Several decades ago, when they were young, 230 men and one woman were convicted of terrible crimes—murders, rapes, robberies. They thought they were going to die in prison. They were supposed to. But then, just a few years back, Merle Unger Jr., one of the most notorious escape artists of our time, discovered an ingenious (and legal) way to get them out. It was an unimagined second chance for them—and a nerve-wracking experiment for everyone else.

Meet the Ungers

 

He was a 72-year-old man with a messed-up back and he knew he shouldn’t be lifting this stuff, but he was here to help a friend move, and so were some other old guys who had their own issues with bad knees and arthritic joints, so Hercules Williams Jr. plucked a small wooden end table from the back of a U-Haul truck and carried it down the sidewalk, slowly.

“That’s the Herc I always knew. Lifting that thing like it was nothing,” shouted 64-year-old Larry Owens, who sometimes walks with a cane. “You’re gonna feel that tomorrow.”

“I feel it now,” Williams said, setting the table down and placing a hand on his back. “I feel it now.”

Donald Shakir, the beneficiary of all this labor, saw that Williams was having trouble and grabbed the table from his hands, pulling it up the steps and into the living room. Shakir is a muscular 63-year-old with thick black glasses and a bright-orange beard. He’s legally blind and can’t see at all out of his left eye, even with the glasses. He also suffers from arthritis in his knees, but if the pain was bothering him that afternoon, he didn’t let on.

He had been leading the operation, telling the guys where to put a chair or a couch, insisting on lifting the heavier objects, pausing every so often to look around at his new neighborhood.

He didn’t want to call attention to himself, but this was a big day for him, a setting down of roots after a period of upheaval and wandering. Three years earlier, he had met a woman named Nzinga Amon and fell in love. They moved in together. At first, they slept on a couch in Shakir’s sister’s basement; they had to spoon each other to keep from falling off. “Hoooooo,” Amon says now. “It was hilarious. But what do they say: love is blind?” After that, they moved to a cramped one-bedroom apartment. This new place, though—a house instead of an apartment, with a Formstone facade, on a quiet block in southwest Baltimore? “It means stability,” Amon told me.

After the men unpacked the first load of boxes and furniture, they drove the empty U-Haul back to the old place to load up again, passing fans and flower pots through an open first-floor window. Inside, a TV was tuned to the Orioles’ first game of the season.

“The Orioles ain’t won nothing since I’ve been home,” Hercules Williams said, shaking his head. He was dressed in an Orioles raincoat and a white Orioles cap. He told me that he went to his first game at Camden Yards three years ago and couldn’t believe the size of it; he’d only ever seen a game at the far smaller Memorial Stadium, which the team abandoned in 1991. “I thought I was in New York City. The crowds, you know? And the gaiety of it all?” he said. “That was the first big positive crowd I saw since I got out.”

Every so often these guys let slip a phrase that reveals how long they spent in prison. Forty-one years and four months for Williams. Nearly 44 years for Owens; 41 and change for Shakir. They were all convicted of murder in the early 1970s. Shakir was 19 when he shot and killed a 77-year-old confectioner during a stickup. He wanted money to buy drugs. Owens had just turned 20 when he gunned down a dry cleaner, also during a robbery to fuel a drug habit. The circumstances around Williams’ conviction are murkier. He maintained his innocence and had a strong alibi, but his alleged accomplice testified against him in exchange for immunity, sticking him with the same sentence Shakir and Owens got: life in prison.

Back then, lifers who demonstrated good behavior and personal growth could get paroled after 20 or 25 years. But in the following decades, the state’s prison system became more punitive. Maryland is one of three states where the governor can overturn the parole board’s decision to release a prisoner. In 1995, after a lifer named Rodney Stokes committed a brutal murder while on work release, Governor Parris Glendening, a Democrat, said the parole board shouldn’t bother sending him any more applications from lifers, because “life means life.” Every governor since has followed his lead. So by the time Williams and Shakir and Owens had put in their 25 years, it didn’t matter what they had done with their time. They weren’t getting out. They were going to die in prison, with their loved ones far away. But then a fellow inmate named Merle Unger Jr. discovered an unexpected kind of door.

Merle Unger.

