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He started demanding to live in solitary the day he got to prison, conduct reports show. After watching an orientation video on his first day at Dodge Correctional in December 2005, he immediately told a guard he was a solitary person and asked to be placed in "the hole." He refused to go to his cell and got his wish: 90 days in solitary for disobeying orders. Schuth has received 11 more conduct reports since for violations ranging from disobeying orders to leave solitary to making threats and being disruptive. He got 180 days for calling a Green Bay guard a "Nazi flattop (expletive)" in May 2007. In August 2008 he got another 30 days for swearing at a guard at the unnamed facility. "Having a hard time keeping in my emotions, true feelings about you people," he wrote in a statement in that conduct report. On the day he returned to Green Bay he was written up twice for threatening to hurt a guard or someone else, and threatening to stab someone if he wasn't placed in solitary. He got 180 days for the assault threats and 240 days for the stabbing threats. The most recent conduct report was dated April 2009. He got 90 days for refusing to leave his cell in solitary. Lieberman, who defended Schuth in federal court, said Schuth is scared. "This demonstrates a good example of why prison isn't really the place for people with mental illness," Lieberman said. "Even if you go back to the facts of his state case, without trying to minimize his conduct, he was living in isolation, wanting to be left alone. If he had been left alone, none of this would have happened."
[Associated
Press;
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