Wednesday, July 11, 2012

BEWARE AFRICA GRACE AMSALU IS A PRANKSTER ON THE LOOSE:



BEWARE AFRICA GRACE AMSALU IS A PRANKSTER ON THE LOOSE:

Someone once told me that, “ if the deal is too good, think twice…” I got a message from a certain girl through a certain social media that read:

tue at 9:29 pm
graceamsalu10@yahoo.com Hello I saw your profile today and it was so good to me.u know that i am interested to be a friend first.please i will like you to contact me direct to my e-mail address, (graceamsalu10@yahoo.com) so that i can give you a full introduction of my self with my pictures ok. i will be waiting for your mail to my e-mail address(graceamsalu10@yahoo.com) as you know there is no age,race,colour and religion bar in knowing each other thanks. cares Grace.

so being a naïve and accommodating person, I did send her an email that read-

hey grace,;) winking

its funny i had no idea i had a profile on that site. but this is my email, lookin forward to a greater friendship.

Just a young chap with a passion for writing….that’s how I would describe myself. My curious attitude inspires my writing since writing requires you to be interested in everything.

Talking is my favorite sport, and writing is a way of talking on paper. I’m a daydreamer, which helps me to come up with ideas. I love words so much and the bit of playing with words really intrigues me.

Above all, I enjoy the struggle to come up with just the right words as I write and rewrite….

If you are a culprit of not listening, then be warned. The tragedy is that most of us, who do not listen, do sometimes carry out very expensive experiments, just to try and satisfy ourselves that we are right and others are wrong.

thats a bit about me which you will find on my blog-  http://bukhungu-bukhanga.blogspot.com follow it , tell ur pals and lets share.

on facebook find me at- oracles vincent libosso chronicles

cheers gal

But little did I know what was awaiting me and that offering my email was not a good idea. So I got a reply from her that read:

Subject: PLEASE TELL ME MORE ABOUT YOU



I am very happy to receive your reply

Like I said before my name is Grace, 23yrs old, Fair/African lady and never married. I am a simple person who likes to have fun and offers the same to my companion. I do tend to be a little shy in the early going but with the right person it goes away pretty quickly.

I believe is important to know each other better for trust and confidence which is necessary in any good and lasting relationship built on truth and real love.

I like reading and spots either, walking or just sitting at the beach (watching the sun go down is the best time).I love children too & can also carry on a good conversation but I also have a great pair of ears for listening. I am from Sudan and i am presently staying in a refugee camp here in Senegal.

I came here  because my parents died  and our region is not safe at all because of the rebel soldiers who are rapping women everyday and i escaped through the help of the unicef and red cross and i am now registered with the united nation high commission for refugees Dakar Office here in Senegal.

I choose to come to Senegal because i came once to Dakar three years ago with my late father because he was in oil business  . I will tell you more about my family and everything about me when i am sure who you are and that i can trust you with my life as true friend and guardian,

Attached here is my picture I will tell you more about myself in my next mail. Please send your own picture and telephone number in your next reply.

Hoping to hear from you soonest!
cares Grace.

 
Being an investigative journalist, I embarked to find who this girl was. My first step was the UNHCR website but there was no info on registered refugees. So I typed her name and google searched her. That’s when my fears were confirmed on who she is, whether it’s a he or a she.
In one social media site we discovered her. Her post read;
grace amsalu added a new comment on yettyolukoya's profile.
graceamslu@yahoo.com Hello I saw your profile today and it was so good to me.u know that i am interested to be a friend first.i also believe that coming to you will be a probability of meeting that very love that has been lacking in my entire life. please i will like you to contact me direct to my e-mail address, (graceamslu@yahoo.com) i dont know the posebility of remaing in forum for long time,i will give you a full introduction of my self with my pictures ok. i will be waiting for your mail to my e-mail adsdress(graceamslu@yahoo.com) as you know there is no age,race,colour n religion bar when it comes to true love, cares Grace.

This site was- grace amsalu - Female - Senegal | WDY | Nigerian Music

www.wetin-dey.com/fconn/graceuu/

but more investigations revealed another site that discovered her prank too but here she was using a different name ( we assume! )

 

- FRAUD | Lightstalkers

www.lightstalkers.org/posts/fraud

14 Jan 2012 – Amsalu Tina amsalu_tina@yahoo.com ... I hope by Gods grace i will come out of here soon if everything works out well between me and you ...

SO WE ARE SENDING A DISCLAIMER OUT THERE TO FELLOW AFRICANS TO BE AWARE OF THIS PRANK!


AFRICA'S MOVERS AND SHAKERS

HABIBA GHRIBI:


Today we travel to Tunisia to meet the beautiful, sensational and talented athlete Habiba Ghribi. The Tunisian athlete made history twice in August 2011 with her silver medal in the 3,000m steeplechase in Daegu, South Korea.


She became the first Tunisian woman to win a world championship medal and set her country's national record.


A SELF OPINIONATED PIECE ON THE WAY FORWARD FOR SOUTHERN SUDAN:



A SELF OPINIONATED PIECE ON THE WAY FORWARD FOR SOUTHERN SUDAN:
Happy first anniversary! One of the hardest questions I have had to endure while writing this piece is that of “what do you think needs to happen so that South Sudan can prosper as a nation?”
First thing first, like a one year old baby trying to prove that it is independent and can try to walk, that is what the youngest potential state in Africa is trying to do.


