Sometimes the freedom some seek for is to leave this world. When
she was 15 years old, Paula Cooper and three high school classmates in
Gary, Ind., decided to cut school and steal some money to play games at a
local arcade. They drank some cheap wine, smoked some pot and walked to
the nearby home of a 78-year-old Bible teacher, Ruth Pelke. They
figured she might have a jar of money somewhere.
The
teenagers cajoled their way inside by telling Ms. Pelke that they were
interested in Bible lessons. Once there, one of them hit her with a
vase. Ms. Cooper stabbed Ms. Pelke 33 times with a butcher knife.
The
others stood watch, joined in the slaying or searched for cash. They
left with $10 and took a joy ride in Ms. Pelke’s old Plymouth.
Three
girls received long prison sentences. Ms. Cooper pleaded guilty to
murder and in 1986 was sentenced to die in the electric chair, becoming
the youngest death-row inmate in Indiana history.
What
followed was extraordinary. Bill Pelke, the Bible teacher’s grandson,
forgave Ms. Cooper for killing his beloved grandmother, who never would
have wanted an execution, he said. Mr. Pelke started a sweeping campaign
to spare Ms. Cooper’s life, wrote to her faithfully and visited her
behind bars.
“She told me how truly sorry she was for what she’d done,” said Mr. Pelke, who is the president of Journey of Hope: From Violence to Healing, an anti-death-penalty group he co-founded.
More
than two million people, most of them in Europe, signed petitions on
behalf of Ms. Cooper; protesters in Italy began a Paula Cooper crusade,
complete with T-shirts bearing her mug shot. The pope made a plea for
clemency.
Read: Man dies as his Girlfriend shot him while teaching her how to use a rifle
Read: Man dies as his Girlfriend shot him while teaching her how to use a rifle
In
1989, Indiana’s Supreme Court commuted Ms. Cooper’s sentence to 60
years in prison. She earned a bachelor’s degree, trained assistance dogs
for the disabled, tutored inmates and ran the prison kitchen. In June
2013, after spending her adult life as inmate No. 864800, she walked out
of prison, released decades early because of her good behavior.
She
didn’t know how to use the Internet. She constantly got lost; in
prison, there’s no need to learn directions because someone always tells
you where to go. “I didn’t know how to use an A.T.M. card — anything,”
she said.
She
nevertheless got a job cooking hamburgers at Five Guys and soon became a
manager. She got engaged and moved into an apartment with her fiancé.
She won her dream job as a legal assistant in the Indiana federal
community defender’s office, led by her longtime friend and defense
attorney, Monica Foster, the chief federal defender.
“You’ve got to have hope,” Ms. Cooper told me. “If you give it up, you’re never going to make it.”
On May 26, some two years after her release, Ms. Cooper committed suicide. She would have turned 46 this month.
I
was one of the few journalists to talk to Ms. Cooper post-prison and
was the last to speak with her, in a call a month before her death.
I’d
been planning a trip to Indianapolis to finally meet her for a story
about teenagers on death row who transformed themselves. If anyone was
proof that redemption was possible, it was Ms. Cooper.
She
asked me to wait a little. “My life is quiet right now, and that’s how I
like it. Once people find out who I am, they all have an opinion about
me because of what I did. They start seeing me as a monster.”
Ms.
Cooper had been severely depressed since childhood, her older sister,
Rhonda LaBroi, told me. Ms. LaBroi begged her to get counseling, but
after all the time in prison, Ms. Cooper couldn’t trust anyone. Ms.
LaBroi said that in a suicide note, her sister said that “she wanted to
tell people suffering from mental illness not to go down that road, not
to commit suicide, to reach out any way they could.”
Ms.
Cooper’s history was daunting. Her mother tried to commit suicide and
kill Ms. Cooper and Ms. LaBroi when they were young. She put the girls
in the car with her and ran the engine in a closed garage. Ms. Cooper’s
father, Herman, now deceased, issued daily beatings, often with an
extension cord, Ms. LaBroi said.
School officials, police and social workers wouldn’t intervene. “We begged them to help and they never did,” she told me.
In
prison, the torment continued At the Indiana Women’s Prison, her first
home, “some of the guards lived to make us miserable,” Ms. Cooper said.
In her 20s she spent three straight years in solitary confinement,
heaping new scars on top of old. Leading causes of criminality are
chronic trauma, neglect or abuse, said Ms. Foster, a public defender for
three decades. “The prison system does absolutely nothing to respond to
that.”
“Paula
showed the incredible possibilities in people,” Ms. Foster said. “She’d
been put down, put down, put down, sentenced to death, did 28 years,
and she came out and did great — she turned everything around. In the
end it wasn’t enough, because no one gave her the help she deserved.”
“It’s a complete tragedy,” Ms. Foster told me after her death.
Mental
health care in prison is mostly a pill in a paper cup. Ms. Cooper
herself was briefly on antidepressants, she told her sister. No one
mandated follow-up treatment for “re-entry,” an apt term considering how
much it must feel like dropping from outer space. “Nobody helps because
people don’t see us as human beings,” Ms. Cooper said.
Basic
reforms could have made the difference for her, and putting them in
place could help hundreds of thousands of other offenders, according to
everyone from judges and psychiatrists to advocates. This isn’t about
pampering. The reforms would cut costs by reducing recidivism.
We
need to provide mental health assessments; adequate counseling and
treatment programs; rehabilitation; and appropriate medication, as
opposed to just sedatives. We should make outpatient treatment a
condition of parole, and expand the use of specialized mental health
“re-entry courts,” which offer intensive guidance and support.
WHATEVER
demons Ms. Cooper fought with, she hid them well. “She’s thriving,” Ms.
Foster told me a month before Ms. Cooper’s death. “She’s full of joy.”
She
learned to shop for food, and drive (badly). She was the cheerful,
patient voice on the phone for terrified and lonely law office clients.
She spoke at two colleges to “give back to the community.” She tried
everything she could to help a mentally ill homeless man in her
neighborhood.
But
she felt mentally ill herself, she told her sister, who said: “Bill
Pelke forgave her, but she couldn’t forgive herself. She said she felt
like she didn’t deserve to live.”
There are lots of Paula Coopers in the country. Prisons release more than 650,000
inmates every year. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics, some
70 percent of incarcerated women in state prisons suffer from mental
health problems.
Ms.
Cooper needed help to survive her despair over the crime. Her sister
said she thought about it every day. When her victim’s grandson visited
her in prison, he forgave her, and hugged her. “You’ve taken a burden
off me,” she told him. In the end, there were too many others to lift.
0 comments:
Post a Comment
What's On Your Mind?