hollon had an ongoing relationship with her father for many years and basically it appeared, at least to her at the time, that he had scammed her father out of several thousand dollars. in the tune of about $60,000 over the last 12 or 13 years. i don t agree with it at all. whatever somebody did for me, they did because they wanted to. i couldn t make them do anything. there was no fraud. because i never lied. mr. hollon has been misleading the victim into believing that he if kept sending money that offender hollon to a fictitious attorney, that defender hollon would be able to get out of prison. that s not going to happen. have no money. i can t function right in prison. i don t have money now. i have to deal without hygiene. i have to go without laundry. i have to do without everything. coming up going on back to my cell, man. all right.
last ten years anything i asked him for he gave to me. he took good care of me. i love him as a person. i don t have no family. so he was the family i never had. but hollon has a history of troubled relationships. in 1977 i got out on parole from indiana youth center in plainfield. they sent me to a town i never been to before. i fell in love with a girl. i caught her with another man. and i beat, stabbed and strangled her to death. i ve been in prison ever since. hollon s current relationship might have a dark side as well. at the end of july i received a phone call from an elderly from the daughter of an elderly gentleman on the street that indicated that offender
home. i feel really bad about not being in contact with my friend. he meant so much to me. and helped me to make it through the next day, just knowing somebody out there cared about me. now i have nobody. all my family has passed away. now i m alone in the world. if they were to release me tomorrow, i wouldn t have nowhere to go. in addition to giving hollon one year in the detention unit, prison officials would like to pursue additional criminal charges. but they might not get the help they need from the district attorney s office. at this point i m going to call the daughter back. hello. this is doug ayers. i was calling you to bring you up to speed on the status of the investigation involving your father at this point. basically where we re at with it, internally i have charged offender hollon with a class a
offender hollon with a class a conduct report for violation of state, federal, local law. unfortunately with the prosecutor i think we re going to encounter snags on being able to prosecute. obviously your father s age, and his health and as far as having to travel to indiana yes. he s 84 and i don t want him leaving us with this as the last thing in his life that he remembers. the other fact is that hollon is doing a life sentence. it s really, from the prosecutor s point of view is what are we going to gain by being able to prosecute him? yes. we re not going to be able to recover the money. most of that has probably been spent. i still have a meeting scheduled with the prosecutor, hopefully one day next week and see if we can do something else. maybe not be able to prosecute him on a felony but some lesser charge. okay. as soon as i talk to the prosecutor, i ll be back in
gentleman on the street that indicated that offender hollon had an ongoing relationship with her father for many years and basically it appeared, at least to her at the time, that he had scammed her father out of several thousand dollars. in the tune of about $60,000 over the last 12 or 13 years. i don t agree with it at all. whatever somebody did for me, they did because they wanted to. i couldn t make them do anything. there was no fraud. because i never lied. mr. hollon has been misleading the victim into believing that he if kept sending money that offender hollon to a fictitious attorney, that defender hollon would be able to get out of prison. that s not going to happen. have no money. i can t function right in prison. i don t have money now. it means i have to deal without hygiene. i have to do without a laundry