WASHINGTON - St. Paul law Prof. Peter Erlinder told U.S. consular officials in Rwanda that he swallowed a concoction of prescription pills to escape the squalid conditions of a jail cell where he has been held for nearly a week, his family said Thursday.
While State Department officials called for his release, the family said Erlinder told consular officials that he "did not want to spend another night in jail." Rwandan police said Wednesday that Erlinder had attempted suicide, which friends and associates promptly denied.
"It's more like a hunger strike," said Erlinder's wife, Masako Usui. "He would never try to take his own life."
Usui acknowledged that Erlinder, 62, has taken antidepressants most of his adult life, but maintains that was not a factor in his decision to overdose. Rwandan police found Erlinder slumped over in his cell Wednesday morning, apparently after taking unknown tablets dissolved in drinking water.
"He said he took the pills," said his daughter, Arizona attorney Sarah Erlinder. "But he wasn't trying to die."
Erlinder's family and friends said it appears he took a nonlethal dose of medications to force Rwandan authorities to transfer him to a hospital from the dank jail cell where he was being held with seven or eight other prisoners.
Family members said lawyers who visited Erlinder described the cell as a "cage." Gena Berglund, Erlinder's legal assistant, said he was being handcuffed each time he was taken out of the cell, even to go to the bathroom.
Erlinder, a William Mitchell College of Law professor and longtime civil liberties activist, was arrested last Friday on allegations that he has denied the 1994 Rwandan genocide, a criminal act in that country. He had traveled to the East African nation to represent opposition presidential candidate Victoire Ingabire, who herself has been charged with promoting "genocide ideology." Erlinder has maintained that Rwanda President Paul Kagame was complicit in the mass killings.