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Forever Offender is the perpetual subject of writings. Judge Edwin C. Dalberg, 1968, sentenced me to twenty years at Waupun State Prison: "I am sentencing you to twenty years, not so you remain in prison for an extended period, but so you have a long supervision." Well-documented specific evidence that the human brain is not fully developed until around twenty-five, and that even then the frontal cortex which regulates executive functioning, including decision-making and impulse control, is the final part of the brain to fully develop. Fifty-seven years counting, I am impacted by changes in…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Forever Offender is the perpetual subject of writings. Judge Edwin C. Dalberg, 1968, sentenced me to twenty years at Waupun State Prison: "I am sentencing you to twenty years, not so you remain in prison for an extended period, but so you have a long supervision." Well-documented specific evidence that the human brain is not fully developed until around twenty-five, and that even then the frontal cortex which regulates executive functioning, including decision-making and impulse control, is the final part of the brain to fully develop. Fifty-seven years counting, I am impacted by changes in Wisconsin Caregiver Laws, Rehabilitation Review Panel Request No.: 2000-00047; Mississippi seven years since conviction; and Texas Convictions Barring Employment Safety Code 250.006. I was discharged from that twenty-year sentence on February 3,1989. I have been suffering self-denial psychological incarceration in lieu of "three strikes out." Clear and present need for a pardon. Study each writing for the reason ex-convicts have been denied freedoms others take for granted daily. Ex-convict is a difficult seat to sit. I have evolved 360 degrees since a conviction history discharge. I am asking for full recognition of human rights in the United States of America. This book is a call for research on social justice matters concerning race.