Merle Unger escaped from jail for the first time in 1967, when he was an 18-year-old dropout with an interest in petty crime. People in his native Greencastle, Pennsylvania, saw him as a harmless character—a scrawny kid who figured out how to tie his bedsheets together and climb out of the nearby jail at night so he could see his girlfriend and play bingo at the Catholic church before climbing back into his cell in time for roll call. He did this until a sheriff’s deputy went to play bingo, saw Unger sitting there and was like, wait a minute.

Whenever jail officials increased security, Unger found another route out. A local radio station started a Merle Unger Fan Club. His public defender made T-shirts that said, “Merle, baby, where are you?”

In 1975, after more escapes and arrests, he found himself locked up in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, fixating on a skylight in the lunchroom, 45 feet up. Early one morning he tied a piece of rope to a 5- or 10-pound dumbbell and wrapped the other end of the rope around his neck. He piled up some tables, put a small step ladder on top of the pile, climbed atop a beam, pulled up the ladder, set it up again, reached higher, hurled the dumbbell through the skylight’s glass, and climbed through the broken window into the December cold, wearing a short-sleeved shirt. “I mean, I’m not proud of that,” Unger told me last month. “I just wanted my freedom.”

On the run, Unger made it to Hagerstown, Maryland, where he robbed a grocery store at gunpoint. An off-duty cop, Donald Kline, happened to be shopping at the time and shouted, “Halt, police officer!” When Unger ran, Kline chased him into an alley. Unger opened fire. Kline was hit three times and died in the hospital.

Later that night, police found Unger hiding in a house, bleeding from one of Kline’s bullets. But before he could be tried, Unger escaped again, using a hacksaw slipped to him during a visit. He cut the bars of his cell and crawled out through an air duct. His public defender opened the mail one day to find a poem from Unger: “Some say I am un-cool or even a fool / because I escaped again. / But tell me true / What would you do / If your life was at an end?”

He fled to Florida and got caught in Orlando. Brought to Talbot County, Maryland, in 1976 to stand trial for the Kline murder, he was convicted and sentenced to life plus 40 years. But Unger had a strong preference for staying in Florida, a preference he expressed in 1981 by escaping a maximum-security prison in Maryland at the wheel of a hijacked dump truck. The FBI led a national manhunt after that episode. He was captured a month later while breaking into a gun store in Clearwater, Florida, and convicted of armed burglary, beginning a tug-of-war between Florida and Maryland for the right to incarcerate him.

A Maryland paper splashes the news of Unger's capture six months after he killed Donald Kline.

In the middle of all this, in the ’80s, Unger happened to meet a woman. A fellow inmate in Florida had put a personal ad in Mother Earth magazine, and he got so many responses that he sold the extras to other prisoners for a dollar apiece. Unger bought a few, sent letters and a woman from Illinois came to visit. They ended up getting married in 1988 and had two children, both conceived in prison. He says his life changed when he held his infant son for the first time: “I didn’t want to commit no crimes anymore.”

In Unger’s telling, this is the moment he developed an obsessive interest in the American legal system. Another friend worked in the prison’s law library and told him about a case in which a federal inmate earned his freedom by challenging the constitutionality of the jury instructions in his trial. Unger spent hours studying the case. It was all he could talk about. And the more he read, the more he thought he might have a shot at winning a new trial on the murder charge if he came back to Maryland to fight it.

Today in Maryland, juries are told to decide cases solely by evaluating the facts. But this isn’t what they were told before 1980. As the judge in one 1976 murder trial put it to the jury, “It is your responsibility in this case to determine the facts, as you do in every case, but also it is your responsibility to determine for yourselves what the law is.” The practice was a holdover from the 1700s, when colonists, fearing that tyrannical British judges would run roughshod over their rights, gave juries the power to nullify unjust prosecutions. Over the centuries, though, states moved away from these instructions, because they encouraged juries to second-guess fundamental rights of defendants, like the presumption of innocence and the standard of reasonable doubt. “These are all fragile rights,” says Michael Millemann, a law professor at the University of Maryland. “It’s hard enough to get jurors to enforce when you tell them, ‘That’s the law, you have to do it.’ And when you tell them, ‘You have to decide what the law is,’ it just invites gross injustice.”

