I work recreation, which is one of the better jobs here. Everyday it puts me outside, gives me access to everyone on a daily basis. What does it mean to work recreation? It means a few things.First it gives me access to all the recreation,three two hour periods per day, regardless of which pods are at rec, so I can basically spend all day, morning and afternoon in rec, with access to everybody here except 3B inmates. I’m a 3A inmate. To be a 3A inmate you have to keep it clean, and everybody has different jobs.
I started out sweeping and mopping the inside gym. I moved up to taking care of windows walls and drinking fountains in the office area. Now I got raised up again to program aide where I get to run tournaments for all the other inmates. But I’m on the bottom rung of this position, as most of the big things like baseball,basketball,football are already covered. So I get to run things like horseshoes and bocci ball. These games are for prizes so most every guy will play. Guys are leaving here daily so I will eventually find my way into the bigger stuff, but right now I'm good with how it is. It takes me 20 minutes twice a week to do the windows and walls and the rest of my time is free to just be at recreation doing whatever I please.
The rec yard is huge. Picture a football field, two full court basketball courts, two baseball fields, a volleyball court, with extended areas for just sitting out in the grass out of the way. The track is on the outer realm of the rec yard . They say that 760 steps, five times around is 2 miles. Good or bad day you can just walk and walk. In the summer, we have at least 3 pods out—with 124 guys in a pod. Even with all of us out there, we each still have room to move in our own space.
I love the yard—which is why I made sure I got a rec job. I wasn't here a month and I got the job over guys who had been waiting years to get the job. That I came from death row helped and that I was older helped.They want older guys who have some sense, to deal with the others. I basically just stay in my lane and I'm fine. I get along with everybody; staff and inmates, just by being respectful. Most address me as Mr.Tyler, and I’ll keep it like that for the rest of my time here.
Next April 2016 I will go back in front of the parole board with the hope that it is my last year in prison:clean of tickets, clean of any trouble.The first year went really well and all I need to do is stay on this path. Hopefully they will let me come home.
It's beautiful weather here right now. I’m on my way out to rec!
Monday, June 8, 2015
Thursday, May 21, 2015
My Calling is to Be Out There
I
don’t want you to think it’s easy being here. It’s a fight to
wake up with the anger of being here.
I’m here because someone told the truth and then lied.
By
6:30am when
the gates of hell open, I try to put on a face to deal with a day of
idiots, gangs, and other inmates who are filled with an anger they
don't know how to curb. It’s a war every moment till 9:00pm. Then I
have to contend with a nasty stinky cellie all night long. If anyone
thinks us guys aren't being punished being in prison, don’t believe
the hype. The worst thing in the world is to wake up and go to sleep
in a toilet with another dude who has no real sense of cleanliness of
body or surroundings. The hard part is being stuck with the stink—and
not be able to do anything but hope to change cellies. There are few…
I
now have the time to do my studies for the paralegal course I’m
taking, which is hard but fine. I'm learning everything I need to
know to finish in time and pass. I really think my calling is to be
out there, to go to the little ones who have yet to be touched by the
system. I want to stop them from reaching the lost path rather than
let them go astray and then try to stop them. I want to get them
before the system gets them because if the system gets them, life for
them is over. So that is my focus over the next year, to figure out
how to get involved with people on the outside who have the same
ideas about stopping the cycle at its core. I also want to figure out
how to ensure that this will be my last year in the prison system,and
pass the test to become a paralegal.
I
guess the really good thing is that this is the anniversary of me
getting off death row. I’ve just completed my first year off death
row. I have one more year to go before I can request another hearing
with the parole board. I hope it is just one more year here. Even if
the parole board gives me another good recommendation to be paroled—
like they did last year—it is still just a recommendation. Only the
governor has the power to release me.
Friday, April 17, 2015
Follow my Journey...
I'm Arthur and I’ve spent 31 years on death row for a murder I didn’t do. It’s too long of a story to go into here but you can find the whole story at my website Justice4ArthurTyler. I hope you will read it.
In 2014, the State of Ohio to set an execution date and we prepared for the clemency hearing. The Clemency Board voted 11 to zero to grant me clemency—meaning I’d be released. (See Clemency Recommendation for the Case of Arthur Tyler). The majority (six) voted to grant an immediate eligibility for parole. Five opted that I should serve two more years and then receive parole. The Clemency Board said my trial was filled with doubt and to give me Life without Parole would be against the interests of justice. The parole board didn't scream that I was innocent. Rather they spoke about the glaring doubt about my guilt (another man confessed six times, including to his mother),and figured enough was enough. They basically granted me a chance to finally be free of this madness.
My case and the Clemency Boards findings and recommendations went before the governor of Ohio. The governor himself touch on how badly the system had handled my case, at the trial and in the appeals. Yet, the very next day, the governor opted to take me off death row but instead of clemency, to give me Life Without Parole. I was exonerated in one sense, but not in another. The parole board at least gave me a chance to come home.
I am truly Innocent of what they have accused me of and kept me here for. I am not a murderer.The courts failed with my case, and because there is no DNA in the case at all. I don’t understand why my case doesn't seem as important as all the other cases that were exonerated and the prisoner freed. I am not here to beat the governor down about it. I just want to right this wrong. I've now been in this system for 32 straight years. I hope this story of how I go about staying above this injustice touches someone who can help...Thank you for taking the time to follow my journey....
Tuesday, March 24, 2015
I Do a Few Good Things to Stay Gone
Almost
a year has passed since the governor marooned me to a living death,
granting me clemency from dying but overruling the entire parole
board and keeping me here. It gets to me and I long for justice. I
long to be free. But I've learned to stay busy and stay gone from
my cell. Ever tried to think to the sound of a thousand wailing
babies? That is the noise level around this place. The only quiet
time is when you are locked in your cell during count times.
But
I do a few good things to stay gone. I work recreation. I get to
leave the block each day if I choose two hours in the morning, two
hours in the afternoon, and two hours in the evenings. I have to go
back to the block three times a day for count.
I’m
taking a Toast Masters course that teaches me to speak in public,
something I never really had a chance to do, having been here now for
32 years. I also take a business course. I am a member of Kairos, a
Christian-based group that worships together. I am also a member of
Links which is a group of prisoners that do community service. In the
ongoing program, we now make hats for the homeless. We also hold
charity food sales and donate the money to people in need.
I
have to stay hopeful that this time next year I will be home doing
the things I had planned had the governor done the right thing. By no
means have I settled into this. I'm just trying to stay alive, stay
sane, while we wait for the governor to right this wrong.
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
Hi, I'm Arthur...
Hi, I'm Arthur. I'm a Clevelander, a member of a large close-knit family, a graduate of East Tech, and I'm living a Locked-Up Life.
I am serving a life sentence without the possibility of parole, despite grave doubt and serious unfairness associated with my case. This is after already serving 32 years on Ohio's Death Row.
When I faced the Parole Board to request clemency, the 11 members unanimously agreed that I should not only receive clemency from the death penalty, but that I should be given an option for release. Governor Kasich did not follow the unprecedented recommendation of his board. Instead, he gave me LWOP which leaves me wondering, "where's the justice in that?!"
Here I'll post my thoughts and activities as I try to make the most of a terrible situation AND continue to struggle for my release. You can find me on Facebook and visit my website to learn more about me and to support the cause.
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