SANTEE Calif.
An attorney for a woman arrested in California 32 years after escaping a
Detroit prison said he plans to petition Michigan's governor to commute the nine
years remaining on her sentence.
Susan LeFevre, who married and raised three children in a posh San Diego
suburb using the name Marie Walsh, has agreed to be extradited to Michigan to
face the consequences of her 1975 guilty plea to drug-trafficking charges. She
served one year of a 10- to 20-year sentence before climbing over a fence to
meet her waiting grandfather in February 1976.
Now 53, LeFevre was arrested April 24 outside her home. She is being held at
a women's jail in San Diego County, where she is bound by handcuffs and a
plastic bracelet bearing the identity she never revealed to her husband of 23
years.
"Nobody is suggesting that she ought to just be able to walk away from this
and have everybody forget, but we now have the benefit of perspective," Paul
Denenfeld, LeFevre's lawyer in Grand Rapids, Mich., said Thursday. "By all
indications she's been a good wife and mother and a good community person, so we
think that presents extraordinary circumstances and we think that calls for
governors to respond in kind."
Michigan corrections officials said LeFevre would return to Michigan within a
few weeks and would be responsible for serving out her sentence. Under
sentencing laws from the 1970s, she likely would have to serve at least 5 1/2
years before being eligible for parole in 2013, said Michigan Department of
Corrections spokesman Russ Marlan.
"She's not going to do 10 years," Marlan said.
Michigan officials do not plan to ask prosecutors in Wayne County, where
LeFevre fled the Detroit House of Corrections, to pursue escape charges against
her, he said. LeFevre may forfeit credit she earned for good time during her
year in prison because she escaped.
The prison is now known as Robert Scott Correctional Facility.
LeFevre, who trained as a hospice worker and volunteered for political causes
in California, said she tried to live a model life to atone for her past
mistakes.
"I've tried to be exceptionally good," she told The Associated Press in an
interview Wednesday at the Las Colinas Detention Facility in Santee, a San Diego
suburb. "I wanted to make a life as Marie, to make a point of being as
disciplined as possible."
She said her behavior as a teenager, when she was despondent over the death
of her high school sweetheart in the Vietnam War, was "inexcusable." She was 19
when she was arrested with a friend during an undercover drug operation at a
pizza parlor outside Saginaw, Mich., in 1974.
Michigan corrections officials said investigators at the time believed she
was making several thousand dollars a week selling heroin and knew top drug
dealers in the area.
LeFevre said she supported herself working full-time at a Kmart after moving
out of her parents' house. She said she agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy and
violation of drug laws to spare her family the embarrassment of a trial and
expected to be put on probation. Instead, she was given the maximum sentence.
LeFevre said she hid her fugitive status from her husband and children until
agents began actively looking for her late last year. Federal officials said an
anonymous call tipped them to her name and location in March.
Associated Press writers David Eggert in Lansing, Mich., and Corey Williams
in Detroit contributed to this report.
Copyright 2008 Associated Press