David Potchen, 53, who robbed a bank in
Merrillville, Indiana, last June, now has a job as a welder and is
staying out of trouble after receiving help from family members that had
long been estranged.
He had told a Lake County
judge earlier this year that he attempted to rob a local Chase bank so
that he could get placed back in custody, where he had served 12 and a
half years in prison.
Potchen, who was originally
sentenced for a 2000 bank robbery, had been making $8.29 an hour in
prison but had trouble finding a job on his release.
He was
on probation in June and served 286 more days before he told Judge
Clarence Murray that he would plead guilty only if he got the maximum
eight years for the recent theft and was put back in prison.
"In
my lifetime I have had occasion to run into a lot of homeless people,
but I don't recall ever meeting face-to-face a hopeless person. To me,
someone who would give up on freedom, it was just shocking," Murray
said.
Potchen had decided he needed to go back to
prison after his years free had left him without a job or a place to
stay and sleeping in mosquito-filled woods.
After
stealing roughly $1,000 with a bank robbery note on the back of his
resume, he sat on the curb outside and waited for police.
The
judge decided to let Potchen withdraw his plea and give the 53-year-old
a conversion charge that will drop the robbery charge if he stays out
of trouble for one year.
"You’re not a throwaway,
Mr. Potchen. You have value, sir. I’m always optimistic and hopeful that
there are still good people out there who believe freedom is
important," Murray said in February.
Murray appealed to those who heard about the case to offer the defendant help.
Now
the reformed man has reconnected with cousins who have bought him a
microwave, clothes and a coffee maker to help him adjust to life on the
outside and continue working welding truck flat beds in Illinois.
"I can't stop them. They keep buying me things," he said.
The
owner of the trucking company, a devout Christian, has hired
ex-convicts before and felt like he needed to do something to help
Potchen.
He said he was 'all about the job'.
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