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Harley Oliver Teets (14 November 1906 in Terra Alta, Preston County, West Virginia [1] – 1 September 1957 in Marin, California [2]) was the warden of San Quentin State Prison from 1951 until his death in 1957. During that time he presided over executions performed in San Quentin's notorious gas chamber.
This page is a list of notable inmates currently serving time at San Quentin Rehabilitation Center (formerly San Quentin State Prison). As of July 2023, there are nearly 4000 convicts located at the institution. [1]
Morris Solomon Jr. (March 15, 1944 – August 1, 2024), known as The Sacramento Slayer, was an American convicted serial killer on death row in San Quentin, California for the murders of six women. [1]
The San Quentin News was founded in 1940 by Clinton Duffy, the then warden of San Quentin State Prison, as an inmate-edited newspaper. [2] The newspaper had a spotty publication record until completely closing in the 1990s. [2] It was reestablished in 2008 by warden Robert Ayers, Jr. and, as of 2014, had a print circulation of 11,500. [3]
He was incarcerated at San Quentin State Prison. In 2020, Erskine became one of a dozen California death row inmates to die in the span of less than two months as the result of a COVID-19 outbreak at San Quentin State Prison. [2] He died on the same day as fellow death row inmate Manuel Machado Alvarez, who also died from COVID-19. [3]
San Quentin State Prison, San Quentin, California Gerald Frank Stanley (born 1945) is an American murderer and suspected serial killer who murdered his fourth wife, Cindy Rogers Stanley, in August 1980, following a four-year prison term for murdering his second wife, Kathleen Stanley, in 1975.
The San Quentin Post Office. The United States Postal Service operates the San Quentin Post Office. [8] A post office operated at San Quentin for a time in 1859, and from 1862. [2] The Tamal post office is a substation of the San Quentin post office. [2] In the state legislature, San Quentin is in the 3rd Senate District, and in the 6th ...
In 1971, at age nineteen, Silverstein was sent to San Quentin Prison in California for armed robbery. Four years later, he was paroled, but he was arrested soon after along with his father, Thomas Conway, and his cousin, Gerald Hoff, for three armed robberies. Their take was less than $11,000 (~$53,000 when adjusted for inflation in 2022).