I don’t know about you, but I feel like the rest of African nations and the world too as a whole corporately are these close friends to the already birthed mother- Kenya.
Kenya, here is like the closest thing to a mother to South Sudan, since Kenya played a critical role in peace negotiations that led to the signing of the CPA ( Comprehensive Peace Agreement ) in 2005. This effectively put an end to the civil war between the two “Siamese twins”- the north Sudan and the South Sudan.


The most important asset to a country is the citizens. The plea and cry has gone out loud and clear from South Sudanese people and the government. An appeal to fellow compatriots in the Diaspora to go back home and help rebuild their country.
But even with this call, the South Sudanese government will need to provide a convincing open book on how serious it is in implementing reforms, fight corruption and reverse the legacy of political and social exclusion perpetuated earlier by Khartoum.
Trade and economic development needs to be championed. Trade cannot be divorced from peace, so to maintain internal peace, there is even more need to resolve the demarcation of borders between the half brother republic of Sudan. Enjoying border shares with Northern Sudan, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, DRC and Central African Republic, cross border trade should be a channel of exploration.


With an oil crisis being experienced now, and the long term measure of linking the Lamu port in Kenya to South Sudan via pipeline not in place, the short term option remains in re- negotiating a new equitable, functional and just oil- wealth sharing agreement with the North. This is one space the larger international community is monitoring. The issues largely being commercial investment and energy cum- trade investment.
With security termed as the determinant for canvassing foreign investment, there is still one thing going for Juba. The south is blessed with arable land, water and natural resources that the north can only dream of. All these are awaiting exploitation.


Despite the challenges, there is still hope in this long journey. Nation building requires strong institutions, and even though many may criticize South Sudan as a ‘failed state’, I believe just like a baby who marks any birthday anniversary, it is a hope for growth and development. So this one year anniversary is that same bright hope for Southern Sudan.


Tuesday, July 10, 2012

MOVERS AND SHAKERS- » Top African players at Euro 2012


http://www.africaplays.com/index.php
» Top African players at Euro 2012
Friday, June 8th, 2012 at 17:02  

Over a dozen players with African histories will feature for top teams at the 2012 European Championship which kicks of today in Poland and Ukraine.

France, unsurprisingly, lead the others with eight African players, followed by Portugal who have three players, all of whom are from the Cape Verdean Islands.

Africaplays.com takes a peek at some of the players.

v     PATRICE EVRA - FRANCE

Manchester United left-back Patrice Evra was born in Dakar, Senegal, to a Senegalese diplomat of Guinean descent and a Cape Verdean mother.

v     STEVE MANDANDA - FRANCE

Born in Kinshasa, the Marseille number one goalkeeper Steve Mandanda is number two to Hugo Lloris in the France team. His brother, Parfait, also a goalkeeper with Belgian club Sporting Charleroi, has played for Congo DR.

v     ALOU DIARRA - FRANCE

Imposing midfielder Alou Diarra was born in Villepinte in France to Malian parents. The Marseille star turned down the opportunity to play for Mali in 2004.

v     ADIL RAMI - FRANCE

Valencia centre-back Adil Rami was born in Bastia to Moroccan parents. Morocco tried unsuccessfully to secure his switch to the Atlas Lions.

v     SAMIR NASRI - FRANCE

Born in Marseille to Algerian parents, France, Manchester City attacking midfielder Sami Nasri is a key member of Laurent Blanc's France.

v     KARIM BENZEMA - FRANCE

Immensely talented Real Madrid forward Karim Benzema was born in the French city of Lyon to Algerian parents. He made his debut for France in 2006.


Real Madrid star Karim Benzema has his roots in Algeria


v     BLAISE MATUIDI - FRANCE

Idolised Nigeria's Jay-Jay Okocha when he was growing up, but now plays in the defensive midfield position at Paris Saint Germain. He was born in Toulon to an Angolan father and a French mother.

v     HATEM BEN ARFA - FRANCE

Newcastle United's creative attacking midfielder Hatem Ben Arfa has a Tunisian father, but a French mother. His father Kamel was a Tunisian international.

v     NANI - PORTUGAL

Manchester United's dashing winger Nani was born in Praia, Cape Verde, and he moved to Lisbon at an early age.

v     SILVESTRE VARELA - PORTUGAL

FC Porto winger Silvestre Varela is one of three players in the Portuguese squad, including Nani, whose parents hail from the Cape Verde Islands.

v     ROLANDO - PORTUGAL

FC Porto defender Rolando was born in Sao Vicente in Cape Verde and moved to Portugal at the age of 14.

v     JEROME BOATENG - GERMANY

Brother of Ghana's Kevin-Prince Boateng, Jerome, has been a regular feature in the German team's defence since the 2010 World Cup. He was born in Berlin, to a Ghanaian father and a German mother.

v     SAMI KHEDIRA - GERMANY

Another in the German team from Africa is Real Madrid holding midfielder Sami Khedira. Born inStuttgart to a German mother and a Tunisian father, he was impressive for Germany at the 2010 World Cup, bagging the winning goal in the third-place match against Uruguay.


