Pubdate: Thu, 29 Jun 2000 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: The Vancouver Sun 2000 Contact: 200 Granville Street, Ste.#1, Vancouver BC V6C 3N3 Fax: (604) 605-2323 Website: http://www.vancouversun.com/ Author: Jeff Lee with Michael Zeigler Rochester Democrat and Chronicle FUGITIVE ORDERED BACK TO JAIL IN N.Y. Longtime B.C. Resident Loses Gamble For Mercy Allen Richardson, who fled to B.C. nearly 30 years ago after escaping a U.S. prison, lost the final round of a gamble for mercy from New York's justice system Wednesday. Appearing in a Rochester courtroom, Richardson was quickly ordered back to prison to finish a four-year term for selling $20 worth of LSD in 1971. The order ended a faint hope that the 50-year-old lab technician's exemplary life in Canada had paid back a sentence stiffer than judges would likely hand out today. But his lawyers said they will now take the fight for his early release to New York's state parole board. And they say their chances at convincing the parole board Richardson's case qualifies as an "unusual and exceptional" circumstance that would qualify for leniency have been bolstered by the judge's own views about the quality of the more than 150 character reference letters submitted to court. Were he coming before him now as a newly minted felon, Monroe County Court Judge John J. Connell said, Richardson would likely receive probation. As if to underscore the public image he has developed as someone who has paid his debt to society, his first concern after being ordered back to jail was to make sure his wife Amalia, who has twice had breast cancer, would be all right. "We just said, 'Chin up' to each other and hugged each other and said we'd try to talk on the telephone tomorrow," Amalia Richardson said after she watched her husband led away. "He's a good citizen and a good person," she said. "Sometimes you have to go backwards and say, 'I did something wrong and there's some kind of punishment that has to be paid.' But I hope it's minimal for him, because he has already suffered tremendously." Richardson, who escaped from prison in 1971 after serving three months of a four-year sentence for selling LSD in his dormitory room at Rochester Institute of Technology, had hoped Connell would show mercy and reduce the sentence. But the judge refused, saying he found it was a lawful sentence. To allow Richardson to escape serving the rest of his time would be to reward him for escaping and encourage other felons to flee, the judge said. Before Connell made his decision, Richardson said he had changed from a radical youth who fervently opposed the war in Vietnam and was called a "wide-eyed, open-mouthed revolutionary" by an RIT dean. "I only hope that in the past 30 years of life . . . I've been a good man, a just man," he said. He was transferred to a processing prison at Fishkill, New York, where he will spend a week being assessed. His wife will remain in New York for 10 days until he is moved to a permanent location, said his Vancouver lawyer, Michael Bolton. Richardson built a new life in Vancouver after he escaped from a New York prison camp after being told he would be returned to Attica Correctional Facility, a maximum-security prison that had just undergone a major riot that killed 43 people. He went to work at the TRIUMF facility at the University of B.C., married and became an active supporter of several groups, including the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. New York authorities caught up with him in 1998 after Canadian immigration authorities were told of his old identity. Last November, Connell refused to excuse Richardson from serving the rest of his sentence. The fugitive later gave up a bid for refugee status, saying the fight was putting too much strain on himself and his wife, who has been fighting cancer and needs to stay close to facilities in B.C. Richardson could be eligible for parole in less than six months and will probably be helped by the glowing letters of endorsement, his New York-based lawyer, Michael Kennedy said. Bolton said they would begin the process immediately to ask the New York parole board to cut Richardson's time given the unusual circumstances and his client's own long-term attempt at rehabilitation. "The judge's own comments about him, and the overwhelming number of comments and letters from people who support Allen put this into the category of unusual and exceptional cases," Bolton said. "We're hopeful the parole board will see it that way." Friends and associates of Richardson were shocked at the judge's decision to put him back in jail, and offered words of support. "We will help him fill out his time in jail by assuring him he has a job at TRIUMF when he returns," said TRIUMF spokesman Jim Hanlon, who added that Richardson was well-regarded by his colleagues. "We're very upset he's having to face such a severe penalty," said Steven Huddart, a spokesman for the SPCA. "It does come as a shock that he's been sent back to jail. He did the honorable thing in returning, and the humane thing would have been to return him to his life, his community, his wife and his job." Canadian immigration officials have said Richardson will receive a minister's permit allowing him to return to Canada once he finishes his sentence. - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk