Saturday, May 28, 2005

Do the crime, do the time!!! Even if it's a black & white TV you stole!!!

This gentleman is by no means a saint, however, I find it quit silly that he would be in jail since 1970 (I was born in 1971) and he's just now being releashed....for stealing a black-and-white TV set!!!

35 years for a TV set! A black and white TV set!  I have a color TV that's only 2 inches wide.  If someone stole that I'm sure they'd less than 35 years in the slammer.  Who was this guy's lawyer, Barney Fife???  Dude missed the birth of the Internet, the rebirth of the NY Yankees (they stunk from 1964 till 1976), cable TV, and pizza delivery.  Lucky for him he's out in time to catch the 5th season of American Idol in January:

 

From ABC 7 News:
TV Thief Out of N.C. Prison After 35 Years
Location: HILLSBOROUGH, N.C.
Posted: May 28, 2005 6:03 PM EST
URL:
http://www.wjla.com/news/stories/0505/231891.html

HILLSBOROUGH, N.C. (AP) - After 35 years in prison for stealing a black-and-white television set, Junior Allen is a free man. Allen, 65, walked out of prison Friday, ending a case that attracted widespread attention because he remained in jail while other inmates convicted of murder, rape or child molestation were released.

"I'm glad to be out," Allen told supporters outside Orange Correctional Center. "I've done too much time for what I did. I won't be truly happy until I see a sign that says I'm outside of North Carolina."

Allen was a 30-year-old migrant farm worker from Georgia with a criminal history that included burglaries and a violent assault when he sneaked into an unlocked house and stole a 19-inch black-and-white television worth $140.

Some state records say Allen roughed up the 87-year-old woman who lived there, but he was not convicted of assault.

Instead, he was sentenced in 1970 to life in prison for second-degree burglary. The penalty for the offense has since been changed to a maximum of three years in prison.

The state Parole Commission decided last year to release Allen if he behaved and completed a transitional work-release program. He worked at a restaurant washing dishes and floors and had no prison infractions during the past three years.

He did so well he was released several months early - on his 26th try at parole.

His parole could last up to five years, meaning he could gain complete freedom by age 70.

Rich Rosen, a University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill law professor who took up Allen's case three years ago, said it was a shame that Allen had not been released decades ago. "At least he's got some years left," Rosen said.

Once outside the prison, Allen got into a car with two friends who were driving him to Athens, Ga., where he planned to meet relatives and return home to Georgetown, Ga.

Enoch Hasberry, the programs director at Carteret Correctional Center in Newport where Allen went through work-release, said he worries Allen might not adjust well to life on the outside.

"For a black-and-white TV, how much do you have to pay?" Hasberry said. "We've got an in-house joke here: How much time would he have gotten if he had stolen a color TV?"

 

http://www.wjla.com/headlines/0505/231891.html

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