Thursday, February 14, 2013

AFTER MANY YEARS IN PRISON, INMATES BECOME ‘INSTITUTIONALIZED’, UNABLE TO FUNCTION IN FREE WORLD

Institutionalization has always been a problem for prisoners that have spent years behind bars. After years of having been told when to stand up, sit down, talk, shut up, wake up, go to sleep, eat, go to job assignment, go back to cell, etc., etc., they find it very difficult to do things on their own when released from prison. Deliberately committing a crime with the intent of getting returned to prison is not at all uncommon.

FBI: ELDERLY EX-CON ROBBED BANK IN HOPES OF PRISON
He felt more comfortable in prison and wanted to spend his final years there

By Michael Tarm

Associated Press
February 13, 2013

CHICAGO — After spending most of his adult life behind bars, 73-year-old Walter Unbehaun decided to rob another bank in hopes of getting caught. He felt more comfortable in prison, court documents allege, and wanted to spend his final years there.

So the balding, gray-haired man leaned on a cane as he walked into a bank in suburban Chicago over the weekend and used a novel stickup line: He had just six months to live, so he had nothing left to lose, according to a federal complaint citing his post-arrest interrogation.

Unbehaun also allegedly lifted his coat to show a teller a silver revolver shoved into his waistband.

Investigators say Unbehaun, of Rock Hill, South Carolina, walked out of the Harris Bank in Niles on Saturday with $4,178 in his pockets. He wore no disguises, so law enforcement quickly tracked him down using surveillance-camera photos of him holding up the bank, the complaint said.

When authorities stopped Unbehaun on Sunday outside a motel room where he was staying, he immediately threw down his cane and surrendered, saying he knew they were there because he robbed a bank the day before, according to the complaint filed in U.S. District Court in Chicago.

Unbehaun told investigators hours after his arrest that he had spent most of his adult life in prison and "felt more comfortable in prison than out."

"He wanted to do something that would guarantee that he would spend the rest of his life in prison, and he knew that robbing a bank with a loaded gun would accomplish that," according to the complaint, signed by FBI agent Chad Piontek.

Contacted on Tuesday, Unbehaun's defense attorney, Richard McLeese, declined comment.

Unbehaun's most recent stint behind bars ended in 2011, when he was released after serving 10 years for a 1998 bank robbery. His Illinois record alone includes multiple other felonies dating back decades.

Unbehaun made an initial court appearance Monday in Chicago and was ordered to remain in jail pending further court procedures. No additional hearing dates were set.

If he is eventually convicted on the new bank robbery charge, he could be sent to prison for up to 20 years.

3 comments:

bob walsh said...

If they can't function in the free world, they could maybe move to DC or Chicago.

Anonymous said...

This is why the laws need to change......SMH..........

Anonymous said...

Rehabilitation or punishment? Either way there's no support for people being released from prison. We're all human beings and we all make mistakes, some of us bigger mistakes than others, who are we to judge?