Tunisian roots, Germany star

v     KHALID BOULAHROUZ - NETHERLANDS

Born in Maassiluis to Moroccan parents, 30-year-old defender Khalid Boulahrouz will be flying the Dutch flag at the championship.

v     IBRAHIM AFFELAY - NETHERLANDS

Barcelona midfielder Ibrahim Affelay was born in Utrecht to a Moroccan family. He opted to play for the Netherlands despite interest from Morocco.

v     ANGELO OGBONNA - ITALY

Centre-back Angelo Ogbonna was born in Cassino to Nigerian parents. He is a team-mate of Super Eagles star Nnamdi Oduamadi in Torino, both helping the Serie B side gain promotion to the topflight this past season.


Born to Ghanaian parents, Mario Balotelli will lead Italy's attack.

v     MARIO BALOTELLI - ITALY

Young maverick Mario Balotelli was born in Italy to Ghanaian parents. He was put up for adoption and raised by an Italian family. The Manchester City star turned down a chance to play for the Black Stars, opting for the Azzurri.

v     THEODOR GEBRE SELASIE - CZECH REPUBLIC

Defender Theodor Gebre Selassie is the son of an Ethiopian father, Gebre Selassie and plays for Czech side Slovan Liberec.

v     DANNY WELBECK - ENGLAND

Daniel Nii Tackie Mensah Welbeck was born in Manchester to Ghanaian parents. The Manchester United forward broke hearts in Ghana when he opted to play for England.


A LETTER TO SOUTH SUDAN:


A LETTER TO SOUTH SUDAN:

Happy anniversary,
Yesterday, July 9th you turned 1. Happy first anniversary as an  independent state! Africa’s 54th nation, Africa’s youngest daughter and United Nation’s 193rd member state.
How I wish I was there to see the smiles and joy on your face. But never the less, even as I sit over here in Kenya, where you were born, I rejoice over you.
The “separation of the Siamese twins” as one author chose to put it, in reference to the intractable relations between the Arab North and Black Southerners, mostly Christians.
Even in this moment of celebrations we cannot forget the “self determination” of those who have gone before us. Those whom in other annals they term “rebels” yet because of them, we enjoy the fruits of freedom and the broken chains of oppression.
At 1, you struggle to walk and the challenges you have faced so far have only come to strengthen you. If I was to reconstruct everything then I will say I see erected lamp posts, set high to light you paths to hot spots.
Hot spots such as Abyei, Heglig, Southern Kordofan, Darfur and the Great Blue Nile.
Sudan’s People Liberation Movement led by Dr John Garang, who was killed in a plane crash on July 30, 2005 as he left Uganda, barely 7 months after signing the Comprehensive Peace Agreement that paved way for your independence, would have been proud of this day.
President Salva Kiir Mayardit, his successor has proved his statesmanship and the quest to guide South Sudanese to independence.
Challenges of corruption, nation building, economic development, border disputes and other unresolved challenges still linger before you.
Like the Greek Mythology Titans, it is your undying self determination to see a better South Sudan that will see you overcome these challenges.
As I finish, I echo your president’s words during the independence celebrations;
           “We have not forgotten you
               When you cry we cry.
                       When you bleed,
                  We bleed.
                  I pledge to you
                   That we will find a just peace for all!”
Long live South Sudan!

