Pubdate: Thu, 27 Feb 2003
Source: Courier-Tribune, The (NC)
Contact  http://www.courier-tribune.com/
Address: P.O. Box 340, Asheboro, NC 27203
Fax: (336)626-7074
Copyright: 2003, Stephens Media Group
Author: Judi Brinegar

EX-CON DOCTOR TRIES TO SAVE OTHERS' FUTURES

ASHEBORO - Donald Pritt is a 70-year-old retired doctor and published author.

He's also an ex-convict who spent 34 months in federal prison for 
bankruptcy fraud.

On Wednesday, Pritt made a visit in Asheboro at The Learning Center 
alternative school for at-risk sixth-through ninth-graders, hoping that he 
might say something, anything, that might change the future of some of the 
students there.

"You can't allow your peers to push you to do drugs," he told the young 
people at the school. "You are flirting with russian roulette if you do and 
you could die."

Pritt said that his experiences in prison gave him the desire to help teens 
and young adults.

"My lecture tries to zero in on why our kids are in these alternative 
schools," he said. "I try to tell them that if they run with the wrong 
crowd, they can end up in prison."

Pritt, who lives in West Virginia, has spent most of his time since his May 
2002 release from prison traveling to middle and high schools across the 
South talking to teenagers about the dangers of drugs, alcohol and violence.

"This is, I hope, an atomic bomb lecture for these kids," Pritt said. "I 
look these kids straight in the face and tell them about my life. I try to 
make them curious and then hold them by taking myself to their level and 
then peaking their interest."

Pritt gladly spends all of his time and money going to these schools on the 
chance that one person may be affected by his message.

"You ask yourself 'how many people can I reach?' " he said. "I want to be 
able to reach everybody and I'm looking for new ways every day to do it.

"I love these kids and all I want to do is make a difference."

Pritt showed the students a video of a youth named Tony who got into 
trouble for dealing drugs and armed robbery. Tony, who carried a gun for 
protection, said his own father was stabbed to death over a drug deal when 
Tony was a very small child. Now he is serving time and has a child of his 
own. Tony is 15 years old.

In the video, when Pritt asked Tony if he wanted to change his life, Tony 
said he wanted to, but didn't think he could. The advice Tony gave kids 
watching the video?

"Don't get caught."

"The videos are about kids who are just like the ones I am trying to 
reach," Pritt said. "I tell them stories of horror and I try to get them to 
read between the lines.

"It starts out with behavior problems for a lot of these kids. They have 
too much time on their hands and it's easy for them to get into trouble."

While incarcerated, Pritt said he asked so many questions of other inmates 
he actually put his life at risk.

"I had to be put in solitary confinement for my own protection," he said, 
"but I wouldn't stop asking questions.

"I needed to know why these guys were serving time so I could help others 
when I got out. I would look out the window on visitation day and see 
little children brought into the prisons to see their fathers, uncles, and 
brothers and those guys told me to do whatever I could to keep other kids 
out of prison."

Wearing handcuffs, Pritt warned the kids in attendance of the risks they 
take by just being a part of the wrong crowd. He told of stories of kids 
being taken away in handcuffs as a result of hanging out with the wrong 
people at the wrong time.

"How many of you have ever had a beer?" Pritt asked. "How many have had 
whiskey? Or smoked pot? Or crack?"

More than half of the students polled Tuesday answered yes to those questions.

To these students Pritt emphasized choice - right or wrong - and the end 
results of the choices they make.

He showed them a piece of soap, the size of an ice cube, noting if the 
sample were crack cocaine, it would equal 20 years in prison.

"I realized that these guys just won't see the consequences of what actions 
they take unless I tell them," said Pritt. "Losing everything and going to 
prison just isn't smart.

"You can put this much cocaine in your pocket, but can you put 20 years of 
your life in the same place?

"The bottom line? Prison steals time."

Pritt is now trying to get the parents of the youth he sees to get involved 
in the program.

"I'm asking the parents to come to the program as a reinforcement of what I 
say," he said. "It helps if the message is carried over into the home. 
There is nothing stronger than the truth."
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MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens