By Mark Johnson, The Charlotte Observer
CHARLOTTE - Meg Scott Phipps, daughter and granddaughter of North Carolina governors, tumbled from a political legacy to sleeping on the floor in a one-person cell shared with a mentally ill prisoner.
With her expected release Monday from a federal prison camp in Alderson, W.Va., she will have finished more than three years of incarceration. Phipps, the former commissioner of agriculture who pleaded guilty to public corruption charges, completed most of her sentence at Alderson, where her husband's grandmother once worked as a guard.
Phipps is prohibited from talking to the news media, but since arriving at Alderson, she has written a newsletter for family and friends sharing details of her prison life. As her release drew near, the Charlotte Observer obtained copies from a family member.
Phipps, 51, is to stop first Monday at a parole office in Greensboro. From there, she heads home to her family's farm near Haw River with her husband and teenage daughter and son.
She'll be confined to her home until August, other than working at her church. She will wear an electronic ankle bracelet.
There are far worse locations than Alderson, with its minimum security and Allegheny mountains setting. Still, Phipps was immersed in the tangible and psychological duress of imprisonment, from a 7-by-10-foot living space shared with drug dealers to inmate suicide attempts and her children living without her.
Her newsletters voice occasional frustration and some fears for other inmates struggling to gain skills to succeed outside the prison fence.
Mostly, though, the mailings highlight the comforts and blessings she could still grasp: a report on her daughter's 16th birthday, a friendship during Martha Stewart's brief stay at the camp or moving from a large dorm into one of the camp's cottages.
"We have a door to our room. I'm on a bottom bunk bed with a real mattress. My room has two 12-pane windows that look out on to trees and mountains." -- March 6, 2005
Three months later, the cottages were closed and all prisoners moved into a dormitory.
Phipps taught high school-level classes to other prisoners, including a popular course on women in U.S. history that she developed. She shared the rewards with her newsletter readers.
"One woman (who whines and complains a lot and who won't ask for any other teacher's aide) told me out of the blue, 'You know, God put you here to help me.' She said it so sincerely, and I was taken aback and didn't quite know what to say." -- Oct. 15, 2004
And the frustrations.
"It is hard dealing with the ones who don't want to learn or can't. We have women who suck their thumbs, eat toilet paper, are medicated or can't speak without a curse word. They can't do fractions when they don't know their multiplication tables. Limited vocabulary prohibits composition of a five-word sentence. I've been so tempted to switch jobs here! But I can't just walk away." -- Christmas 2005
Famous, infamousDrug dealers and addicts populate the camp alongside bankers, doctors and lawyers, Phipps writes. Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, who tried to shoot President Ford, was once imprisoned there. But no celebrity could match the media circus around Martha Stewart's five-month sentence at Alderson, starting in fall 2004. Phipps describes helicopters overhead and photographers in the woods.
"I was told I was on CNN and 'Good Morning America' this week, including a mug shot next to 'Squeaky Fromme'! Remember her? She was here some years ago. Several guards have said I won't be the most famous person here now. I didn't know I was." -- Oct. 15, 2004
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