Monday, July 9, 2012

Last Day of a Life sentence by david anderson



featured guest writer


Last Day of a Life sentence

The Last Day of a Life Sentence
David Anderson
Aurora, Colorado
a-shedusa@comcast.net
303-489-6972
The prison guard came to my cell and told me to gather up the things, I wished to take with me, it was a beautiful spring morning; April 29, 1983. Today was my birthday and I had much more reason than most people to celebrate on this birthday.
I had gotten up long before the sun on this special day and had watched as the sun made its appearance into a brilliant blue sky, there was not a cloud to be seen anywhere; never had the sky looked so blue or the air smelled so sweet as on this day. It was one of those warm spring mornings that you feel the rays of the sun on your face and know that the long hard, bitter and cold winter is over. That warm sun gives you a special feeling and a glow; it’s a joy to be alive and to have survived the cold winds of winter.
The cell door slid open and I picked up the brown paper grocery sack that held all of the things in life I owned, with a pen, the night before I had written in bold letters on the sack “Canon City Suitcase”, ah! It was nice to see that after all these years my sense of humor was still intact, as you will soon see. I believe that it was my sense of humor to a good part that helped me survive.
I had given away most of the things I had accumulated in the last seven years to the other prisoners; men who had become my close friends over the years. The bonds of these friendships had become very close, so close that a few had even offered to kill for me.
I stepped through the cell door and looked around at what had been my home; there was a mixed feeling of pain and relief at walking out of here still alive, with only the scars of the prison left on my mind unseen. The very spot where I stood outside my cell door had been covered with blood of a prisoner only weeks before; where he had fallen in pain, bleeding from his stab wounds, life ebbing away.
And now I stood in the same spot to begin my journey to freedom, to once again join the living and begin life anew.
I looked down the tier and saw Pierson (a prisoner) standing in front of another prisoner’s cell door. Pierson was serving a life sentence for first degree murder; although he was capable of murder he was not a very strong person mentally.
The prison had turned him into a homosexual, the day before my release Pierson came to my cell door and told me how happy he was for me and my impending release, I considered Pierson a friend but not a close friend. In prison unlike the free world your selection of friends is much more limited. Your only choice for friends is from the men who are locked in the cells around you. Often I have seen the prison administration place a known homosexual within a certain cell block as a means of keeping it quiet. The prison guards figure that if the convicts are busy having sex then at least they are leaving the guards alone.
Pierson knew how hard I had struggled in court for this day of freedom. Very few things in prison are kept unknown from the other prisoners; prisoners have little else to do with their time but talk and so everything about the prisoners is known by the other prisoners; his politics’, his sexual habits, his drug habits; if any, if he is married and how his relationship with his wife is withstanding the test of prison.
As Pierson stood in front of my cell door, he told me that he wanted to do something for me; when I ask him what? He told me that he wanted to give me “head” so that I would have something to remember the prison by and he would have something to remember me by. As soon as I got over my shock, I told Pierson “Thanks but no thank you” I declined his gift and told him that I had made it for seven years without sex and I was sure I could last one more day, I told him that I already had more than enough things to remember the prison by.
The cell door banged shut behind me and there I stood with my paper grocery sack (my canon city suitcase) ready to begin the long slow walk out of the prison.
Had it really been seven years ago the prison door slammed shut on me, on what was supposed to be for the rest of my life. When it did slam shut on June 30, 1976 it was suppose to stay shut for the rest of my life, I’m sure many of my friends and family thought it surely would stay closed as they picked over all of my material possessions for themselves. I thought of the story from the bible; as Jesus hung on the cross and the soldiers cast lots for his garment.
In no way, shape or form did I think of myself as a Jesus but I certainly could relate to the feeling of betrayal. There is an old saying “When you go to prison, you find out who your friends are”.
I never gave up the struggle to free myself from that prison, I always felt and believed that someday I would, in spite of the many things that happen to me in those seven years to hold me there. It was much more than a dream that I knew this day was coming for me.
As my escort guard and I were leaving the cell house, another guard came up to me and wanted to shake my hand, I declined his offer, I told him that we didn’t shake hands when I entered the prison and that I didn’t see any need to do it now. He also said that he wanted to wish me “Good Luck” and hoped that I made it out there in the free world. Not more than one week earlier this same guard had refused me two minutes time to go to the shower and get a bucket of hot water so that I could wash my clothes and now here he was wishing me “Good Luck”, somehow I did not feel his wishes were very sincere; and so I ask him if he would wish all of the men (prisoners) there the same “good Luck” that I had had, knowing that if they did the prison would soon be empty and he would be without a job? He never replied as he turned away with a pained expression on his face. I was well aware of the anger and bitterness that I held inside of me, not just for what the prison had done to me but also for the many men that I saw there and what it had done to their lives and even reaching beyond the prison walls to hurt the people who loved them.
In my seven years there at the prison I had always been known for my strong criticism of the guards and the warden, for writing letter to the media, the courts, for filing law suits (One that closed old max) and it was mostly aimed at the injustice that I saw being done by the warden and his guards to the prisoners. The warden classified me as a troublemaker and said I was very dangerous (the truth is I was a pacifist) and because of their classification I spent nearly all of that seven years in “Administrative Segregation” This is what Geo Carlin would call kinder and softer words, I was in the “Hole” for the greater part of those seven years for the crime of being critical of the warden and his guards. I never let them reduce me to screaming at them “F**k you!” as most of the prisoners did in frustration. Maybe the warden thought if he called it “Administrative Segregation” instead of the “Hole” it wouldn’t be as painful for the prisoners and it would appear to the general public that the prisoner were all living in a country club. I often reminded the guards that we were prisoners in a prison……not inmates in a correctional facility and then I would add “You can’t correct the problem in your own life and have little time left to work on mine”.