For decades, the state’s higher courts blocked attempts by convicts to obtain new trials; reopening all those cases would have thrown the system into chaos. But by the time Unger returned to Maryland to file his petition, the makeup of the state’s Court of Appeals had changed, and in 2012, the court ruled that Unger’s constitutional rights had been violated. He was entitled to a new trial. And by the logic of the decision, so were the 230 other living prisoners—mostly first-degree murderers, and some rapists—convicted before Maryland changed its jury instructions.

Hercules Williams described his building as “clean, laid-back. A man can chill. Some fresh old ladies.” Then he shook his head and added, “I’m an old man, I’m not trying to get with anyone.”

Unger v. State doesn’t say that these prisoners should be freed, only that they can ask to be retried. In practice, though, there’s a strong incentive to settle cases where the defendant has a clean prison record. Re-trying a case that’s 30 or 40 years old can be tricky: the witnesses have moved away, the detectives are dead and the case file is skeletal, or missing, or destroyed. Since the decision came down, 142 of 231 prisoners have negotiated their freedom, almost all of them getting probation. One was acquitted at a new trial. Another eight have died behind bars before they could get a hearing. There are still about 70 prisoners with open cases, which means that even more may yet go free.

But Merle Unger Jr. is not one of them. In 2013, a Maryland prosecutor tried him a second time for the murder of Donald Kline, relying on the original 1976 trial transcript. A judge found Unger guilty once again and sentenced him to life. Now he lives alone in a five- by 10-foot cell, making fine-art cards that feature paintings and colored-pencil drawings of deer, elk and eagles. He sells them for around $10 apiece on Etsy. In a phone call from prison, Unger told me he’s still fighting his case, filing appeals to win his freedom. “When you get old,” he said, “you look back at all the things you did and you regret them. … I want to prove that I can do something good.”

When I asked him how it felt to still be in prison after springing so many others, he tried to be gracious. “I’m happy for all them,” he said, “because they all deserved a second chance. That’s something the American prison system got away from: giving people second chances.”

For the first time in a generation, American politicians actually agree that we put too many people in prison and that this is a bad thing. (The United States has the highest incarceration rate in the world, with 716 people per 100,000 behind bars; the comparable rate is 475 in Russia and 121 in China.) And yet the most commonly proposed solutions tend to focus on nonviolent federal drug offenders: relaxing sentences, rescheduling drugs, diverting addicts into treatment programs. These steps barely address the larger problem. The vast majority of U.S. prisoners are in state prisons, not federal, and the majority of those have been convicted of violent crimes (54 percent) as opposed to drug crimes (16 percent). To reduce the American prison population in a meaningful way, states will have to liberalize sentences and parole for some violent offenders—a terrifying prospect for politicians.

In Maryland, though, the politically impossible has been happening for three years now. Unger v. State is essentially a natural experiment in the controlled release of violent offenders. And because the experiment is so new, nobody knows how it will end up—not the lawyers, the judges, the social workers, the families of the ex-offenders, the families of the victims, the citizens of Maryland or the former prisoners themselves. Thanks to a legal lightning strike, almost 150 people who were supposed to disappear in prison are now living on the outside. Are they ready? Are we?

Nzinga Amon (left) has been trying to help Donald Shakir fit back into the world.

“It just sort of developed,” Nzinga Amon told me of her relationship with Donald Shakir. We were sitting on a stoop across from their old place in West Baltimore, watching Shakir and the other guys lug desks and drawers into the U-Haul. She said she met her husband by chance in 2013—just two people waiting for a bus. She wasn’t looking for a relationship at the time. She had a job as a reading tutor at an elementary school and was enjoying her independence.

Still, she was drawn to Shakir. She liked his calmness, his seriousness. She liked that he shared the poetry he had written in prison and that he talked to her about his regrets: the son he didn’t raise, the mother who died while he was away. And she liked how he kept finding ways to surprise her. Shakir had this beautiful singing voice, a high, sweet falsetto that seemed unconnected to his big body. “We all change, we all grow up,” she said. “I can appreciate the man he turned out to be.”

It wasn’t until they moved in together that Amon realized how hard it is for lifers to re-enter the world. These are not unskilled people; in prison they learned masonry and welding and other trades, and the ones approved for work release regularly earned promotions and even managed crews. But the only job Shakir could land at first was as a minimum-wage dishwasher at Pizza Hut. He felt as though his manager was constantly testing him, giving him all the crappy assignments, like cleaning the drains, to see if he could take it. He ultimately quit because his arthritis made it too painful to spend hours on his feet.

At home he seemed scared a lot of the time. He was afraid of the night. The kids on the street and the way they dressed and talked, the vacant blocks where people used to live when he was young—he didn’t feel safe. “I’ve never seen so many drug users in my life,” he told me. “I’ll never get over seeing so many empty houses.” When Amon has meetings after dark, Shakir calls repeatedly to make sure she’s O.K. One time he waited for her on the stoop of their place, in his pajamas.

“We lived in a world that had rules,” Shakir told me. “And we came out into a world without rules.” For many of the released, it was unsettling to move through public space, a series of little jolts. They found roads where buildings used to be, buildings where parks used to be. Banks spewed money out of a wall, 24 hours a day; there were no ATMs in the early ’70s. Crazy people walked down the street holding loud conversations with themselves; friends had to explain what Bluetooth was. The city had reconfigured itself while they were away. And in a lot of cases, so had their families, or what was left of them. Shakir’s friend Larry Owens didn’t have a spouse or a sibling or a child to come home to. The last time he saw any of his kin was in 1992. “I look at it like this,” he told me. “They got their life to live.” He ended up moving in with his 62-year-old cousin, Barbara Lotts. She and Owens were never close, but her reason for housing him was simple: “Wasn’t nobody else,” she said. “It is what it is.”

Larry Owens taught himself to paint portraits while incarcerated and got so good at it that he became a mentor for a bunch of other guys in there and now teaches a community art class.

He’s still living in a spare bedroom in her house, and they basically get along. She accepts that he’ll moan and talk to himself in the night and that he’ll continue to wake up every day at 6 a.m. “Larry,” she wants to say, “you’re free, you can sleep in.” Owens doesn’t like to be a burden, so he takes out the trash and kicks in a little money when he can. “I love her,” he says, “but I want my own.”

Owens and Shakir are lucky in the sense that they have each other. They’ve been close since they were 9 or 10, having grown up in the same housing project in the neighborhood of Fairfield. They fell into drugs at the same time, and for the first year of their incarceration, they shared a cell at the Maryland Penitentiary. They’re basically inseparable now. They get together every weekend and talk on the phone during the week, and they also hang out with other ex-lifers released thanks to Unger v. State, like Hercules Williams, and another friend, Kareem Hasan, who was locked up at 17 after a fatal neighborhood dispute. (His co-defendants testified against him in exchange for shortened sentences.) Now 57, Hasan has achieved a lot in the short time he has been out: a steady job with the city of Baltimore, a car, a marriage to a registered nurse named Annette, a business plan for a youth mentoring nonprofit. He functions as a constant positive presence in the group, a connector and a joker. Just before his release, he called Annette and said, “Mmm-hmm. Mmm-hmmm. I hope your shit is in order. I’m coming home.” She was elated. “I’m at peace of mind with him, you know?” she says. “I never gave up on him.”

The men seem to share a bond that’s reflected in language. Often they refer to themselves as part of “the Unger family,” or sometimes just as “Ungers.” More than one of them told me, “I’m an Unger.” They realize they’re a part of something bigger than themselves.

And they are. Digging them out of prison took an unprecedented effort by the Maryland Office of the Public Defender, which worked with professors and students at the University of Maryland law school to help prisoners file petitions to reopen their cases. Early on, the attorneys also realized there needed to be a major social-work component: if the Ungers didn’t have help adjusting to life on the outside, they were more likely to fail. So teams were mobilized to snag the Ungers in a safety net. These social workers still travel across the state to prepare prisoners for re-entry. They are there on the day of release to hand the client a personal hygiene kit, a binder of information on government programs, and a $20 bus pass. And in the weeks and months after release, they help Ungers with challenges large and small, everything from obtaining health care and I.D. cards to finding independent living situations.

