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Video: ‘Prison’ star on real-life ‘nightmare’ behind bars

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    >>> we are back now with the story of lane garrison , an up and coming hollywood star who made one tragic mistake that resulted in the death of a 17-year-old boy and a real life stay behind bars for the star of the show " prison break ." he'll join us for his first sit-down interview since his release from prison but first here's miguel almaguer.

    >> i got something for you this time.

    >> reporter: in the fox television series " prison break ," lane garrison was on the verge of becoming a star. a young, promising actor who made it to the silver screen .

    >> my career was just taking off and i thought, here we go.

    >> reporter: in an instant, the actor known for playing a convict became one. december 2006 , garrison, 26 at the time, was invited to a high school party.

    >> this was a night of just bad decisions.

    >> reporter: teenagers were drinking, so was he.

    >> i had two drinks, i downed two shots.

    >> reporter: garrison got into his car with three teens.

    >> to bottom line it, i never should have been at that party. i never should have had drinks and i should have never drove.

    >> reporter: his blood alcohol level , twice the legal limit. garrison slammed into a tree. two 15-year-olds were injured. the third, a 17-year-old was killed.

    >> i am guilty, your honor.

    >> reporter: convicted of vehicular manslaughter, garrison faced the victim's family in court.

    >> there can be no doubt that the defendant is reckless. he's careless. and above all, he's selfish.

    >> reporter: the sentence? three years, four months. his first stop, the l.a. county jail.

    >> you are basically thrown up against the wall. your clothes are stripped off. you're standing there naked. they check every orifice of your body. they give you a number. your name is gone. my number was f-95770.

    >> reporter: the actor wasn't on set anymore. he would spend the next 20 months moving from prison to prison.

    >> i can remember all eight prisons, everybody in them.

    >> reporter: surviving the yard? not his only worry.

    >> you have to trust that one of these guys when you close your eyes is not just going to wake up in the middle of the night , pull you off your rack, beat you or stab you.

    >> reporter: garrison says he's lucky to be alive. do you think you deserved to be there?

    >> absolutely. 100%.

    >> reporter: in 2009 , released early for good behavior, lane garrison returned to the l.a. county jail for the first time with us. what's it like being back?

    >> it's been a while .

    >> reporter: garrison paid his debt but said he won't forget his crime.

    >> i say a prayer for the family every night.

    >> reporter: a young hollywood actor with an uncertain future and an unforgettable past. for "today" miguel almaguer, nbc news, los angeles .

    >> lane, good morning.

    >> good morning.

    >> good to see you. i wonder if people understand. you were released from prison in 2009 .

    >> right.

    >> so you have tried to remain quiet, stay under the radar for a while. why are you speaking out now?

    >> i think part of it was once you do an amount of time it take as while to adjust back into society. i really wasn't ready to speak to anyone. you know, out of respect for the family, i didn't want to say anything. but i knew as people were asking me more questions that eventually i was going to have to talk. i felt there were just blurbs mentioned about me. i would say something about prison and it was like, lane complains about jail or says it was hell. the message was, hey, if you don't want to go through what i went through and you don't want a family going through the pain, don't drink and drive.

    >> when you look at the night of the accident, so many bad decisions made in one evening. is it fair or unfair to say you felt the way a lot of stars in hollywood do and young people in general. you felt invincible.

    >> i think for me, i had been through so much. i had just lost both of my parents. i felt like nothing else bad can possibly happen to me. i'm on a course that life's going to be great from here on out. i think the message is simple here. drinking and driving , most people don't have an intent to hurt somebody. but it happens. it can happen to anybody. for me, look at the decisions that i made that night. they were so poor. my judgment was poor. it was 26 minutes from the time i met them through the party to the accident.

    >> you went to court and a lot of people expected this excuse, that excuse. you stood up in court and you said, "i am guilty." i think that probably started a transformation in your own life.

    >> absolutely. i think that was the first time i became a man when i accepted responsibility. i fwru up learning from a father who said, when you make a mistake or a bad decision, man up and take responsibility. the minute that i decided to do that, most people speculated that i wouldle fight it. the minute i decided to plead guilty is the minute everything changed in my life as a man.

    >> you talk now about your time in prison. it was not easy. it was a number of different facilities over 20 months. i think you say the 77 days you spent in l.a. county waiting to be processed for the hardest. give me a sense behind the wall .

    >> behind the wall at l.a. county jail and if you speak to someone who's done time, the fact you make it out of there alive is a miracle.

    >> why?

    >> first off it's like a bomb went off inside. it's your worst nightmare. your hard-core gang members are there. you know, the guards are pretty hard there as well.

    >> you witnessed violence?

    >> i probably saw 300 fights. i had a bunkie who was killed. i saw people stabbed. i don't know if they made it or not.

    >> as a high profile inmate at that facility and others, why do you think you were never harmed? why didn't somebody say, i'm going to get the actor kid over there?

    >> they might have. i believe i had a guardian angel watching over me. i don't know why nothing happened to me. i would be sitting in the yard and someone next to me would literally just get clocked. i was never touched. it's by the grace of god i'm sitting here with you today.

    >> i know you pray for the family of the victim, the 17-year-old, every night. the reality is he's not coming back. you are going to live with this forever.

    >> forever, right.

    >> you're a convicted felon.

