Category Archives: Crime

Mike Miske autopsy produced no immediate answers about his cause of death

What do we know about Mike Miske’s death in Honolulu’s Federal Detention Center on Sunday?

Not much.

Miske, 50, was awaiting sentencing next month after he was convicted on 13 criminal counts by a federal jury in July following a complex 5-month trial.

He was found “unresponsive,” it has been reported. Initial news reports say there were no indications of physical violence.

An autopsy conducted the next day produced “inconclusive” results, with no finding of foul play or suicide.

Additional forensic tests are being conducted, according to prior reporting, and results are not expected quickly.

Miske’s attorneys have previously reported he had several health issues.

According to court filings, Miske suffered from high blood pressure, had previous back surgery, and suffers from “a foot-drop,” a weakness that makes it difficult to raise the front part of your foot. Because of this condition, Miske was “permitted to wear shoes in locations where otherwise they would be prohibited,” according to prior court filings. It was not reported whether this affected one or both of Miske’s feet.

Hawaii News Now has reported that Miske was not being held in isolation.

“HNN Investigates has learned he had a cell mate, but investigators do not believe at this time that he was the victim of a crime,” according to HNN.

At one time, he had shared a cell with his half-brother, John Stancil, but I have not seen any indication whether or not that was still the case.

Is it odd that he wasn’t being held in solitary?

In 2021, Miske’s defense attorneys filed a motion objecting to his being confined in the “Special Housing Unit” where prisoners are held in solitary confinement.

Miske’s lawyers argued that his right to an effective defense was being violated by restrictions on attorney visits and access to case files due to restrictions in the SHU. They also argued that being held in isolation deprived him of several privileges routinely available to those in the detention center’s general population.

Immediately after his arrest in 2020, Miske had been held in the general population. I noted at the time, “he was in a housing unit with detainees who had work assignments requiring them to be out of their cells at various times, often for long periods. He met with his attorneys without being shackled, and he was able to use a telephone in a counselor’s office for calls with his attorneys and a court-assigned death penalty mitigation investigator, where he was able to spread out the documents being discussed.”

Although two defense attorneys told Hawaii News Now that Honolulu’s Federal Detention Center is known as a secure and safe facility, contrary evidence was presented a few months ago in the case of Jacob “Jake” Smith, who was a key witness against Miske.

Smith, who pleaded guilty to being a central player in Miske’s criminal organization, was transferred into protective custody in an undisclosed location after his lawyer disclosed he had been beaten several times in retaliation for “flipping” on Miske, despite the Federal Detention Center’s reputation for relative safety and security.

According to Ching’s court filings, Smith had been housed in Module 5a at the FDC, while Miske has been housed in Module 4b along with Bronson Gouveia, a career criminal with convictions going back to 1997. Gouveia’s reported street name, “Murder Inc.,” is now the name attached to a gang he allegedly controls. Gouveia is in the detention center awaiting trial on federal drug trafficking and firearms charges.

According to the motion, Miske and Gouveia communicated frequently in the past year, while Miske also built up a following among members of the WestSide gang. He was able to have discovery materials passed between the modules showing Smith was cooperating as a “rat” with the government.

Smith’s attorney, Louis Michael Ching, stated in a court filing that Gouveia is “related and/or associated with” Edward Caspino, the leader of the West Side Gang, whose members took part on one of the assaults on Smith as he was quietly talking with Caspino.

“In the meantime, Mr. Caspino, the Leader of the WestSide Gang Members, casually stood up and walked away,” Ching wrote.

Miske’s father, Michael John Miske Jr., died after drinking a cyanide concoction. He was apparently depressed and despondent by the breakup of his marriage, and the prospect of losing his wife and son.
The senior Miske died in 1980. Mike Jr. was just 6.

If you go past the multiple suicide and crisis hotline ads to search for means of suicide that can escape detection during an autopsy, there do appear to be a few. However, whether any of those would be feasible in a correctional setting like the Federal Detention Center is unknown.

Naturally, this uncertainty is fertile ground for conspiracy theories, which I’m sure will not be in short supply.

For the record: My past reporting on the Miske case

While digesting the death of Micheal J. Miske, Jr., and wondering about the lack of information about the circumstances of his death, I’ve been looking back at the hundreds of stories and blog posts I’ve written about Miske and his case.

Here are links to the lists of stories.

A look back at my reporting on the Miske case

Part 1: November 29, 2020

Part 2: June 9, 2021

Part 3: September 15, 2021

Part 4: October 7, 2022

Part 5: December 31, 2023

Part 6, July 20, 2024

Breaking: Mike Miske found dead at Honolulu’s Federal Detention Center

I receive a tip within the last hour that convicted crime boss, Micheal J. Miske, Jr., was found dead in Honolulu’s Federal Detention Center earlier today.

Although I have not fully confirmed from official sources, it has apparently now been confirmed and reported by Hawaii News Now. Before it became public, the news had been spreading rapidly among those Miske’s criminal entrprise had impacted, including family and friends of Jonathan Fraser.

Miske was convicted by a federal jury in July on 13 of 16 charges, including murder for hire, murder in aid of racketeering, and kidnapping for the murder of Fraser, who Miske wrongly blamed for the death of his son, Caleb Miske. The jury also found that more than $20 million of assets should be forfeited to the federal government.

Miske was scheduled to be sentenced early next year. Several charges carry a mandatory sentence of life in prison, although it appeared likely that an appeal would be filed on his behalf once he had been sentenced.

Miske turned 50 in February, not long after the beginning of his federal racketeering trial.

During a criminal career that the government alleged dated back to the late 1990s, when Miske was in his 20s, Miske build a business network that operated as a facade that hid his criminal activities. He was well known as the owner of Kamaaina Termite & Pest Control and the M Nightclub, along with several other local businesses.

All of Miske’s 12 co-defendants also pleaded guilty before the start of the trial, including his half-brother, John Stancil. In addition, another group of defenants were charged separately with taking part in Miske’s criminal organization and also pleaded guilty. Most are now awaiting sentencing.

Some are likely to welcome the news of Miske’s death, while others may view it as a failure of the federal prison system.

More later as details become public.

Buntenbah to be sentenced today

Michael Buntentah, one of Mike Miske’s original co-defendants, is scheduled to be sentenced at 9 a.m. Wednesday morning, November 20, in Judge Derrick Watson’s courtroom.

Buntenbah was originally charged with drug trafficking for his role in a 2014 cocaine buy in California that went sideways when law enforcement intercepted several cars carrying Buntenbah and another Miske associate, Wayne Miller, to a San Francisco Bay Area airport along with a load of about 5 kilos of cocaine.

At the time, Buntenbah was part of a group providing security at Miske’s M Nightclub near downtown Honolulul.

He was also charged with assault in aid of racketeering for taking part in at least four attacks against customers at Miske’s nightclub.

He was released on bond in October 2020 after providing a $500,000 secured mortgage as security.

In March 2022, he pleaded guilty to the assault in aid of racketeering charge and admitted he had conspired with Miske and others, including Miske’s half-brother, John Stancil, to commit the assaults.

Buntenbah remained free on bond pending sentencing until January 2024, when he was involved in the assault of several people in a bar in Waikiki’s International Marketplace. He was arrested for violating the terms of his parole, and his release was revoked by Judge Watson.

In addition, Watson order that the mortgage put up to secure his bond be forfeited. It had previously been reduced to $250,000 from the original $500,000, and Watson ordered the entire amount to be forfeited.

In total, Buntenbah served about three months in detention until being released on bond, and then an additional ten months since his arrest in January.

The maximum sentence on the federal assault charge is three years.

The main sentencing decision is likely to be whether to credit that period of time served towards whatever sentence Watson imposes.

Buntenbah also faces sentencing next month in state court on a pair of 2nd degree assault charges, both Class C felonies, for the January 2016 assault on two men at Miske’s nightclub. He entered a plea of “no contest” to the charges in 2022, but his sentencing was put off pending resolution of the federal charges. Each of these felony assault charges is punishable by up to five years in prison.

See:

Miske sought cocaine supply deal with Mexican source, prosecutors say

Defend Hawaii” owner pleads guilty in Miske racketeering case

Memorandum of Plea Agreement by Michael Buntenbah

The Miske case started with a secret indictment

The Miske case started with a secret indictment (Part 2)

Defend Hawaii owner back in federal custody after instigating a Waikiki brawl