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View Full Version : Girl's Dying Wish Denied; Imprisoned Father Not Coming Home


Alonzo
03-20-2008, 02:47 AM
LINCOLN, Neb. -- A 10-year-old Lincoln girl dying of brain cancer has one wish -- for her father to be at her bedside.

It isn't likely to happen. Her father is in a federal prison in Yankton, S.D.

Vonda Yaeger is pleading with the warden for compassion to grant her daughter's wish.

"She wants her dad. She goes to her room crying because she wants her dad," Yaeger said.

Jason Yaeger was convicted of methamphetamine charges nearly five years ago and is scheduled to be released next year.

"We've never asked them to release him early. Never asked them to change anything. We've asked them to just give him some time to be here," Vonda Yaeger said.

Jayci Yaeger has been allowed three escorted visits with her father, but each trip lasts only a couple of hours and costs the family hundreds of dollars. Requests for longer furloughs have been denied.

"They say it doesn't constitute an extraordinary circumstance," Vonda Yaeger said.

A representative of the Yankton facility would not respond to specific questions about the situation.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons Web site states its policy -- that furloughs can be allowed for a family crisis and that decision is left to the warden.

"We've asked them numerous times, 'What is an extraordinary circumstance?'" said Vonda Yaeger. "They danced around it. They don't give you a direct answer."

Jayci still gets calls when her father can manage.

"He talks to her. We put the phone to her ear and she cries," Vonda Yaeger said.

She said there have been several times she didn't think Jayci would make it through the night, but she somehow keeps fighting.

"I feel she's hanging on for her dad," Vonda Yaeger said.

The family said that what makes the situation even more difficult is that Jason Yaeger is scheduled to be transferred to a half-way house in Council Bluffs, Iowa, in August. That would make it possible to visit Jayci, but her mother said it will probably be too late.

http://www.ketv.com/family/15643474/detail.html

Alonzo
03-20-2008, 02:58 AM
I was going to say it's unfortunate but we can't just go releasing people, even if it's short term. But then I found that it was for a meth conviction so my response is WTF? The rules said such conditions can result in release under extraordinary circumstances. The guys daughter is dying, the daughter clearly wants him there, and he wasn't arrested for a violent offense. Who fits the exception better than he does?

nevadamedic
03-20-2008, 03:05 AM
I was going to say it's unfortunate but we can't just go releasing people, even if it's short term. But then I found that it was for a meth conviction so my response is WTF? The rules said such conditions can result in release under extraordinary circumstances. The guys daughter is dying, the daughter clearly wants him there, and he wasn't arrested for a violent offense. Who fits the exception better than he does?


I agree, eventhough I think drug convictions should get the harshest punishment possible. They can put this guy on house arrest. I don't see what the deal is, unless he has really screwed up while in prison.

Osborn F. Enready
03-20-2008, 12:02 PM
nevademedic said:
I agree, eventhough I think drug convictions should get the harshest punishment possible.

?????

What would justify that? Their crime only affects themselves 90% of the time?

PostmodernProphet
03-20-2008, 12:48 PM
nevademedic said:
I agree, eventhough I think drug convictions should get the harshest punishment possible.

?????

What would justify that? Their crime only affects themselves 90% of the time?


you don't generally go to federal prisons for using drugs......particularly in the case of meth, you go there for manufacturing drugs and selling them.....

Deadshot
03-20-2008, 12:57 PM
PMP has got a point, going to a Federal Prison on meth charges makes me think that we're not getting the whole story here.

BTW, just to throw another wrench in the system, if it's expensive for the family, how much do you think it costs the State to send a Federal prisoner flying around the country?

I think something should be done to help this child out, but if he's in the Fed Clink on a drug charge that brings up more questions then answers.

Osborn F. Enready
03-20-2008, 01:33 PM
I wasn't commenting on the "emotional appeal" of the little girl.

I was commenting on the idiocy of our drug laws.

4Reaganomics
03-20-2008, 01:45 PM
It depends on what the cost would be to the tax payers

If the family picks up the whole cost then I say it would be okay in this rare type of circumstance.

Pookie
03-21-2008, 04:55 AM
Don't some inmates get released early for good behavior? Would this apply here?
Purrs,
Pookie