    >> right.

    >> how do you deal with that?

    >> you don't deal with it. i mean, it's always going to be there. it's something i think about almost every hour. you know, i try to go on with my life by teaching other people and helping other people, reaching out and letting people know, hey, this can happen. i don't want it to happen to you.

    >> you have been given a second chance. you are acting again here on nbc. what does that mean in terms of your road to getting back to some sense of normalcy?

    >> it's a miracle. just going through eight prisons, i never thought i would make it out to see another set. so i'm fortunate enough to get a second chance when a young man doesn't have one. i'm going to make the most of it. i'm blessed to be on set and be working again.

    >> lane, it's nice of you

By
TODAY.com
updated 4/18/2011 11:58:08 AM ET 2011-04-18T15:58:08

In 2006, actor Lane Garrison, then best known for his role on “Prison Break,” made 26 minutes worth of terrible, tragic decisions.

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At a supermarket near his home in Beverly Hills, Calif., he accepted an invitation from star-struck high schoolers to go to a party. He went, he drank and then he left the party with three teens to get more alcohol. While driving, Garrison jumped a curb in his Land Rover at about 50 mph and hit a tree. The accident killed Vaughn Setian, a 17-year-old Beverly Hills High School student, and injured two 15-year-old girls.

When the time came to go to trial, Garrison did something you don’t often see celebrities do: he owned up to his actions. On May 21, 2007, he pleaded guilty to vehicular manslaughter, drunken driving and providing alcohol to a minor. He was sentenced to 40 months in prison. For the first time since his 2009 release, the actor spoke about the experience Monday, on TODAY with Matt Lauer.

But Garrison has more to say about his experiences. He wants young people to know what life is really like behind bars and that not being able to contact the Setian family has been one of the most difficult parts of the experience.

“I wish I could have talked a little bit more about what life was like inside prison so that people could understand the consequences of their actions. Really see what’s going on inside of a prison, inside of a jail — which obviously I put myself in,” Garrison said after his TODAY interview. “Waking up in a cell covered in ants and roaches. Being tortured by guards. Not having anything but four walls. One of the things about jail that’s weird is that you’re sent to a place where you’re supposed to sit there and think about your actions and their consequences and why you’re there. And I think now, it turns more into — the minute you go there, it’s just survival.”

Survival is one thing. Knowing you’re wholly responsible for a family’s grief is an added challenge. “There’s a family that doesn’t have their son. The least of my worries was doing jail time. The whole notion that I was responsible for someone losing their life, that’s what really ate me up inside,” Garrison said. “This is something that I am never going to get over, they’re never going to get over.”

Getting through prison — eight different prisons, in fact — was something Garrison did by making the choice to be a “bright light in a dark place.”

“These people were in so much pain, no matter what crime they committed — and I didn’t ask, because in there you’re all the same. You’re a number, not a name. Most guys can’t leave, they can’t write, their parents were drug dealers and they were doing drops for them on their way to school by the time they were 11 years old. They’ve never had one chance, let alone two,” Garrison said.

“There were days in there that I felt, ‘how can I help these guys?’” At one point the actor organized a talent show. As president of the substance abuse program at one prison, he was able to use the program’s budget to get a Thanksgiving dinner delivered. Garrison recalls the reaction he got afterward: “There was a man over in the corner and he calls me over and is sobbing. He’d been locked up for 15 years. And he said ‘I want to thank you so much for doing this for us. Just the smell of real food gave me back all the memories of my family that I’d forgotten. I haven’t smelled real food in 15 years.’ And there are days like that that I’d think, I’m in here for a reason.”

Through all of this, Garrison wishes that he could have contact with the family of the young man he killed. Through his attorneys, he has reached out to the family. During the trial, Garrison was ordered to not make contact with the victims, which was difficult for him.

“It was eating me up inside. I literally wanted to scream. Walking into a courtroom and having the family right there and not being able to say anything literally made me go insane,” he recalled. “I just wanted to scream and say this is who I am; this is who I’m not. If you want to slap me, punch me, whatever. I just wanted some kind of contact with them. I pray to God that over time, that will happen.”

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In the meantime, Garrison is moving forward with his life, but that too is taking time. After his April 29, 2009, release, it took him about a year to be able to function on a level close to normal, much less work. “My nervous system was shot. You’re desensitized after, by all that you’ve seen. And as an actor, that’s the worst thing you can be. To be a good actor you have to feel life, and observe life. And it felt like I came back from war. It took me about a year to adapt, to hug someone, to be able to tell someone I love you. Or even be able to hold a coffee cup. Post-prison, I was jittery.”

Garrison is currently appearing on a multi-episode arc on “The Event,” his first television work since his release (he’s also written a screenplay, “One Heart,” and participated in “Graduation Day,” a PSA about drinking and driving).

“It’s amazing,” he says of being back at work. “I want to do it every day. When I show up on set, I feel like, ‘this is my home. I’m supposed to be here.’ There is nothing better to me.”

Regardless of where Garrison’s career takes him, he is certain about the events of December 2006. “There was no other choice than to say, ‘I’m guilty. I made a bad decision.’ This family is in pain because of me,” he said. “I’m just trying to tell people what it’s like so they don’t make the same mistakes.”

© 2012 MSNBC Interactive.  Reprints

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