I recalled a time a few months before my release that a guard named “Rocky” confided in me that I was different than most of the convicts there and that he didn’t believe that I belonged in prison, I told “Rocky” that if he had lived with these men as I had for the last seven years he would see that there are many more men that do not belong in prison. “Rocky” hated his job as a prison guard but he was also faced with a family to feed and a home mortgage that needed to be paid and little prospects for other employment in the small town of Canon City, the prison was Freemont counties largest employer. Many men and women are caught in this same trap. Rocky was right about one thing; I was different as all men and women are. Rockies’ problem was that he was trying to put me in a neat little box with a simple little label “Inmate” and it didn’t work. I don’t think we should do that to people; in prison or out of.
On June 30th 1976 the day I entered prison to serve the first of three life sentences, I vowed to myself that I was not going to let the prison rob me of the things I believed in, that I would not become a part time homosexual for lack of a normal sex life,
That I was not going to start drinking home brew or start using drugs to escape the terrible boredom, monotony and drudgery of every day prison life. Nor would I become a “Snitch” looking for a few small favors from the guards. I saw many men who went down this path and most always became very disappointed and ashamed of their actions. I wanted to hang on to what self respect I had left; I believed the one thing the prison can never rob me of, “My thoughts” and how I responded to my environment no matter where I found myself. I believed that when we find ourselves in an uncomfortable environment, do something positive and constructive to change that environment or leave. And so at the beginning I took the course of escape. My freedom had been illegally taken; I reasoned that I had every right to take it back. And so that is just what I did with two successful escapes from “Old Max”. Escape from prison was not that hard, remaining free is the hard part; because as J Edgar Hover said “No man can remain free on escape, because someone either loves’s him too much or hates him too much”.
I found this out with the tragic loss of my family. And so I set a new course for myself; I was going to walk out the prison’s front door; totally free. And this would require that I study the law that had sent me to prison, and so with my 8th grade education I poured myself into the law books and in my spare time of which there was a lot of, I used my sense of humor to entertain the other prisoners and myself; of course! At the prison and guards expense. One of the more memorable and funny event happened while I was in the
“Dog Cages” of cell house three, the “Hole.” It happened soon after I was returned to “Old Max” from my second escape in 1979, it all began when I happen to come across a small plastic bottle with a lid, the bottle was about the size of the small bottles of shampoo, like the ones they give out in all the finer motels. I confided only to my close friend (Carlos Henry) in the cell next to me of what I was going to do. He fell out laughing when I told him and said that he didn’t believe the guards would be that stupid to go for it. My reply was “We’ll see”. I pissed in the bottle and secured the lid. I was allowed a one hour weekly exercise period in a small yard, I hid bottle in my underwear when I went to the yard; there was a guard tower atop the 30 foot wall and whenever I was out in the yard, I was watched closely because of my previous escapes.
I walked in circles around the small yard keeping a close eye on the tower guard, at one spot I dug a hole with the heel of my shoe so that I could bury the bottle undetected. Because of the watchful eye of the guard, it took several passes to accomplish this. When my one hour was up I return to my cell and took up pen and paper, I was composing what is called a snitch letter, but of course my snitch letter was anonymous, the way I had it figured; someone was really going to be pissed over this little game. I began my anonymous snitch letter with; “Someone one is going to get killed and I don’t want to be any part of it” I went on to explain that the convicts in cell three were planning to escape, They had a bottle of “nitroglycerine” and planned to take the cell house guards hostage and then use the “nitroglycerine” to blow a hole in the east wall of the small yard. I told them where the “nitroglycerine was buried on the yard; under the second wall light, five feet out from the wall. I signed off on the letter with “please help! I don’t want to see anyone get hurt. I sent the letter to John Snow, who was the chief investigator (the convicts all referred to him as Barney Fife) at the prison and who was in charge of all crimes committed on the prison property. The following two days after I sent the letter I spent standing on the foot of my bunk where I could peer out between the bars to the spot where I had buried the bottle of piss ( by the way; nitroglycerine is a light yellow color, just like piss) And nothing happen. No guards digging up the yard.
A week went by and nothing. And then one day all hell broke loose; guards were coming out of nowhere hollering “Lockdown” “Lockdown” we all jumped up to see what was going on, we didn’t have a clue as to what it was all about until we saw some strange uniforms and people we had never seen before, there were about 20 of them and they all had dogs, never seen dogs in prison before, there was such a mad commotion of men running up and down the tiers and then it became clear, the strange men were from the Denver Bomb Squad, flown to the prison in an emergency call from the warden. They needed to find that nitroglycerine and stop the big prison break. The convicts were all hollering to add to the pandemonium that had broken out. Some of the convicts were whistling at the dogs distracting them from searching for the nitro and the bomb squad was having trouble controlling their dogs. It was total insanity for well over three hours and all the convicts were laughing and hollering; it was like the 4th of July, Christmas and New Years all rolled into one. The convict’s lives were so void of any activity in cell three, this was a great event.
Carlos slid his hand through the bars of his cell with his mirror in his hand, he had the biggest smile on his face that I had ever seen in the seven years I’d known him. It was only one of the events that I dreamed up for a distraction from the horrible monotony of prison life. I learned later the reason for the delayed reaction to my letter; John Snow had left on a two week vacation just a few days before I sent it and it wasn’t opened until he returned. A small foot note; is that even after I gave them clear instructions on where the nitro was buried, they never found it as I discovered a few days later.
