Perdue's action likely to delay, not eliminate releases
AP Photo
Manley Porter, who is serving a life term at Davidson Correctional Center in Lexington for a crime committed in Winston-Salem, was scheduled to be released from prison next June even before the N.C. Supreme Court made its ruling that could shorten his life term.
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Published: October 24, 2009
RALEIGH
When prisoner Cecil Morrison heard that Gov. Bev Perdue would block his release from a life sentence after nearly 32 years behind bars, he said he felt so sick he had to lie down on his bunk and ask God for help.
"When I heard the news yesterday I got a little weak in the stomach, a little dizzy, a little tears," Morrison, 49, told The Associated Press in a phone interview from the Randolph Correctional Center in Asheboro. Just last week prison officials told Morrison he would unexpectedly be set free.
"I was looking forward to the day of my release," he said.
The N.C. Department of Correction said it has been closely monitoring Morrison and 19 other inmates since Perdue said Thursday that she would block their releases. The state is also temporarily preventing the group from participating in work-release and community programs that allow them supervised time outside of prison.
"We're obviously concerned about the emotional ride these inmates have been on for the past week as well as the victims," Keith Acree, a department spokesman, said. "We're watching that group very carefully to make sure there's no rash behavior."
Acree said that mental-health staff and chaplains were available for the 20 and that the community privileges could be restored early next week if there are no problems.
Perdue said Thursday that she was "appalled" by the N.C. Supreme Court's ruling that officials believed would lead to the release of convicted killer Bobby Bowden early from his life sentence. Bowden argued that a state law from the 1970s defined a life sentence as 80 years. The good-behavior credit system in the 1980s allowed some such as Bowden to get day-for-a-day credits for good behavior. Twenty inmates, including Morrison, qualified for release under this ruling. More were to follow in later months.
The governor argued that the General Assembly never intended to give the corrections department of that kind of authority.
Morrison still believes that he will be a free man soon, even though Acree said that the releases are on hold indefinitely.
"I'm still holding on to my faith and I believe that right now this is just a little red herring," Morrison said, adding he has no animosity toward the governor and he knows she's just doing what outraged victims and the general public demand.
Morrison was convicted of second-degree rape in 1977 for abducting a girl at knife point, leading her into a wooded area, sexually assaulting and robbing her.
"At that point I didn't really feel for anyone but myself," Morrison said. "I'm not who I was in 1976 when I was locked up. I'm not that 17-year-old child anymore."
Morrison says he's been changed by the grace of God, but the corrections department may have had a hand in it as well. Morrison credits prison with transforming him from an illiterate teenager into a man with a GED certificate who is a few credits shy of a degree in social work.
Wanda Short, who owns a vocational school in Raleigh where inmate Faye Brown works, said yesterday that she and Brown were both disappointed when they learned of Perdue's decision.
"Just knowing that a system or government can one moment want you to have faith in the judicial system and the process and then to come back and take it back ..." is disappointing, she said. "Now you see the law can be manipulated as needed, just as they choose to do it."
James Lewis, the assistant superintendent at Davidson Correctional Center, said that inmate Manley Porter was also disheartened by the decision. Porter is one of three inmates convicted in Forsyth County who are eligible for release.
In 1976, Porter and another man robbed a general store on Academy Street in Winston-Salem. A store clerk said that Porter, who had a shotgun, forced a customer to the floor and raped her.
"He was disappointed as any of us would be," Lewis said. "Now he's just waiting to see what happens. He knows that things can go up and down."
Porter, 61, said in an interview earlier this week that he was excited to return to the outside world, planning on eating a first meal at International House of Pancakes and continuing his involvement at a local church where he plays piano on day trips outside of prison with a mentor.
Regardless of the state high-court ruling on sentence length, Porter is scheduled to be paroled in June of next year.
Officials say that most of the other inmates will likely join Porter soon.
"I think what will ultimately happen is that each of these people will spend several years more but not life," said Rep. Paul Stam, R-Wake. Stam, who sent a memo to the state attorney general arguing against the ruling. He said that the inmates would probably be granted some of their good-behavior credits, but not all.
Victims of the convicted murderers and rapists realize that their fight isn't over.
Corrections-department employees who notified victims that the inmates would not be released Thursday said they were very pleased but also realized "this isn't a permanent decision," Acree said.
Morrison said that although he isn't "the monster they described in the newspapers" he feels sympathy for his victim, who is riding the same roller coaster.
"I know she's going through pure hell right now, too," Morrison said.
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