Pubdate: Mon, 09 Mar 2009 Source: Nelson Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2009 Nelson Daily News Contact: http://www.mapinc.org/media/288 Author: Colin Payne Note: The newspaper does not have an active website. Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada) FORMER NELSON RESIDENT CAUGHT TRAFFICKING DIES IN SPOKANE JAIL Tragic End: Lindsay-Brown Had Stolen Helicopter To Smuggle Marijuana Over Canada - U.S. Border A man with Nelson roots took his own life in a Spokane jail last week after being busted transporting 150 kilograms of marijuana across the Canada-U.S. border in a helicopter. Samuel Lindsay-Brown was born in New Zealand and moved to the Nelson area as a teenager. He lived in Kaslo for much of that time and graduated from LV Rogers Secondary School. On Feb. 23, the 24 year-old Revelstoke resident was caught in a sting operation by the United States Drug Enforcement Agency when he touched down late at night in a Bell 206 helicopter at a remote location in Colville National Forest. The $1 million helicopter had been reported as stolen to the RCMP by a man from the Sicamous area. And despite the fact he did not have a pilot's license, Lindsay-Brown managed to land the large chopper full of marijuana he'd flown solo from Sicamous through fog and pelting rain in the dark of night. DEA agents arrested Lindsay-Brown while he was unloading his cargo and took him to the Spokane County jail. He was charged with possession with intent to distribute marijuana and held in a private cell. After two court appearances through the week, on Feb. 27 prison guards found Lindsay-Brown in his cell hanging from a noose made out of a bed sheet and jammed into a wall light fixture. Breean Beggs, a lawyer with the Spokane Center Justice, is looking into what he sees as the suspicious nature of Lindsay-Brown's death. The Spokane Center for Justice is an organization that takes on legal advocacy issues that many other organizations cannot or will not tackle. Beggs said the fact that Lindsay-Brown was in his own cell in a crowded jail says there was something special about his circumstances. "When you're booked into jail, you do a mental health assessment," Beggs said. "And a red flag I had...is they had him in his own cell. One reason he could be in this own cell is if he was feeling despondent. If he was isolated because he had mental health issues, you would expect he would have been monitored more closely." Beggs said there is currently no concrete evidence to suggest this is the case, but he noted there have been four suicides at the Spokane County Jail in the past couple years. He said if there was any suspicion that Lindsay-Brown had mental health problems the authorities had a duty to keep a close eye on them. Beggs also suggested Lindsay-Brown's death might have been related to a decision to provide evidence. "Someone mentioned he could have been in his own cell because he had turned states evidence and was going to be an informant," Beggs said. "So they wanted to protect him." "The theory was either they knew he had mental health issues and he committed suicide, or he was taken out as a hit." Officials from the Spokane Police or the federal prosecutor's office were not available to comment on the case (With files from Canadian Press, CBC and The Spokane Spokesman-Review) - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin