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Comment by nopmike

3 years ago

It's a little late, so this will get buried, but I had a similar experience. I caught two felonies (both from the same incident) Luckily, I had a good job at the time and it was my first offense, so I was able to get house arrest. After seeing what could have been my life, I completed my BS in CS, online part-time and convinced the state of California to let me move there. I received five years of probation, so even though I was off house arrest, I had to convince the state of California to take me as a probationer. I don't think this is usually offered, even though I had gainful employment waiting for me. I feel very fortunate. Since then, I've worked for various startups and Fortune 50 companies as a software engineer. I was lucky enough that the tech industry valued me more for my skills than punished me for my past. I will be forever grateful to the state of California and the tech industry for this. I've looked into, and tried to volunteer for various programs that try to teach inmates or felons technical/engineering skills. All have fallen through. I'd love to hear what you're working on OP, and if you want to brainstorm a way we can try and help more inmates turn their life around through software development.

Thank you for sharing your story. It's wonderful that you want to pay your fortunes forward.

I don't think they work directly in prisons and jails, but https://www.underdogdevs.org/ is a group that works to train formerly incarcerated people in software and tech. They built mentee/mentor relationships between professional development and those wanting to learn.

Thanks for sharing this.. send me an email if you'd like. preston@unlockedlabs.org