Pubdate: Sat, 03 May 2003 Source: Courier, The (LA) Copyright: 2003 Houma Today Contact: http://www.houmatoday.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1477 Author: Dee Dee Thurston LOCAL WOMAN SEEKS PARDON HOUMA -- Last Tuesday, after clocking out from her parish government desk job, Cheryle Hayes drove home in her Toyota Highlander, started dinner and tossed a load of laundry into the washing machine. And she considered herself fortunate to be able to do so. Sorting socks and stirring soup may seem like mundane tasks for most, but for Hayes each is a morsel of cherished freedom worthy of celebration. Convicted of heroin-distribution in 1979, Hayes served 20 years of a life sentence before Gov. Mike Foster ordered her freed. "I learned to appreciate the things I missed," she said. "Sometimes we take the simple things for granted and don't realize it can all be snatched away." But freedom's sweet flavor still bears a bitter aftertaste for Hayes, who has come to realize in the two years since she walked out of prison doors, that legal tethers keep her from enjoying the liberty she feels she deserves. "I've had a chance at a new life, and I appreciate that," she said. "But I want the same privileges other people enjoy. I want to be able to vote, to volunteer at the jail and to have my name cleared." The 45-year-old Hayes, who used to be known as Cheryle Beridon, is scheduled to appear before the five-member state pardon board in Lockport Wednesday morning to ask for a full pardon. If board members give the OK, the decision as to whether the crime gets wiped off her record and her rights are restored will be up to the governor. If they say no, it will be two years before she will be allowed to ask for a second hearing. Many state and local officials, as well as community activists, say Hayes deserves the break now. "I'm going to fully support her in getting a gubernatorial pardon," said Sen. Reggie Dupre, D-Bourg. "This is the first time I've ever lobbied the governor for a pardon and I couldn't think of a more deserving (person) to receive one." The odds that she will get the legal forgiveness she craves, however, are against her. Nearly 1,000 convicted felons asked for a pardon hearing last year. The state pardon board agreed to consider fewer than half of those requests and approved only 111 of them. The governor signed off on a mere 22, making the official release a reality for fewer than 2 percent of those who asked in 2002. Hayes doesn't let the daunting odds dissuade her. She said she already fought and won one seemingly impossible battle: The one that took her from a tiny prison cell in St. Gabriel to the new Authement Street home where she now lives. Twist Of Fate Hayes was sentenced to life in prison for selling $125 worth of heroin to a police informant in the summer of 1977. Hayes has long claimed she was framed by then-Terrebonne Parish District Attorney Norval Rhodes after an affair between the two of them soured. Rhodes denies the allegations. Hayes' story fell on deaf ears for much of her two-decade stay at the Louisiana Correctional Institute for Women. It was a chance meeting on the Terrebonne Courthouse steps between Hayes' older brother and Jerome Boykin, president of the Terrebonne Chapter of the National Advancement of Colored People, which eventually led to her release. "I asked after their mother and (Joseph Hayes) said, 'She's OK, but she's worried about Cheryle,' " Boykin said of that years-old encounter. Boykin knew of Hayes and the alleged affair that she said landed her behind bars, but said the encounter reminded him of her plight. "Then it hit me," Boykin said of his resolve to help. "I said, 'Give me your mother's phone number. The NAACP is going to take up Cheryle's fight. I'm making a promise to you right now: We're going to get her out of prison and bring her home.' " The civil rights group's legal support, evidence-gathering and the testimony of a former investigator in Rhodes' office helped persuade the Pardon Board and Gov. Mike Foster to commute her life sentence to 45 years, making her eligible for parole. But the Parole Board, citing fights and other infractions of jailhouse rules that led to a spotty behavior record, sent Hayes to a Lake Charles halfway house for six months before granting her freedom. A New Life Hayes proudly shows off the scrapbook detailing the life she's led since leaving the halfway house in November 2000. It's one of five she plans to present to the board members who will decide whether her request for a pardon is a valid one. "You can go to the Pardon Board and say, 'I did this and I did that,' but there's nothing like looking at it in black and white," she said of her carefully compiled scrapbook. The 1/2-inch thick book includes pictures of Hayes standing alongside state and local politicians as well as copies of documents proving she is the proud owner of a new SUV and a three-bedroom brick home. "It hasn't been easy," Hayes said of her life on the outside. "I've had a lot of bumps and bruises and there were a lot of things that took some adjustments." One of the hardest things for her to comprehend, she said, was the fact that she really is free. "At first I kept thinking they were going to come and get me," she said. "That they were going to knock on the door and tell me it was all a mistake and I had to go back." But the former self-admitted drug-addict and prostitute says she was determined to get past her anxiety and change her life for the better. "I was 22 when I went to prison and I was not finished growing up yet," she said. "I am wiser now. I've learned responsibility and how to put priorities into place." A Chance At A Job Hayes credits a strong support system -- family, friends and some influential backers -- with helping her pull herself together. She moved in with her mother briefly following her release and went to work for the parish as a draftsman in the Engineering Department. Most convicted felons have difficulty landing a job because of the stigma that comes with their rap sheet, but Parish President Bobby Bergeron, impressed by Hayes' determination to overcome her difficulties, pledged to help her find employment while she was still in jail. "I was fully aware that unless someone gave her a break it would be difficult for her to get back to a normal lifestyle," he said. Hayes' boss, Bob Jones, said he