letters of my last name. although stacey was sentenced to five years for an altercation with his neighbor, his good behavior at anamosa cut that time in half. i got through it with no write-ups and no loss of good time. my wife has never missed a visit. any time we have the opportunity to have visits, she has always been there. in just three days, his wife will visit with him again. only this time, he s going home with her. monday, i will be free to go anywhere i want to go, and i got tickets to see the minnesota twins play the kansas city royals thursday. fearing that he might become a target of other inmates jealous of his parole, he asked to spend his last three months in the protective custody unit. being in pc, i m not allowed to be around other inmates and they not allowed to be around me.
owing outrage. thousands demanding justice in the shooting death of unarmed teenager trayvon martin in sanford, florida. a community watchman who pulled the trigger has not been arrested, and the town s police chief has stepped aside due to the controversy. it s friday, march 23rd. announcer: from abc news, this is world news now. good morning, everyone. i m john muller in for rob nelson. good to have you here john. great to be here. and i won t forget your name because my husband s name is john. that s easy. paula i can remember, too. your last name, i m not sure. i m paula. who cares about my last name. last night s rally took place not far from where trayvon martin was gunned down. demonstrators demanded that the community watchman george zimmerman be apprehended immediately.
this helps a lot. i ve marked down my last 63 days. my wife made this for me. she always tells me to stay true. that s the first three letters of my first name and first three letters of my last name. although stacey was sentenced to five years for an altercation with his neighbor, his good behavior at anamosa cut that time in half. i got through it with no write-ups and no loss of good time. my wife has never missed a visit. any time we have the opportunity to have visits, she has always been there. in just three days, his wife will visit with him again. only this time, he s going home with her. monday, i will be free to go anywhere i want to go, and i got tickets to see the minnesota twins play the kansas city royals thursday. fearing that he might become a target of other inmates jealous of his parole, he asked to spend his last three months
there and approaching the poll and person kind of gets out the information of my middle name, street address and then sense the ballot before finally saying, you know, i need to get my identification card and hand it is back, but he had obtain it had through that means and then my brother showed me the video, which was ridiculous when i first saw it and then we looked into it and the unedited vers that they had posted it is actually my first name, my middle name, my last name, my street address and everything and we said we couldn t sit on this, this is ludicrous and so we reached out to try to get it out there that they didn t get dead people. they got a live, living person and i m standing right here. so when they gave your name your middle name, your address, all accurate, thinking they were proving voter fraud on how dead people vote, you are here to say that your name, your address and
i m just here to do my time. was it weird at first dealing with officers? did you run into people you knew? yeah. i mean, i ran into a few people and that. they said, hey, rapatz. they call me, by my last name, what happened, how did you end up here in the joint? what happened? i tell them, i ended up wrong place, wrong time. i was out drinking and using drugs and alcohol. and i messed up my life. as we continue to interview rapatz, we learn although this was his first conviction as an adult, it was hardly his first brush with the law. i started stealing cars at a young age and breaking into schools. i broke into my junior high and my high school. at 11 years old i was living like i was 21. between the ages of 13 and 18, rapatz did time in juvenile detention centers in several states. once i turned 18 i got my life together until i was about 24. i did do good. and i was trying to change my