Dayton Daily News

This should be redemptive tale: Free Mitch Rutledge

- StephenMoo­re Stephen Moore is a senior fellowat the Heritage Foundation andwrites for Creators Syndicate.

Nearly everyone has seen the classic movie “The Shawshank Redemption.” Well, it turns out there is a real life “Red” Redding, the character played by Morgan Freeman. He is in prison in Alabama. He has been there for nearly 40 years. He was guilty of his crime: a murder he committed as a teenager in a drug operation. But so many people who have interacted with Rutledge in prison see the similariti­es in character with Red.

He grew up in a broken home with a father he never knew. His mother was a child of 13 years old and was hardly around for adult supervisio­n. He was illiterate. As a teen, he roamed the streets with drug dealers and prostitute­s. With no real family. Without religion. Without schooling. Without love of any kind. It was the kind of trapped and hopeless situation that makes you think, “There but for the grace of God go I.”

He admitted his heinous crime, and he was convicted and sentenced to death. His tragic story was widely publicized in 1983 by a Time magazine profile of individual­s in prison on death row. It was not a sympatheti­c portrayal. The author ended her story by dismissing Rutledge as irredeemab­le. She recommende­d that he “sit and stew in his 8-ft. by 5-ft. pen in Alabama. Forget him.”

But his story drew the attention of my friend and fellow economist Burton Folsom — a bestsellin­g free market author — and a few other kindhearte­d people who saw a chance of redemption. Burt and his wife went to visit Rutledge on many occasions.

They and others converted him to Christ, and his life has been turned around. His death sentence was commuted to life in prison. He has become in every way a model citizen in prison. He instructs young Black men how to avoid the mistakes he made. What gave Rutledge hope was his inner conviction that “maybe there was a purpose to my life. Maybe there were still things God wanted me for.” This epiphany is what has kept Rutledge from the torture of total despair after 40 years behind bars in a maximum-security prison in Alabama.

Prison normally hardens men’s souls. Rutledge has softened. As Folsom and his wife, Anita, wrote in their biographic­al book “Death on Hold,” “There may be no inmate in the United States who is more rehabilita­ted than Mitchell Rutledge.” After 40 years behind bars — two-thirds of his life — with virtually no personal freedom and only knowledge of the outside world from TV in prison, he has paid his debt to society.

Trump and/or Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey must act with justice and mercy. It would be a victory for our penal system that a man can serve his time and be rehabilita­ted. Rutledge puts it well: “The prison system does not rehabilita­te inmates. The prisoners have to rehabilita­te themselves.” Everyone, including the warden, has spoken up on his behalf.

The famous line from Tim Robbins in “The Shawshank Redemption” is, “You have to get busy living or get busy dying.” Let Rutledge get on living. Freeing a 60-yearold Black man, who has reformed his life against all odds and poses no threat to the public, would be an appropriat­e and justified use of presidenti­al power by Trump, highlighti­ng his righteous crusade for civil justice reform. Redemption is a beautiful thing.

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