The escort guard and I walked an open area toward the sally port and I could see the other prisoners at the windows watching me and waving goodbye, as I made that final walk across the prison.
In the sally port I would be put for a final time into a cell, stripped of my prison clothes. I would put on the clothes of a free man, the clothes that Lila had left for me to wear home.
I quickly removed the prison clothes and discarded them in a pile on the cell floor, those long hated, ill fitting prison clothes. No longer would I have to look at them or feel them next to my skin.
The clothes that Lila left for me were simple clothes but yet they felt so good on my body. I remember looking down at myself and thinking; I looked so strange in these clothes. They fit and they had color, how strange they seemed from the world I had known this past seven years.
I stepped out of the cell in those beautiful free world clothes and waited for the last three doors to open. Those doors were all that stood between me and freedom and as I waited for the door to open the thoughts began to creep in; this was all a mistake, somewhere along the line a guard would come running up and say it was all a mistake, for me to be taken back to my cell, I would not be released because they had a new charge against me. And just then a guard that I knew well came walking towards me, Charlie Linam, I was a little shocked by his question, he wanted to know how it was that I was being released from prison with all of the sentence’s that I had, he meant the three life sentences.
I explained to him that the sentence’s had all been overturned and the judge had ordered me released, he wanted to know why I had not received any time on the second escape. I explained to him that I would not plea bargain and that because the DA had spent so much money on my first trial, he elected not to waste any more money on me, the DA stated to me that I was like beating a dead horse. If we had had the second trial I was going to make them spend every dime I could. When you have three life sentence’s you don’t feel the fourth that much. And beside that if I was going to get them overturned? It didn’t matter if was three or four.
Charlie’s eye’s, face and voice were filled with anger over my release, he told me that he would take me out to a car that was waiting to escort me off prison property.
This was not the first time I had felt Charlie’s anger for me and it was not the first time I had been the cause of his deep anger for me. Charlie never quite knew how to deal with me and that was just how I liked it. When I was in junior high school a teacher had told me that if I had a weak spot to never let any of my enemies see it or they would use it against me. Charlie’s weak spot was he had a deep seated anger for convicts and I was at the top of that list. I truly believe that if Charlie thought for one minute he could have got away with it, he would have shot me right there in the parking lot and then claimed I had tried to escape while being released. One of our more infamous meetings between Charlie and I took place in Anchorage, Alaska where he had come to pick me up from the county jail after my second escape from “Old Max” I had been working on a ship when I was captured at Dutch Harbor and then moved to Anchorage for safe keeping while I fought extradition. I did not kid myself into thinking I could win; I was only stalling, looking for another chance to escape. The more I stalled the angrier Colorado got. So that by the time Charlie got there he was pretty upset. It was Feb. of 1979 when he came to the jail to pick me up for my return trip to Canon City. And to make matters worse the FBI told the warden Bill Wilson that if I got away from them again they weren’t going to hand me back to them a third time. The warden and the Governor were somewhat embarrassed that I had written to the newspapers after my second escape telling my side of the story. So now here stands Charlie reading me my rights as required by law, “You have the right to remain silent, anything you say can be used in a court of law against you,” The Miranda Warning”. Charlie and another guard wrapped about fifty pounds of chain around my waist legs and arms and then it was off to the airport we went. But there was one small problem; the Anchorage airport was closed because of a howling winter storm. This only served to make Charlie more nervous. They told us that our flight had been transferred to Air Force base where the runways were being kept open. When we arrived at the plane the stewardess told Charlie that they would not allow me to go up the stairs with all of the chains on, he would have to remove them, Charlie tried to tell her that I was an escaped convict but the stewardess was having none of it, she told him if you don’t take the chains off of him you can’t board.
Poor Charlie, he just couldn’t get any respect for his authority. We boarded the plane without incident, but after I was seated Charlie began to put the chains back on me, until the stewardess saw what he was doing. She walked quickly to where we were seated and told Charlie that he could not put those chains on me or we would have to get off the plane, he didn’t argue with her as he removed my restraints. There was an authority in her voice that quietly said “I’m in charge here” it was a beautiful thing to see and experience. This small woman standing up to the big powerful prison guard with all of his chains, guns, his symbols of power and her message was clear to Charlie.
My eyes met with her eyes and in that moment I saw something that I had not often seen, compassion.
Her instincts told her that I was not the dangerous convict that Charlie wanted her to believe. And she was right. I might run away or escape (who doesn’t want to be free) but I did not want my freedom at the cost of hurting another human being.
I have a great fear of flying but I can honestly say it was a flight that I forgot my fear because of the kind human treatment of the stewardess. It was a beautiful flight to Seattle for me as the stewardess showered me with kindness and service, while Charlie’s request for a coffee refill were ignored. This strong small woman turned the world upside down with her common sense and compassion.
Did Charlie think that I was going to jump from the plane at thirty thousand feet?
When we arrived in Seattle, I was taken to the King county jail and booked as an overnight guest, and once again, Charlie began with his dangerous convict speech to the jailers.
The following morning after check out at the county jail, I was driven to the airport where to my surprise, was waiting a small six passenger plane. It had the state of Colorado logo on the side; it was the governor’s plane along with his pilot the “bald eagle”. Wow! I was being given the royal treatment, but this time there was no compassionate stewardess to make Charlie remove the chains. Charlie was back in charge.
After we had been in the air for some time and everyone began to relax, Charlie turned to me and said “David” just for my own curiosity; I wondering how you got those hacksaw blades into the prison; did a guard bring them to you? Yea, right Charlie. I didn’t believe him for one minute when he said for his own curiosity that he wanted to know.
And so I thought to myself; well Charlie, two people can play at this game; tell me everything you know and I won’t use it against you, remember the Miranda warning?
I told Charlie that I would tell him how it was done but it would only be in strict confidence (these last words had a nice sound of truth telling) and that if he ever revealed how he found out I would deny telling him. Boy! The bullshit was getting so deep in this small plane we must have lost a thousand feet of altitude. Charlie loved it, there was a gleam in his eyes as he was sure he was about to learn and extract the truth from me.
I told Charlie one of the biggest bullshit stories I had ever manufactured; unknown to me and Charlie at that time, it would have disastrous effects for Charlie in the distant future for his authority over the convicts and make him the laughing stock of the prisoner’s and guards alike.
And so I began my wild tale; I told Charlie that several weeks before the escape, I was out on the big yard of the prison with a friend when the idea came to me of how to smuggle the hack saw and blades into the prison and that at this same time the plan for escape began to form in my mind;
As my friend (Pollock) and I stood there on the big yard, Pollack was once again telling me of his misfortune at getting caught selling drugs in Denver, especially when he had worked out such a fool proof plan on getting the drugs into the states from Mexico. I had heard Pollack’s story a hundred times before, but this time something clicked! Maybe it was because of the spot where we were standing as Pollock once again told his story. We were standing on a small bridge of the prisons big yard; the bridge covers an open irrigation ditch, the bridge was about thirty feet from the north wall, there is a guard tower directly over the irrigation ditch (see illustration) where the guard had a bird’s eye view of all below. The irrigation ditch comes into the prison on the south wall through an archway that is cut into large sandstone wall; the archway is covered by a double set of heavy steel bars that allow that passage of the water. The irrigation ditch travels directly from the south wall to the north, dividing the prison in two. Pollock and I stood at the north wall that day as the water flowed to its exit with another set of heavy steel bars. The water was about four feet deep in the ditch, as it leaves the prison it travels through the heart of Canon City, strait through the residential section of town. And yes I knew that many convicts before me had tried their escapes from this very same ditch and all had failed. I remember standing on that small bridge, staring into the water, watching it swirl around the heavy steel bars and then leaving the prison behind, traveling on into the free world.
Often I stood and day dreamed that I was a leaf floating on the water and that the current would carry me to the freedom beyond the wall. I somehow knew that it was right here in the water that we would make our escape. It was about this same time that Pollack came to the part of his story of how he and his wife would travel to Mexico with their trained ducks; Pollock would go across into Mexico with the ducks and his wife would remain on the state side. After he made connection with his drug supplier he would head for the Rio Grande and a pre determined spot where his wife waited on the other side. Pollock placed the drugs into sealed plastic bags and then secured then to the ducks whereupon he would release them into the river, his wife had a whistle that Pollock had trained them to go to; It was here that I made the connection of the ducks, the irrigation ditch and the hacksaws.
I stopped Pollock in his story and ask him if his wife still had the ducks? He told me that his wife was in Denver and that she still had the ducks. I ask him if he thought the ducks could be trained to follow a red ping pong ball that was floating on top of the water. “Piece of cake” he replied, I then ask how long would it take to train them? He told me “Maybe a couple of weeks”. I told him to get word to his wife and start their training as soon as possible and then let me know when their training was complete. I contacted a convict that worked in the gym and traded him a pack of smokes for a ping pong ball, I then had a con that worked in the paint shop swipe a small jar of red paint. I pulled the heavy thread from my mattress that I would use for the string; the waiting began; for word from Pollock’s wife. I had Pollock contact his wife and set a date for our action; the date was set for July 30th 1978 and the time would be at ten am she would drive to canon city and wait one block from the north wall in the residential section next to the ditch, When she sees the red ping pong ball floating on the water secure the hacksaw and blades to the ducks and put them in the water.
Right on time Pollock’s wife contacted him and said everything was ready on her end.
On our pre arranged date I headed for the big yard with my red ping pong ball safely hid in my underwear and the string wound around my waist hidden under my shirt. Pollock was with me and would act as my spotter for the tower guard.
When we got to the bridge I dropped the ping pong ball into the water and began letting the string out. I waited 15 minutes and then began to reel the string in; when I saw the ball at the bar there were no ducks following it, Pollock said let it out again and give her a little more time. Pollock was right as the ducks were right behind the red ping pong ball when it got to the bars; where I left it floating until the guard was on the other side of the tower, Pollock quickly slipped into the water and retrieved the hacksaw blades and frame. I broke the string and the ball began its journey back to where Pollock wife waited to retrieve the ducks.
And this is how I got the hacksaw and blade into the prison, Charlie. And then I added a little flavor to the story; I told Charlie the reason there were no ducks following the ping pong ball the first time was because Pollock’s wife had tied too many blades and the frame to one duck; when she sat him in the water, he sank to the bottom of the ditch and drowned.
The story I made up and told Charlie that day was pure fiction; it was my way of saying to Charlie; if you want to bullshit me by saying “Just” for my own curiosity then I will give you some bullshit back. The truth was that a guard had carried the hacksaw blades into the prison; but he didn’t know he was carrying them, and had I given Charlie his name, Charlie would have had him fired in a heartbeat. I reasoned that the guard should not be fired for something that he was not guilty of knowingly doing.
At that time I had no way of knowing that the story of the “The red ping pong ball and Ducks” would ever come up again.
