But whaddaya know? In the CYA procedural manuals, I found a list of
the factors that must be taken into consideration in deciding which facility a
youth should be sent to. He should be close to his family. If he was a high
school graduate or had received a GED, he
should be at a facility that
offered college programs—which Preston certainly did not. The facility
should be chosen based on his propensity for violence and whether he was
likely to try to escape. I had never even been in a fist fight, and had never
attempted an escape. Underlying it all, according to the manual, the goal
was rehabilitation. Great.
I made copies of these pages.
The grievance process also made for an interesting read:
an inmate could
ask for a series of hearings, ending with one at which an outside arbitrator
came to listen to the facts and render an impartial, binding decision.
I went through the stages of hearings. When the impartial arbitrator was
brought in, members of the Youth Authority staff—
five
of them—presented
their side of my case, complete with copied pages from their procedural
manual to support their decision.
A clever move, except they were using what I knew was an out-of-date
copy of the manual, with provisions not nearly as favorable to me.
When it came my turn to speak, I said, “Let me show you the
current
revision of the manual that these folks have not turned over to you.” And I
made a fervent appeal that I wanted to rehabilitate myself.
The arbitrator looked at the dates on the
pages that the counselor had
submitted, and looked at the dates on the pages from me.
And he actually winked at me.
He ordered them to send me to a facility with a college program. They
sent me to Karl Holton, in Stockton, east of San Francisco. Still a very long
way from home, but I felt I had won, and felt very proud of myself.
Looking back, I’m reminded of the lyrics from that Tom Petty song: “You
could stand me up at the gates of hell but I won’t back down.”
Karl Holton turned out to be, for me, the Holiday Inn of the California
Youth Authority. Better living conditions, better food. Though it was a five-
hour drive, my mom and
Gram came every other weekend, as before
bringing loads of food. We’d cook steak or lobsters on the outdoor grills,
like civilized people, and Mom and I would hunt four-leaf clovers on the
lawn of the outdoor visiting area. Their visits
helped make my time in
custody feel shorter.
The counselors would drop around to meet the parents, and mine really
seemed extra polite to my mom.
Other aspects of my stay didn’t go as smoothly. The only razors allowed
were the throw-away kind, forever nicking my skin, so I stopped shaving.
My beard grew full and thick, completely changing my appearance; I would
keep it only as long as I was inside.
I was given early release after only six months. When my Conditions of
Release document was being prepared, I was asked, “What condition can
we put on you that you won’t keep hacking?”
How could I answer that? I said, “Well, there’s ethical hacking and
there’s unethical hacking.”
“I
need some formal language,” was the reply. “What can I put down?”
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