 08:06 PM
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Phew. That's sad, disturbing, moving reading.

I think if his father didn't die. And maybe born into the time when autism was understood. He could have really been someone. He could have lived very well and been a contribution to society.
Old 09-26-2025, 09:18 PM
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Just a simple example of the correctional industrial complex.

This guy should have never been arrested, now conditioned to life of extreme violence and a life behind bars.
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Old 09-27-2025, 03:01 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Bill Douglas View Post
Phew. That's sad, disturbing, moving reading.

I think if his father didn't die. And maybe born into the time when autism was understood. He could have really been someone. He could have lived very well and been a contribution to society.
With good parents he probably would have been an incredible inventor or engineer. Definitely a sad read. I’m not sure what the answer is though, you can’t have someone robbing people at gunpoint either.
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Old 09-27-2025, 04:26 AM
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Initial arrest wasn’t with the firearm use. Only after being subjected to abuse, does one take the extreme measures….

Also note the LSD use by the prison… more human trials ….?
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Old 09-27-2025, 04:45 AM
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I had a guitar instructor who was mentally ill. I was about 20 and Wally was a year or two younger He was an incredible musician, but given to extreme behavior. When he was “normal” he was the sweetest most gentle person you’d ever want to meet. His parents weren’t able to control him. He stabbed his father to death when he was still in his early 20s. He was sent to prison and, sitting at a table during an interview with someone, I don’t know if it was a doctor or a prison official, he got a hold of a pencil. He killed himself by shoving the pencil in his nose and slamming his face against the table.
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Old 09-27-2025, 04:55 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by wdfifteen View Post
I had a guitar instructor who was mentally ill. I was about 20 and Wally was a year or two younger He was an incredible musician, but given to extreme behavior. When he was “normal” he was the sweetest most gentle person you’d ever want to meet. His parents weren’t able to control him. He stabbed his father to death when he was still in his early 20s. He was sent to prison and, sitting at a table during an interview with someone, I don’t know if it was a doctor or a prison official, he got a hold of a pencil. He killed himself by shoving the pencil in his nose and slamming his face against the table.
Holy carp!

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Old 09-27-2025, 06:01 AM
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