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BALTIMORE -- Arthur Bremer was a 21-year-old
former janitor and busboy when he shot Alabama Gov. George Wallace five
times during a presidential campaign stop in 1972 in Maryland.
Now
57, Bremer is preparing for life outside prison. He's scheduled to be
released in mid-December and could get out even sooner.
Bremer
has never publicly expressed remorse for the shooting. He has not
granted a single interview during his 35 years behind bars. He's never
gotten into trouble, either.
"He was a model inmate," said Ruth
Ogle, a program manager for the Maryland Parole Commission. "He never
had an infraction the entire time he was incarcerated."
The
commission denied parole for Bremer in 1996, on the grounds that
releasing him would diminish the seriousness of his crime. He could
have asked for a reconsideration of that decision, but he never did.
However,
Bremer has shaved nearly two decades off his 53-year sentence with good
behavior and by working jobs in prison. Bremer currently works as a
clerk at the medium-security Maryland Correctional
Institute-Hagerstown, where he's been lived since 1979.
His
release is scheduled for Dec. 16, but that's likely to change as he
continues to accumulate credits for work and good behavior, said Rae
Sheeley, a case management specialist at the prison.
Wallace was
seeking the Democratic nomination to challenge President Richard Nixon
when he was wounded May 15, 1972, outside a shopping center in Laurel.
Three bystanders were shot but weren't seriously hurt.
The
attack left the former segregationist with paralyzed legs and forced
him to abandon his populist bid for the presidency. Despite declining
health, he was elected to two more terms as Alabama's governor. He died
in 1998.
Bremer's diary indicated that he had stalked Nixon
before turning his sights on Wallace, and that he was seeking notoriety
when he planned to assassinate a political leader. Yet his silence
since his conviction diminished his infamy.
"I shy away from
publicity," he said during his parole hearing, according to a
transcript. "There's nothing I could say, and if I did say something,
it could be interpreted the worst way possible against me."
Wallace's
son, former state treasurer George Wallace Jr., told the Press-Register
of Mobile, Ala., that he got word of Bremer's impending release about
two weeks ago.
"I've forgiven Arthur Bremer and my family has,
so I think God's law has been adhered to, and we're comfortable with
that," Wallace told the newspaper. "But having said that, I don't
believe that given the suffering my father endured all those years from
the gunshots and the constant paralysis - I don't think Arthur Bremer's
incarceration comes close to that type of suffering."
The
younger Wallace told the paper that the shooting had a "purifying"
effect on his father, who became more religious and sought forgiveness
from blacks for his previous support for segregation. However, the
shooting shortened Wallace's life, his son said.
Reached by phone Thursday morning, George Wallace Jr. declined to comment further.
"I don't have any more to say about it," he said. "It's just too painful."
Jim
Collins was shocked when told that Bremer was close to being released.
Now a spokesman for the city of Laurel, he had been delivering auto
parts to a store at the shopping center close to the time Wallace was
shot.
"This is a man who attempted to assassinate, to murder
somebody - not only one, but who shot other people as well," he said.
"It amazes me that a person like that could get out of prison."
Bremer's
trial lasted just one week. His attorney argued that Bremer was insane,
and jurors heard testimony from experts about Bremer's mental state.
The jury deliberated for 95 minutes before coming back with guilty
verdicts on all counts.
Bremer spoke only briefly. Referring to
a prosecutor who said he wanted society to be protected from people
like the defendant, Bremer said: "Looking back on my life ... I would
have liked it if society had protected me from myself."
Bremer's
plans for life outside prison were unclear. Maj. Priscilla Doggett, a
spokeswoman for the Maryland Division of Correction, said inmates are
required to indicate where they plan to live after their release. Any
money they've made from prison jobs is paid in a check, and they're
given at least $50 in cash.
Bremer's parents are deceased. His
mother, Sylvia, who died in February at age 92, told the Milwaukee
Journal Sentinel in 1982 that two of her sons had changed their last
names because they were tired of being asked about Arthur. Calls to
Bremer's brother, Roger, went unanswered.
http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20070823/APA/708230664
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