One of the first Ungers to win his release was James Richardson, a stocky 71-year-old with cataracts in both eyes and two bum knees. He lived with his daughter for eight months until UMD social workers helped him get his own apartment in a Baltimore building that caters to seniors and sets the rent as a percentage of income. (UMD asked me not to name the building because there are only a few complexes that accept residents with criminal records and the school doesn’t want to create “negative backlash” for the management company.) Five other Ungers live there, including Hercules Williams. They see each other in the elevators, check in, sit on their balconies and talk. Williams described the building as “clean, laid-back. A man can chill. Some fresh old ladies. We got the run of them.” Then he shook his head and added, “I’m an old man, I’m not trying to get with anyone.” One afternoon Richardson showed me the panoramic view of the city from his upper-floor balcony. Life after prison has been “way more than I really expected,” he said. “I was met with open arms, and people willing to help in any way they could help.”

"Mmm-hmm. Mmm-hmmm": Kareem Hasan with his wife Annette at their home.

Maybe the most important strands of the safety net are the two monthly meetings in Baltimore where the men gather as a group—25 to 40 people saying hello, snacking on carrot sticks and pretzels. These aren’t fancy events, but they give the guys a place to see their friends and get help if they need it. The social workers set up a presentation or two: a pitch by a nonprofit leader looking to train black men in computer programming, a class on nutrition and health benefits delivered as a “Jeopardy!”-style game show. (“Let’s try Social Security for $1,000.”) Often a man named Walter Lomax speaks about justice reform. Lomax spent 39 years in prison on a wrongful conviction, and since winning his freedom in 2006, he has been organizing on behalf of older prisoners. Another elder who speaks is a lanky Baltimorean named Karriem Saleem El-Amin, who did 42 years on a murder conviction. El-Amin told me he tries to get people to share their struggles by poking fun at his own. One time, he went to use a public toilet and couldn’t find the flush lever; he started to panic, until the toilet sensed movement and flushed itself. He didn’t know toilets could do that. “Don’t nobody tell you these little delicate things that have changed,” he explained.

There is only one woman in the Unger family. Her name is Etta Myers. She went to a few of the meetings, but people kept mistaking her for someone’s spouse, so she stopped. Myers is attractive, with short yellow hair. She smokes cigarettes and sips tea from a mug that says “Woman of God.”As tough as some of the men have had it, she has probably had it worse. The state locked her up in 1977, when she was 22 and struggling with a heroin addiction. Police said that Myers and her ex-boyfriend shot and killed a man during a robbery. The only evidence linking her to the scene was the testimony of three men who thought they saw her walk away and who admitted to being on drugs that day. She swore she was never there. The jury found her guilty of first-degree murder.

Myers spent 36 years in a women’s prison. Over the decades she became a leader there, the co-founder of a therapy group and a manager in the sewing shop, a multimillion-dollar business that made flags and uniforms. The Maryland Parole Commission tried to release her twice, but governors blocked the commission both times. When she finally got out in 2013, she was given a bed in a Catholic halfway house for women. She now rents a small place in North Baltimore, which she shares with a white and orange cat named Ya-Ya.

When I met her there a few months ago, the TV was tuned to a children’s station showing a cartoon about the Bible. Myers said she watches children’s shows because there are a lot of precocious kids at her church and she wants to understand them better. She’s astonished by her great-niece Chloe, who is 3 years old. “She had a little bump on her head. And I said, ‘How did you bump your head, Chloe?’ And she said, ‘Well, I don’t think we have time for that, that’s really irrelevant right now.’ And I said, ‘Who says irrelevant at 3 years old?’”

The last decades of her incarceration were marked by a spreading loneliness, her loved ones dying one after the other—her mother, her brother. “I was like, there’s nothing else, there’s nothing else for me.” And then she came home and realized that for the first time in her life, she was finally in a position to have a healthy relationship. Before prison, her boyfriend beat her. After they were convicted, she didn’t see him again until the day they were both released—36 years later. He used to be a specimen, a beautiful, muscular man, but he rolled into court in a wheelchair. Later she saw him at an event and reached down to hug him. She didn’t want to waste her time being angry.

What she wanted was to meet a “nice older man” and feel less alone. But the rules of courtship had changed since 1977. “Guys don’t come after girls,” she says. “That was amazing to me. And I guess it had to do with the fact that I was much older. And then the challenge was, O.K., well, where do you go to meet nice old men at? ... I’ve been to several bingo places, and it’s usually a bunch of old biddies, and I don’t consider myself an old biddie.”

Grocery store? Church? “You don’t find a whole lot of single men in church. You see them there, they have a wife right beside them. Then their wives are looking at you trying to make sure you’re not trying to hit on them or something crazy.”

After a while, she stopped trying to find a partner. She now spends her time volunteering at her church and with nonprofits that work on criminal justice issues. In March, after the Maryland legislature restored voting rights for ex-offenders, she registered to cast the first vote of her life, at 62. “I put my trust in the God that I worship, and believe He’ll send me a companion if it’s meant to be,” she said. “And if not, I guess I just won’t have one.”

Forty-five years ago, Thomas Magrogan was shot in the heart by one of the Ungers.

In 2013, when 89-year-old Shirley Rubin heard that her husband’s killer was about to be released from prison, she felt physically sick. The couple had owned a small grocery store in southwest Baltimore until one day in 1972, when a teenager walked into their store and shot them both during a robbery attempt. Shirley’s husband died; she survived. She ended up losing the store and struggled to raise the kids on the little money she had left. The gunman “ruined my life,” she told the Baltimore Sun. “The only thing that kept me going in these last 41 years was the fact that [he] was in prison.”

Antonio Gioia, as the deputy state’s attorney for major crimes in Baltimore, has the unenviable task of calling people like Rubin and telling them that their loved one’s killer may soon be walking around. He’s been doing it for three years, and he still dreads it. “The most prominent emotion is one of disbelief. ‘Why are you calling, Mr. Gioia?’” he told me. “They just cannot accept the fact that this very painful episode that’s left a terrible hole in the lives of the family is being reopened.”

In April I went to see Kevin Magrogan, whose only sibling, Thomas Magrogan, was shot in the heart 45 years ago by a teenage drug addict named Bryant Lee Goodman. Magrogan now lives in the farm country west of Baltimore, where he works as a tax preparer. Sitting behind a desk piled with returns, he told me that his brother’s murder made him “the new head of the household, because my father just never recovered.” His father was a fleet superintendent for a linen company in Baltimore. Before the murder, he worked 12 or 14 hours a day, but afterward, he could only muster 4 or 5 hours, and Kevin had to help out after school to make sure the linen trucks got in at night. His father stopped going out in public because people were always talking to him about Tom. He stopped going to Irish dances with Kevin’s mother. “He would just come home and sit,” Magrogan said.

Family members of victims have a right to speak at Unger settlement hearings, and when Goodman’s came up, Magrogan opposed his release, arguing that because Goodman had been given a drug infraction in prison, he was still potentially dangerous. “Where’s he going to get the money for drugs when he goes back on them?” Magrogan told me. “He’s going to revert back to crime. And if he gets in a pressure situation again—we know he’s already killed once. Why not kill again? He’s got nothing to lose.” Goodman, who is now in his 60s, also exercised his right to speak during the hearing—one of the few Ungers to do so. He said he was “truly sorry” for what he had done, according to the Sun. He went free. The process left Magrogan feeling as if the state just wanted to save the cost of incarcerating elderly prisoners. “It was all show and tell,” he said. “I’m sure that if I was very rich and powerful, he would have been retried.”

This feeling that the system is rigged is common among the families of Unger victims. The sister of a Johns Hopkins medical student killed by a 16-year-old in 1979 told me she thinks the idea of a life sentence has been devalued. “What message are we sending to other possible criminals, that we’re getting kind of soft?” she asked. She said she recently read a story about a former lifer eating a lobster with his family. How did that make her feel? “How would it make anybody feel? You know what I mean? What are you doing eating a lobster?”

Generally, the defense attorneys and social workers trying to ease the Ungers’ transition into post-prison life don’t dispute the damage their clients have done. “You can’t ignore the tragedy of homicide,” says UMD’s Michael Millemann. “You can’t escape from that.” But when he receives an anonymous voicemail that says, “I hope one of these guys kills you,” or when an Internet commenter assumes he must be a Communist, he thinks people aren’t getting the full picture.

Millemann has been working with prisoners since the late ’60s. A judge once called him “the LeBron James of lawyering for poor people.” In 2013, he put together a team of law students and social workers to analyze the earliest Unger cases, and pretty soon, a familiar pattern emerged: poor black defendants convicted by all-white juries after paltry or nonexistent police investigations. A large number of the petitioners weren’t murderers the way most people think of them. In Maryland, you don’t have to pull the trigger to be charged with felony murder; the non-shooter in a fatal robbery is just as guilty of murder as the shooter. That was the situation with a significant number of the Ungers, including Karriem Saleem El-Amin. They were drunk and armed at 16 or 17 or 18 and robbed someone with a group of friends. They didn’t shoot, but they got life. Meanwhile, in some cases, the actual gunmen cut deals with the state and went free after a few decades—so why was the non-shooter still in prison, still bearing the burden of society’s judgment?

