[Oe List ...] A prison experience--NYT article today 1-13-06

J&OSlotta slottaglobalnews at earthlink.net
Fri Jan 13 11:02:20 EST 2006


Hi, Lynda-



The guy (ex-judge) in the following story is far from perfect, and the 
NYT writer does a fairly good job conveying that. But through the eyes 
of this guy we see a little bit more into the penal system. The picture 
painted is bleak indeed.

I'm copying the OE listserve on this one; they may have thoughts to 
share that will help us, as we continue to relate to our imprisoned 
friend, Eric.



Jim Slotta in Denver



January 13, 2006


A Fallen Judge Rethinks Crime and Punishment
By KATE ZERNIKE

GOLDEN VALLEY, Minn. - His last night behind bars, Roland Amundson was 
sitting in the prison library when he felt the large shadow of someone 
standing over him. He looked up to see the inmate others feared the 
most, a former motorcycle gang leader who had been convicted of killing 
a man in a bar fight - a murder so violent the court doubled the 
standard sentence.

The man wanted to talk.

Mr. Amundson had been the appellate judge who upheld that unusually 
strict sentence. Now, he was just a fellow prisoner, inmate No. 209383. 
"He asked if I remembered him," Mr. Amundson recalled in an interview 
in December. "He wanted me to know he didn't hold any hard feelings 
against me."

The encounter in October, Mr. Amundson said, was one of a dozen times 
in his three and a half years in prison that he was confronted by 
inmates whose sentences he had ordered or upheld in 15 years as a 
judge. Those experiences and Mr. Amundson's other dealings as a 
convicted felon - at his sentencing, prosecutors turned the words of 
his rulings against him to justify a longer term - have shaken the 
world view of a man who, from the bench, thought he knew all there was 
to know about crime and punishment.

Until 2001, Mr. Amundson, who is 56, was a highly regarded judge who 
sat on the Minnesota Court of Appeals, the state's second-highest 
court. Mentioned in legal circles as a likely nominee to the State 
Supreme Court, he was a popular public speaker, served on charitable 
boards in Minneapolis, and seemed to know everyone. Colleagues 
described him as brilliant and charming.

Then he was caught taking $400,000 from a trust fund he oversaw for a 
woman with the mental capacity of a 3-year-old, money he spent on 
marble floors and a piano for his house as well as model trains, 
sculpture and china service for 80, all bought on eBay.

Now, serving the last months of his sentence in a halfway house here, 
Mr. Amundson is engaged in an uneasy and humbling round of 
self-reflection, examining the criminal justice system from a rare 
two-sided perspective while busying himself with a menial vocation: 
shoveling snow and taking orders to the printer for a sewing machine 
company he represented long ago as a lawyer.

"Judges can say they have no idea what's going on in prison," Mr. 
Amundson said from a worn couch in the halfway house. "But if you know 
what's going on and you are still callous, God help you. If you are 
part of the system that does the things the system can do, God help 
you."

Like Sol Wachtler, the former chief judge of the New York State Court 
of Appeals who pleaded guilty in a harassment case and spent 13 months 
in federal prison in the early 1990's, Mr. Amundson belongs to a small 
group of distinguished jurists undone by the laws they had been sworn 
to uphold, who later came to claim redemption in their undoing.

In Mr. Amundson's case, it is a transformation that some people he hurt 
find unconvincing. "I don't think he feels like he did anything wrong," 
said Karen Dove, a guardian for Mr. Amundson's victim.

Prosecutors say they are skeptical that Mr. Amundson has learned much 
in prison; he has continued, they say, to expect special treatment. At 
one point, he tried to get into a boot camp program that would have 
halved his sentence; prosecutors blocked the move, saying it was 
intended for inmates with drug problems or illiteracy.

More recently, Mr. Amundson raised eyebrows with a Christmas card 
featuring an unshackled ball and chain. It included quotes from 
Dostoyevsky and Solzhenitsyn about the redemptive value of prison, as 
well as a picture of Mr. Amundson with his four young sons - reminding 
some of his critics of how many lives he has hurt.

"It was another indication that he hasn't seen the light," Ms. Dove 
said.

But relentlessly cheerful - "Come into my chambers," he greeted a 
visitor, his arm surveying his small cubicle with a leather chair 
jammed into the corner at the sewing company in nearby Eden Prairie - 
Mr. Amundson said he wants to use his experience to promote the 
importance of rehabilitation in prison.

After a boom in prison populations, there are now a record number of 
ex-felons getting out of prison each year - about 640,000 a year, up 
about 40 percent over the last decade - and more than half of them end 
up back there. Across the country, officials are experimenting with 
ways to smooth re-entry and prevent recidivism, with drug treatment or 
job training.

Mr. Amundson could get out 23 months early, in April, because of good 
behavior. He has surrendered his law license, and with few prospects 
for the future, says he wants to create homes for men coming out of 
prison, giving them a place to live and help with other hurdles to 
successful re-entry.

As a judge, Mr. Amundson says he had not thought about sentencing 
beyond his court; he has come to see its consequences from fellow 
inmates.

"I knew the era of rehabilitation was over, but I had no idea we had 
reduced it to just warehousing, and I don't think most judges do," he 
said.

Mr. Amundson recalled one man he met in prison who had been convicted 
of killing his parents after they abused him. At 18, he was sentenced 
to 18 years.

"At 34, he is completely incapable of living in society," Mr. Amundson 
said. "He's been raised by corrections officers."

Mr. Amundson, who is openly gay, continues to struggle with the court 
system in a custody battle with his former partner over their four 
adopted sons from Russia. He grew bitter about prison restrictions on 
communicating with the boys. What determines successful re-entry into 
society, he said, is family support.

"If there is any collection of men who need fathers more than the men 
in prison, I don't know it," he said. "You're dealing with men who need 
fathers and yet you're decimating their relationships with their 
children."

By the time he began adopting children in 1998, Mr. Amundson had been 
stealing for at least three years. He had set up a trust in the early 
1990's for the mentally retarded daughter of a wealthy beer distributor 
he knew from his days representing the state's beer wholesalers. When 
the man died, Mr. Amundson became sole trustee.

He recalls putting his hand in his desk drawer and pulling out the 
first of 85 checks he forged. "It was like somebody else was doing it," 
he said.

Ms. Dove and another woman who worked for the retarded woman, now in 
her 30's, became suspicious in 2001 when they asked Mr. Amundson for 
money for a new roof on the woman's house, and he said the trust was 
empty. It had been worth more than $600,000 when the father's estate 
was settled seven years earlier.

In retrospect, Mr. Amundson says he wanted to be caught.

"I was tired of being Rolly Amundson, tired of being at everybody's 
beck and call, just tired," he said. "This was my vehicle to end it 
all."

Amy Klobuchar, the Hennepin County attorney, saw it in simpler terms. 
"I believe he was greedy and wanted to live a lifestyle that he didn't 
have the money to live," she said in December.

Mr. Amundson resigned as a judge and agreed to plead guilty, but he 
haggled over sentencing, she said, trying to avoid prison time. He 
sought to mitigate his sentence in 2002 by arguing that he suffered 
from bipolar disorder, but prosecutors pointed out that he had written 
an opinion rejecting psychological factors as mitigating. They sought a 
sentence 12 months longer than the guidelines recommended; Judge 
Amundson himself, they noted, had written opinions upholding extended 
sentences in cases where the victim was particularly vulnerable.

The judge sentenced Mr. Amundson to 69 months, as prosecutors 
requested, saying he had been drunk on power, and had acted not out of 
depression but out of a sense of entitlement. Mr. Amundson called in a 
long line of prominent witnesses - his pastor, a former Miss America, a 
former ambassador - to argue against a harsh sentence.

For her part, Ms. Klobuchar had what she recalled as "her guardian 
angels," two black defendants who happened onto the courtroom after 
they appeared in court on drug charges, and sat in the front row 
expressing their outrage as Mr. Amundson's friends testified.

"I don't think he should be treated any differently than the people 
that have walked through his own courtroom," she said.




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