initially wasn't so sure if her presence would be a good thing. He said her hiring was preceded by an office-wide conference held to make sure that Hayes would be welcomed. "We discussed it at length," he said, "and it was a joint decision." Hayes was hired in a temporary capacity and quickly learned how to scan drawings and other information submitted to the parish office for use on the agency's Web site. Jones said his concerns that the former convict's presence would be distracting were unfounded and she quickly became a productive and permanent member of his staff. "It was more of an adjustment for her than for us," he said of those first days on the job. "She asked for permission to do everything, it was sort of strange to have someone say, 'Mr. Jones, may I go to the restroom,' but we explained to her that that wasn't necessary." Asked if he ever regretted the decision to hire her, Jones said he never has. Neither did Bergeron, who called Hayes a model employee. "I'm completely impressed with her," he said. "This lady has proven to me that, if given the right opportunity (convicted felons) can come back .. People are amazed at what she's been able to accomplish." Hayes saved up enough money from her job to move from her mother's home to a rented trailer and then, this past October, she moved a third time. She now lives in a $70,000 house that she bought herself. The house, like many other things in Hayes' life, is something she worked hard to get. She bought it through the parish's first-time homeowner's program for low-income residents -- a program that requires participants to pass a course in homeownership and put up the money needed for appraisal fees, insurance and other costs. She lives there with her son, 31-year-old Leroy Beridon, in tidy rooms that she has painstakingly decorated with telling touches that demonstrate the delight she has in her new home. Renewing Ties "I'm really proud of her and what she's done and accomplished," said the man who was just a boy when his mom was locked away. He moved from California into his mother's house just last week in an effort to make up for some of those lost years. "I wanted to come here and spend time with her. I wanted to get to know her," Beridon said. Beridon was 7 years old when his mother went to jail, but her illegal drug use meant she had been a sporadic presence in his life long before she entered the justice system. "I'm upset about what happened to her," he said. "But I'm really glad to have her back." It is difficult for him to talk about the trauma of visiting his mother in prison and Hayes hovers protectively nearby while Beridon talks about the pain her absence caused him. Hayes said she regrets not having been there for her only child, but points to their now-close relationship as one of the reasons why she's determined to stick to her new lifestyle. "When he needs help, he calls me," she said as the two leaned against each other while standing in their east Houma driveway. "That means so much ... it makes me feel so good to know that I am someone he can call for help." It seems that Hayes' son is not the only man in her life these days. She says she met Wendell Pitts, her boyfriend of eight months, in church and the two of them have talked of a future together. "He seems like a good man," Hayes said of the Baton Rouge resident. "He's hard working." Church is important to her too, she says. Hayes embraced Christianity while behind bars and points to her desire to counsel other prisoners as one of her reasons for seeking the pardon. Convicted felons are prohibited from visiting other inmates. "She has a lot of ambition and desires," said Lori Bolden, who pastors Restoration Prayer Center in Houma along with her husband, Timothy Bolden. One of the first things Hayes did when she visited the east Houma church was to pull Lori Bolden aside and confide in her a desire to help others. Bolden said she is confident Hayes will follow through on the promise she made to God while still in prison. "There's a part of her that knows she's been released to help others," she said. "There's a burning desire in her to do that." A High Price Paid Before she can help others, however, Hayes said she must first help herself. Under the conditions of her parole, Hayes must report monthly to a probation officer for the next 21 years. The fees that come with her monthly visits -- a service for which the single mother pays $53 a month -- will total more than $13,000 by then. Hayes said the fees are a burden, but it's the restrictions on her freedom which are the most difficult. The head of a national criminal justice group said it's important to remember there are times when punishment is appropriate and there are times when mercy is warranted. Hayes was sentenced to a mandatory life prison sentence at a time when the federal law only provided for 15 years, said Eric E. Sterling, president of the Maryland-based Criminal Justice Policy Foundation. "Twenty years is a very long time to serve," he said. "And heroin selling is not a violent crime." He suggested, like many of Hayes' local supporters, that the lengthy-prison sentence she already served may have been punishment enough. "Because mandatory minimum sentences have been created in many states, people who are technically guilty can end up getting sentences that the legislature thought would be imposed on more serious offenders," Sterling said. High Hopes Hayes said she is anxious about her hearing, but confident that she will prevail. Her supporters agree. "I'm very confident," Boykin said. "Cheryl has been out two years and accomplished a lot. We're bringing someone before the board who is fully rehabilitated." This hearing, Hayes said, resembles the one that allowed her to walk out the prison doors, but it is also vastly different. The Wednesday interview represents a chance for her to prove her innocence. "I was incarcerated for a crime I didn't commit," she said. "I want my name cleared." It's a battle cry that many of her supporters have taken up, including the state senator whose picture appears in Hayes' scrapbook. "There were some very questionable circumstances surrounding her conviction," Dupre said. "This matter seems to be the largest injustice to ever come out of Terrebonne Parish. She should get her whole civil rights back because that is the right thing to do." - --- MAP posted-by: Beth