Portland Observer Thursday, August 17, 1978 Paga 3 /t's Good to/(now... Behind the wall Larry Baker »35021 O.S.P. Correspondent 'S Julius D. Snowden »38013 Poetry Editor O by Floyd Mack »55054 A plea fo r mercy to the Oregon State Parole Board. In February 1979, 1 will appear before you for a review o f my parole date, which it February, 1982. In 1972 I received a parole set o f ten years for murder. Under the present system I realize that might not sound like much, but for a seventeen year old boy it sounded like the end of the world. There are many mitigating circumstances that I hope you will consider when I appear before you this time. At the time o f my crime I was seventeen years old. There was another boy, aged sixteen involved in the same crime. He was convicted of bludgeoning a woman to death; he received a fifteen year sentence for second degree murder and was sent to McLaren School for Boys. I was convicted of shooting a man to death and received a life sentence for first degree murder and was sent to Oregon State Penitentiary. I suppose I really shouldn’t say I was convict­ ed. because I pled guilty to the charge. I fail to understand how a judge can allow a seventeen year old boy plead guilty to a first degree murder charge. There was no prem editation to the crime. The other boy did approximately fifteen months at M cLaren and was paroled; he has now been discharged from parole for two years and is a free man. In return I have been in­ carcerated in the Oregon State Penitentiary for six years. At the time of my review hearing I will have exactly seven years in prison. I m aintain that there is a great discrepancy in the amount o f time I am having to serve and the amount of time the other boy had to serve for the same crime that happened at the same time. I realize that I was made out to be the instigator of the crime, but that is not true in any way. At the time, Attorney General Lee Johnson requested that I be retained in the county jail until after January 1, 1972 before being sentenced; the idea being that the mandatory ten year date set for murder was being dispensed with at that time, and I would not receive one. But, even though the parole board was setting lifers an average of seven years at the time I went before them, I received a ten year set anyway. I am not trying to justify my crime to you. I have never denied my part in it. I am merely trying to show you how many discrepancies theie are. I realize that I was responsible for the death o f another human being, and 1 will live with that knowledge for the rest of my life. Only I know how sorry I am for what happened. 1 have suffered deeply for my past and for the person who’s life I took. I wish with all my heart that I could undo that damage I inflicted on that per­ son and his family, but I cannot. 1 am an intelligent and capable man. 1 have much potential to make it in society. I have been involved w ith several psychologists and groups since my incarceration, and my last few psychological reports have been very favorable. In fact my last report recommended a parole date cut, but the date cut never m aterialized. I have received my G .E .D ., and have two terms o f college with a 3.5 G PA to my credit. I have completed a course in Vocational Body and Fender, and CSA recommends staff training, comminity involvement The Community Relations Service of the U.S. Department o f Justice has announced that it will design a human relations and cultural awareness training program for correctional personnel in Oregon penal system. The program is the result o f the CRS investigation o f charges o f discrimination made by Oregon Sute P enitentiary inmates during the recent visit to that institution by N A A C P Executive Director Ben­ jamin Hooks. The investigation was made at the request o f Reverend John Jackson, president o f the N A A C P, Portland Branch. Robert Lamb, director o f CRS’s Northwest Regional Office, said the training program will be designed by a CRS team, including a correc­ tional consultant. The training will be conducted by the Corrections Division. Lam b said the prison ad­ ministration was very cooperative in providing in fo rm atio n and in facilitating communication with in­ mates. Among the complaints in­ dicated by inmate groups that met with CRS staff were: complaints related to ethnic food, religious facilities, funds for entertainment, Spanish translation o f rules and regulations, vocational trades, ex­ tended waiting times for visitors, etc. Lamb said he will conuct the Port­ land and Salem Branches o f the N A A C P to attem pt to increase community involvement and to find a solution to the need for a halfway house in the Black community. CRS is an area o f the Justice D epartm ent that helps resolve disputes involving the rights o f minority groups. graduated with a very good report from my instructor. I plan to pursue this trade upon my release. I have never been inside the Segregation and Isolation U nit, and have had only four minor disciplinary reports. I have been in honor cell blocks since the first six months o f my incar­ ceration. I have been involved exten­ sively with the outside building projects of the lifers club. I have built many items for senior citizens, children, and many other people who could not have afforded to have the work done without my help. This has all made me feel very good about myself. You speak of punishment for the criuie, but just how much punish­ ment is enough??? Fifteen months was enough for the other boy. I would like to know why I am being treated so much differently. You say (hat the institutional accomplish­ ments o f us inmates don’t count, but what happens to someone like myself who came in here at such an early age and have accomplished nothing in the outside world? I would think you would have to take into account all my accomplishments since my incar­ ceration. No one can punish me more than I have punished myself for my past. 1 have a very beautiful and in­ spiring wife who has been with me all this time. We have been through many discouraging and d iffic u lt times, but our love for one another gives us the strength we need to stand up and face all the negative things that happen to anyone in this situation. 