• Fareirirrotten Man How a last-minute e ort provided a man with no known family and few friends a Jewish funeral. Michael Knell ELIZABETH APPLEBAUM AppleTree Editor M JN 5/19 2005 14 ichael Knell was something of a forgotten man, a pris- oner who had no contact with family, a private figure whose entire circle of friends was limited to two. Knell died at 7:30 a.m. Dec. 17, 2004, and even his body would have been abandoned had it not been for the efforts of an Orthodox rabbi he never knew, a handful of acquaintanc- es, a member of a Christian motorcy- cle association and his wife, and thanks to a largely unknown piece of legislation. His story begins in Maryland. Knell was born on Feb. 6, 1957, to Charles and Ina Knell. After graduat- ing high school in Maryland, Michael found work as a security guard. He mentioned to a friend that his mother was from Niles, Mich., which may explain how Knell came to be in this state. He arrived sometime after 1971. and settled in the small town of Bronson, south of Jackson near the Indiana border. Because Knell has no known rela- tives, it's impossible to say virtually anything else about his life before prison. What is known is the kind of trouble he got into. On Jan. 25, 1985, Knell was con- victed of criminal sexual conduct, first degree, involving two children under 13. He entered a plea of no contest, which means the accused does not admit guilt, though the plea has the same effect. During sentencing, Knell, then 27, stood quietly wringing his hands" as Judge Michael Cherry spoke, accord- ing to a story in the Coldwater Daily (( Reporter. The judge sentenced him to 16 to 25 years and told Knell: "I want you to know the reason I have exceeded the minimum sentencing guidelines is first to punish you for your offense and secondly as a deterrent for others in this community." Knell served 19 years in prison before he went to the hospital for sur- gery in 2004 and ended up dying days later. , Today, Knell is virtually forgotten in the community where the crime was committed. The most seasoned police chief in the area doesn't recall details of the crime, while Knell's own attor- ney can't remember him, either. Family didn't keep up with Michael Knell. His only apparent connection after his incarceration was with his mother, Ina, who came to visit him at Jackson State Prison. She died in 1986. Harl Orr and his wife, Linda, were Knell's only real friends. They stood beside Rabbi Boruch Levin of Hebrew Memorial Chapel in Oak Park at Knell's funeral — the only three per- sons in attendance. Orr also was a prisoner at Jackson. He was sitting at a picnic table and reading a Bible when Knell, newly incarcerated, approached. "He was kind of lost at the time," Orr says of Knell. "He asked me, What are you reading?' I said, 'Sit down and I'll tell you.'" Knell was, at the time, disenfran- chised from his own religion, though he would come to be interested in Judaism later on. Meanwhile, he want- ed to know what Orr had to say about the Bible. The two became friends. "He was a character, a very pleasant guy to be around," Orr says. "He liked to draw. He liked to laugh; he had a good sense of humor. We used to pull jokes on each other all the time." Knell was good at plumbing and did some electric work while in prison, Orr says. The two men enjoyed walking out- doors and would do so no matter the weather. Orr says Knell rarely spoke of his family. "Michael wasn't mad at his family for deserting him, though," Knell says. "He was resigned to it." Though Orr was the man who knew Knell best, he didn't know the truth about why his friend was incarcerated. Prisoners don't make a habit of dis- cussing their crime, Orr says. Knell said he had been living with his girl- friend in Michigan, and the two had had a fight. The girlfriend ended up accusing him of rape, Knell said. Orr was released from Jackson and found work in Grand Rapids. Knell was set to get out soon, "and he was going to come live with my wife and me, and I was going to get him a job, get him back on his feet and get him interested in life again," Orr says. "When Michael got out, he was going to go back to Maryland and have a good time. My wife is from Maryland, too, and they talked all the time about going fishing there. But then all the plans went down the drain when the Lord took him." "Pleasant Kind Of Guy Marty Hochberg is director of Michigan City (Ind.) Prisoner Outreach Inc. MCP() works with incarcerated Jews throughout the Great Lakes Region. It's a small organ- ization, uninvolved in any legal or financial aspect of a prisoner's life. Inmates hook up with MCPO through prison directories and by word of mouth, "then we do every- thing we can to help them," Hochberg says. Usually, it means providing books and other Judaic material, and corresponding with the inmates. It's difficult work, Hochberg says. "I'll ask myself, 'Why am a doing this backbreaking job?' But then I'll hear from somebody we helped — we've got a list of about 300 men and women in our region — and I'll think, 'That's why.'" Because files are destroyed when a prisoner dies, MCP() no longer has Michael Knell's letters. But Hochberg recalls forming a picture of "a pleasant kind of guy" who liked to talk about politics. Knell requested a Hebrew Bible and a few history books, and he wrote Hochberg about his heart trouble. But Hochberg never imagined Knell would go so soon. "We thought he was going to recov- er and maybe get out," he says. "Then I learned he died and they were going to cremate him and I said, 'He's got to have a Jewish burial.'" Hochberg kept in touch with Rabbi David Nerenberg of Oak Park, who makes regular visits to what is official- ly tided Southern Michigan Correctional Facility. For many years, Jackson was the largest walled prison in the world. In 1997, the prison underwent a huge renovation, includ- ing the creation of various sections divided by security levels. The minimum-security section is called Parnall. Surrounded by two chain-link fences, above which is razor-ribbon wire, Parnall provides inmates with educational and voca- tional programs, along with psycho- logical care. This is where Michael Knell spent his last days. A volunteer at the Jackson Prison, Rabbi Nerenberg makes it a point to meet with the inmates on holidays. FORGOTTEN on page 16