Thursday, October 18, 2012

Another Brick in the Wall


     One day in August of 1995, a trustee who cleaned the walkway in front of my cell told me he had seen Sarah talking with some people who had come from Mississippi.

     My heart sank.  In the back of my mind I had always suspected they would show up eventually, but it was still a shock when they actually came.  A few days later, I found out through the same trustee that Sarah had taken a lie detector test, and I knew I could look forward to new charges in the near future.  I didn't learn the full details about what was going on until my mother sent me an article from the Muskogee newspaper.  Sarah had confided to her lawyers about the Mississippi murder, and they advised her to work with the authorities if they could get her immunity from prosecution in exchange for her testimony against me.  Eventually, he spoke with the district attorney from Mississippi and secured the deal.
The night I found this out, I made plans to kill Sarah and then myself.  I didn't see the point of going on, knowing the severity of the crime in Mississippi. This was the plan. The sheriff’s deputies usually brought us to and from the court house together because reporters always waited for us outside like swarms of bees around honey.  Normally, male and female prisoners were always kept apart, but it was easier for them to keep us together and made for a good clip on the news.  The next time we were placed together, I planned to strangle her with the waist chains wrapped around us while we were locked in the back of one of the transportation vans.  Thanks to my slim and flexible wrists I could slip my hands out of the handcuffs whenever I wished and strangle Sarah before the officers would be able to stop the van and pull me off of her.

     Someone must have been looking over her, though.  From that day on, we never rode together in the van again.  I never told anyone my plans, so I know no one told on me.  Eventually, my rage towards her lessened and the plan for her death was abandoned. Still, I hated her intensely.

     Once when I saw her pass near my cell, I screamed at her through the Plexiglas until I lost my voice and bloodied my knuckles pounding on the walls.  The guards rushed to my cell to find out what was going on and found me red-faced at the door of my cell.

     The funny thing was, even with all the rage that would serge through me when I thought about her, I still had moments when I only wanted to be loved by her again. It was confusing and made the situation all the hard for me to process.

5 comments:

Anonymous said...

I was locked up with Sarah. She used to laugh how she had been take the fall for it all. All that Natural Born Killer crap was all made up. She always tried to manipulate everyone around her in the jail and though she was better then the rest of us in there. That's why no one liked her.

Ben if you ever get to read this you should know I know you were used by that girl. I know you did wrong to but she should be locked up right there with you or they should let you out too. That's only fair.

Serena J. said...

I was also locked up with Sarah. We were friends. She NEVER laughed about what happened in the past. It wasn't something she EVER talked about casually. I would be interested in hearing who these people are supposed to be that were used or manipulated. Maybe this is posted by people pulling for Ben and they are trying to make Sarah look like the bad guy. I believe in second chances. I don't see how anyone who believes in God wouldn't believe in second chances. Ben should have another chance. But Sarah wasn't a bad person, either. She was always trying to help someone out if she could.

Stan said...

Sarah participated in two senseless acts of violence that killed one and indirectly led to the death of another after enduring years of being bedridden from paralysis. Sarah deserved to spend every single day of her OK sentence plus time for the MS murder. It matters not a little bit that she'may' have tried to help people in prison. The price for arbitrarily shooting a kind woman who was just doing her job at the store should warrant a long prison sentence and certainly more time than she served. Poor little rich girl.

Stan said...

Where is Ben Darris? The MSDOC does not show he is an inmate.

Anonymous said...

@Stan: Try Benjamin Darras.