1 owe everything I am and everything I will be to my wife. She saw good in me when I couldn’t even see it in myself. And she worked to make it possible for that good to emerge. She is the incentive I needed to change my life and accomplish the things I have. My wife’s devotion has helped me grow to like myself and others. Compassion has developed in me, along with an appreciation of human accomplishments. 1 no longer wish to be an outlaw, 1 want to be a husband and someone I and everyone who knows me can be proud of. For the first time in my life 1 feel like an adult; a man who is responsible for his own actions. I blame or praise myself for my own actions. I now talk where before I struck out with frustration from not being able to communicate. 1 love being able to express myself so easily and freely. I have strong family ties and they will help me and my wife in any way we need them to upon my release. When 1 am finally paroled I will have a job and place to live waiting for me. I would like to be paroled to California, as that is where all of my family live. So with all that I have said I respectfully request that you consider cutting my parole date to February, 1980. That would allow me to have some time on W ork Release to build up a little money so that I can be more financially sound when I am paroled. I truly hope you can find it in your hearts to give me a chance to show everyone that 1 can make it in society. ’¿ ¿ ¿ If Cal! tcday It s the next step, and it begins when one of Pacific Power s energy consultants contacts you He II want to arrange a cost-free appoint­ ment to check, in depth, the energy efficiency of your home He'll poke and probe in your attic, your basement, walls and more, looking for places where energy s lost. CUSTOMIZING YOUR OPERA­ TION INSULATION. With informa­ tion gathered during Home Energy Analysis. Pacific Power s energy consultant returns to his office Findings are meticulously reviewed Then a custom program is developed to give you the most cost-efficient weatheruation possible, It s then presented for your review WE'LL GET THE BIDS. When you and the energy consultant agree on work to be done, Pacific Power asks for bids from | local independent contractors qualified to weatherize your home If a contractor you recommend is on Pacific s "qualified list, he can be invited to bid. too Pacific Power handles all the details, while you rest easy. 5022 N ALBINA • PORTLAND OREGON A a m x ie H hxt • N ai .« him » Home imprr women t Council • A-so M*’«*»*” i a ia H*1 (jwwfgi CortWBrhxt ENTURES S a m e I f a » • IN MOST CASIS Cerne In befere IO e.m. end We Will Try fe O .llre r yeor Oentwrei by 4 e.m. Seme Oey FREE E stim ates Sodium P e n to th a l M 11(1010« SLEEP D U R IN G extractions & Fillings NO INTEREST licensed Aneslherul in Attendant» OR ____ CARRYING CHARGE ^ 7 Straightening P ,RTHOppNTI(7 b Ra-PoaMoning NEW« O RTHO DO NTIC Dept. of Adult's b Children's TEETH For FREE Consultation tf Estimate A p p o in tm en t Call Our O ffic e — Phone 227 2427 Located In Our Portland Office FAST D ental Dental Insurance Repairs including »ENTURE REPAIRS AU I re 3 H e u r i • In M e n C eses M OIN OWN MNTAl LMO«*IO«T Phone — 2 2 7 -2 4 2 7 Accepted Ité r a it* _ T o rm a Ava dobla a t o u r O ffic e D X N T I8 T l i n n r> H I II I I I l „ -, IMI I 1 1, Closed Saturdays S treet Level 51 5 4 1 **_ th Ave. B e t w e e n A ld e r A W a s h in g t o n CAPITGl LIT M lk d S W « e rn te n IT’S A BIG, BIG JO B . Pacific Power may be weatherizing as many as 71.000 homes in Oregon alone And that s going to take tim e ... probably as long as five years So it s important you ask for Operation Insula­ tion now. because we re going to work on qualified homes on a first-come, first-serve basis, WHO’S ELIGIBLE? Oregon residen­ tial customers served by Pacific Power prior to April 3.1978. This includes owners of single-family residences, duplex owners and owners of permanently located mobile homes Because the greatest savings will come from savings in electric heating, we re going to concentrate on electrically heated homes EVERYONE WINS. Operation Insula­ tion benefits everyone, whether we weatherize your home or not The simple fact is that if we don t conserve energy today, we re going to need more expensive new generating plants that much sooner... plants that have to be paid for by higher electric bills which nobody wants. So as you can see. it pays in a tot ot ways to give us a call today. And start your own Operation Insulation. With your approval, of course It could mean adding more insulation to your ceilings and floors Or installing double-glass windows Or maybe adding more weatherstripping around windows and doors. WE MAKE SURE IT’S DONE RIGHT. After the contractor completes work on your home. Pacific Power s energy consultant returns again Now he makes abso­ lutely certain the contractors work is up to Pacific Powers strict conservation standards. Pacific Power pays the whole weatherization cost. In fact, you don't pay a dime until you sell your house or otherwise transfer title And. when you do repay Pacific Power, you pay only the original cost at the time the work was done. Vbu don t pay any interest And you don t pay any inflated costs DAK ‘ f m m p r f ia f r ” WEATHERIZATION BEGINS. PAY NOTHING NOW. CONSTRUCTION CO . INC M IC iS QUOTE» IN ABVANCE Operation Insulation could cut your electric bill at no cost now Here&hoxM HOME ENERGY ANALYSIS. your business. Whatever you need, call us for an appointment to visit you and discuss your remodeling project, altera­ tions or additions. Free e s tim a te s . P r o f e s s io n a l a d v ic e and assistance with f i­ nancing. References glad- ly furnished USI MY USERAI C H O IT P IA N * It’s enough to warm the cockles of your home. Or stop by your local Pacific Power office. As an Oregon Pacific Power customer, it s the way you kick off your own home weatherization program We II ask a few easy questions about the way you use electricity And that s the starting point for Operation Insulation Helping to improve our community's homes and businesses through quality residential and com­ mercial remodeling. Specialists in de­ signing kitchens and baths to brighten your home. Distinctive new building/ o ffic e /s to r e e x te r io r s and interiors to im p ro ve * le t Ut Hela te « W h * All Vevr Needed Dentistry . OFFICIS ALSO IN SALEM 6 EUGENE ] CALL U S. 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