A few months after I was returned to Canon City from Alaska, a preliminary hearing was held in the District Court, downtown Canon City concerning the last escape. In this hearing it was necessary for the state to present evidence and witness that I had escaped and was returned to the prison. (Against my will; of course!) And the states star witness was none other than Charlie Linam. When Charlie took the stand, he testified of how he had flown to Alaska to pick me up and return me to Canon City, when my attorney turn came to cross examine him; he ask Charlie if he had given me my “Miranda Warning” Charlie said “yes” my attorney then ask if I had said anything and began walking back to our table, as Charlie replied “No” that I had made no statement to him, and then he made a long pause as if he wanted to add something. My attorney turned to look at him and waited; and then Charlie said Oh! He said something about some ducks and a red ping pong ball. Where upon my attorney looked at Charlie not sure of what he said and ask him to repeat what he had said. And when he did, my attorney turns to look at me with a look of “What the hell is he talking about” all I could do was turn my palms up, shaking my head as if saying “I don’t have a clue as to what he’s talking about” and Charlie saw me do this, his face began to go beat red with anger. Everyone in the courtroom was on the edge of their seat as my attorney drug the story out Charlie over the next twenty minutes. The judge had sat up strait in his chair and turned to stare at Charlie as he retold the story of “The Ducks and the Red Ping Pong Ball” It was one of those small unexpected events that it is so funny, you needed to be there to truly appreciate it. As Charlie told the story everyone would look at me and then back at Charlie as if to say “Are you kidding or have you completely lost your mind” When Charlie got to the end of the story, everyone in the courtroom was laughing so hard, the judge tried to show some restraint but could not compose himself from laughing and the clerk was laughing so hard that she stopped taking notes. Charlie had the look of a wild animal with its foot caught in the trap. He wanted desperately to escape the ridicule and laughter but there was no place to hide as he sat in the witness box reduced to a tormented, pissed off prison guard that wanted only revenge. Charlie had not been one of the prison guards that escorted me to the court that day but he was waiting for me in the room where they put the chains and cuffs back on me after court, he had a quiet fury boiling up inside of him when he looked at me and said “you motherf**ker, you’ll pay for that!” then turned and walked out of the room.
There was one person that could have stopped that from happening with a few well placed objections; the DA, Dennis Falk, but he was also so engrossed in Charlie’s story he forgot his job and sat there listening.
A few days after the hearing the word spread like a prairie fire at the prison, by both the guard and prisoners who I informed of the event; they loved it and you always knew where Charlie was in the Prison by the “Quacking” sound the convict made behind his back.
And now here we are again, April 29th 1983 back together again, David the convict and Charlie the prison guard; how much Charlie must have hated his job on this day; to have to be a part of my release.
On Charlie signal to the control center the first steel door slid open and we stepped in, as this door closed the second door opened. We walked to the last door and on command it also opened; beyond this last steel door was that lost freedom, I had hungered for these past seven years. We were still on prison property but there were no more walls or steel doors to pass through; I could smell and taste the air of freedom. As Charlie and I walked the last hundred yards to the parking lot where a van waited for me I fell into a silence and calm in knowing my nightmare was finally over. But Charlie the prison guard would get one last turn to exercise his power over me. Unknown to me, my attorney, Norm Muller and Lila Gracey the two people who had been so instrumental in making this day happen were waiting for me. They had both worked so hard and wanted to be a part of this special day when I walked out of the prison. Norm had gone inside, trying to find out when I would be released. Lila remained in the parking lot. They wanted to be the ones that drove me away from the prison. That was also very important to me, quite simply because they were the ones who had made it all happen.
Lila saw me before I saw her, she cried out my name “David” and came running to me; she wrapped me in her loving arm and began kissing me, and then Charlie stepped in, he ordered Lila to get back away from the prisoner, he told her I was still a prisoner until I was off of state property, there would be no joyful kisses or loving embraces on state property. Lila turned and began walking away, then stopped and turned to Charlie and said “You want him for every second that you can have him”
Charlie put me in the prison van; I was driven to a small parking lot near the hi-way where the prison guard left me standing alone.
In a few minutes Lila and Norm came driving up and we all celebrated my release without any interference of a prison guard. We took some pictures with the prison as a background, and then started up that hi-way to freedom.
God!.. What a beautiful day this was, what a wonderful birthday present I had received all because some very special people cared. For me I know there will never be another day like April 29th 1983.
I’m sure if you had looked at me as I sat riding in the, I would have appeared calm and relaxed; maybe I was stunned. But inside there was an explosion going off; explosions of beauty and pleasure, dear god! The pure sweet taste of freedom.
There is only one small footnote to this story; when I left the prison for the last time that day, I thought I would never have to look at Charlie Linan again in this lifetime. I was wrong.
A couple of years after my release, I was walking down the street of Cripple Creek, Colorado. I was an old mining town that is a favorite for the tourist.
Coming down the street is none other than Charlie Linan, he is in civilian clothes and a woman was beside him who I assumed was his wife.
As we came within speaking distance I broke out into a beautiful smile, not so for Charlie as he just stared at me not knowing what to expect. I kept the smile on my face and just said “well hello Charlie”. I could see that he was pretty stunned by this chance meeting. And then he came up to me and said “David” I’ve often wondered if that story you told me about the Ducks and Ping Pong Ball was true? I reminded him that if he ever brought that subject up again, I would deny I ever told him. Those were my final words to Charlie as I walked past him never looking back.

GOR MAHIA ANTHEM


KNOWN TO MAY AS LORENZO, HE IS AMONG THE MEN BEHIND THE GOR MAHIA FANS COMING BACK TO THE STADIUM TO SUPPORT THEIR TEAM.AND IN HONOR OF THE MIGHTY KOGALLO HE CHOSE TO RECORD THE TEAM'S ANTHEM... A BIT OF BENGA, OHANGLA AND TINDIKTI BUFFET BEATS TO IT...ENJOY!!!!