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Sunday, March 21, 2010 - 3:38 PM
Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
By the year 1913, tempered by years of drinking, beatings,
imprisonment and living on the road like an animal, Panzram evolved into
a hardened criminal. He was also physically big, square shouldered and
muscular. His dark hair and good looks attracted women, but Panzram
never displayed any interest in the opposite sex. And his eyes had a
strange, sullen appearance that unnerved people, made them wonder what
was behind that cold, barren stare. As he continued his journey through
the northwest, he was arrested in several states under the name "Jack
Allen." "Under that name I was pinched for highway
robbery, assault and sodomy at The Dalles, Oregon...I was there about 2
or 3 months and then broke jail," he said later. The Dalles was a tough
river port on the Columbia River where pirates, gamblers, loggers and
outlaws frequently gathered. After he broke out of jail, with a posse of
furious deputies after him, Panzram fled Oregon and crossed the eastern
state line into Idaho. Within the week, he was
arrested again for stealing and thrown into the county jail at Harrison,
Idaho. On this occasion, he used the alias "Jeff Davis." The jail was
poorly run and consisted of just cells and a wall. During his first
night in custody, he set a massive fire to one of the buildings and
several of the inmates escaped, including Panzram. Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire quickly fled
north, through the Grove of Ancient Cedars, across the Bitterroot
Mountains and into western Montana. In the small town
of Chinook, Montana, Panzram got locked up as "Jefferson Davis" for
burglary and received a one-year sentence at the Montana State Prison at
Deer Lodge. Located 30 miles north of Butte in the midst of the
Rockies, the prison resembled a medieval castle. It was built in 1895
when American prison construction was modeled after European castles.
Four pointed steeples rose majestically over a dark and forbidding
complex that was surrounded by thick, stone block walls. There were
turrets spaced periodically on all four walls and corners. Inside the
towers rifle- toting guards kept a watchful eye over the vast courtyard,
ready to shoot any prisoner who dared attempt to escape. According to
the prison admissions log, Panzram was received at Deer Lodge on April
27, 1913. He listed his occupation as "waiter and teamster." But there
was little for convicts to do at the prison, except kill time.
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