Defendant’ s mail fraud and money laundering convictions are affirmed in part where returning certain victims’ investment in defendant’ s scheme was intended to \”promote the carrying on,\” of the \”scheme\” at the heart of the mail fraud count…
]]>John and his wife came to New York City last year (his first time in an airplane) for an event we did at the City University of New York with past diarists. And hopefully we’ll do another event with John over the coming year.
Thanks for your interest… and for listening.
Joe Richman
Radio Diaries
http://www.radiodiaries.org
This radio programme about prisoners was one of Hearing Voices finest… especially the part where we learned ..one lifer talking about his own life as a daily, living graveyard– in which he would never having again the chance to touch another human being …and knew that he would only die only as a number.”
I know of three murders of persons dear to my heart. Their perpetrators sit in such cells. When I heard those words, a cold place in me ……thawed.
I would like Colleen Moore’s address, or please let her have mine.
We have a project where we want to use the work of all kinds of prisoners, in a project where they will be helping others.
I have a person who I feel would be worth looking at for your Lock up series. This person has been locked up for over 17 years for a murder he was convicted of when he was 18 years old. He has become some what of a local celebrity having produced a prison workout video and has a few Ideas about how the State of Ohio could capitalize on the hidden talents of inmates. I will provide you with a link to his workout video on YouTube. He has also written a book and is really just an all around good story for T.V. Please feel free to contact me if you need any further information about him. His convicted name is Gary Boyd but he has changed it to Sol Amen Ra. He is currently being held at Warren Correctional Insitute in Ohio. freegaryboyd.blogspot.com/2006/09/my-story.html http://vids.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=vids.individual&VideoID=36355346
]]>I hear something like this and I wish I had done it. Can’t praise it enough.
One of those interviewed (probably more, wasn’t listening closely enough this morning) mentioned hope, reminding me of Bill Clinton’s “I still believe in a place called Hope” and Obama’s “Audacity of Hope”.
I doubt very much that either of them (certainly Clinton) understand what these prisoners understand about hope. Just as Oppenheimer and other participants in the Manhattan Project felt that world leaders should be required to witness an atomic blast, I believe Obama and leading politicians should be required to speak with people like the prisoners interviewed here.
I am struck that the right so easily demonizes so many who have been convicted of crimes and imprisoned. What does it say of the right-wing Christian foundation philosophy about the possibility of redemption or change?
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