Of the 143 Ungers who have been released, not a single one has been convicted of anything more serious than a minor traffic offense.

Even some of the social workers had been skeptical at first. But that changed quickly. Almost to a person, the prisoners spoke with insight about the people they used to be, expressed remorse for their crimes and described the programs they’d completed in prison to better themselves. They were like living remnants of an earlier, rehabilitative era in corrections, when Maryland lifers could go out on work release (ended in 1993) and take college classes through Pell Grants (ended by Congress in 1994). A forensic social work fellow named Elizabeth Smith interviewed dozens of men all over the state. She told me that she “would get pulled up by [corrections officers], and they’d say, ‘Get this man out of here. He should die at home with his grandchildren.’”

It seems counterintuitive, but murderers can be good bets for parole. A study by the Stanford Criminal Justice Center found that between 1995 and 2010, 48.7 percent of all paroled prisoners in California went on to commit new crimes. But among murderers, the rate was a tiny 0.58 percent, “and none of them recidivated for life-term crimes.” Data from New York shows similarly low recidivism rates for paroled murderers.

The likeliest reason for this is age. According to figures from the Bureau of Justice Statistics, people who murder, rape or rob tend to be in their late teens and early 20s. By the time murderers are eligible for release, they are usually way past their criminal primes. The average age of the freed Ungers is 64. I told Millemann that out of all these people, there had to be a few who still posed a threat. “If prosecutors think there are [Ungers] who are too dangerous to be released,” he pointed out, “they’ve got an option: Re-try them and convict them.” (Prosecutors took this route with Merle Unger and a man who killed his wife with a shotgun in 1972. In the case of a notorious petitioner who murdered an 11-year-old girl in 1969, Baltimore city prosecutors fought to keep him in prison, and he died behind bars this past December.)

For all these reasons, the people fighting for the prisoners feel they’re doing the right thing. So far, the results have justified their faith. According to the Office of the Public Defender, of the 143 Ungers who have been released, not a single one has been convicted of anything more serious than a traffic offense. There has only been one probation violation, a technical infraction that resulted in a stern talking-to. Zero of the Ungers have violated parole. Zero have been sent back to prison.

These numbers didn’t surprise me. After meeting a range of Ungers, and seeing them interact with their families and each other, and talking to them about the horrific things they saw in prison—guys losing it in weak moments and slashing their wrists with razor blades, hanging themselves in their cells, keeling over from sudden aneurysms—it seemed obvious that the last thing anyone wanted to do was go back. Although they didn’t perform their remorse for me, sometimes falling back on cliché (Shakir: “Don’t nobody have a right to take a life, period”), they also didn’t evade questions about their original crimes and the people they used to be. They caused pain to other families and to their own, and now that they can sit on their balconies or go to an Orioles game or eat a meal with their wives, they would rather not blow it up, for themselves and for their friends who are still in prison, the 70 Ungers with pending cases.

The experiment is young and tenuous. The state of Maryland is looking to prevent future releases and recently filed the latest in a series of legal challenges to Unger v. State in appellate courts. If a single member of the Unger family fails in a big way—and even advocates recognize there’s a risk of that—everyone could be affected. The guilt would be a lot to bear. “You don’t mess up so you don’t mess up the chances of the guy behind you comin’ out,” Kareem Hasan told me. “That’s one of the things we stress when we get everybody together. That’s why we try to grab them right when they come out the door.”

"It means stability": Donald Shakir (right) outside his new home with Owens and Hasan.

Credits

Story - Jason Fagone
Jason is a contributing writer for Highline. His work has also appeared in The New York Times, GQ, New York and Wired. He is currently working on a book, The Cryptologists, about U.S. women codebreakers in the world wars.
Photography - Benjamin Rasmussen
Benjamin is a freelance photographer based in Denver, Colorado.
Development & Design - Gladeye
Gladeye is a New Zealand-based digital design agency.
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