THELEAVEN.ORG | VOL. 45, NO. 40 | JUNE 14, 2024
Prison program is at heart of Donnelly’s mission Story and Photos by Jay Soldner
After setting off the walk-through metal detector with his pectoral cross, Archbishop Naumann is checked again with a hand-held metal detector.
From left, Laurence Elnicki, Ahmad Rayton, Malek Brown Jr. and Simon Angilda Jr. enjoy some cake with Sister Sharon Hamsa, OSB, following graduation at the Lansing Correctional Facility. Sister Sharon, who is a math tutor at LCF, made the graduates a cake and some cookies, with their names on them.
L
ANSING — Ahmad, Laurance, Malek and Simon are four recent Donnelly College graduates, yet they’ve never set foot on Donnelly’s Kansas City, Kansas, campus. They all attended classes, held study groups and completed coursework from a different campus — the razor-lined, guarded and fenced-in grounds of the Lansing Correctional Facility (LCF). The four men — Ahmad Rayton, Laurance Elnicki, Malek Brown Jr. and Simon Angilda Jr. — graduated with associate degrees in business. The commencement ceremony for
the class of 2024 Donnelly Prison Program graduates took place in the visitation room at LCF on the morning of May 22. The room is not too far from what you might imagine if you’ve never been inside one — and not too dissimilar from what you see in movies. One side of the room is lined with stalls and phones mounted on the wall next to thick, thick glass, with phones and chairs on the other side of the glass. Opposite the wall of phones are a couple of vending machines with soft drinks and snacks. The graduates were dressed in traditional cap and gown over their blue jeans and T-shirts. Three of the men
wore red sashes over their gowns, representing them as first-generation college graduates. Three wore gold and purple ropes over the gown, signifying their membership in Phi Theta Kappa honor society. A small section of family and friends of the graduates were gathered in the room to witness the ceremony. Also present at the graduation were the prison’s warden, Jesse Howes; deputy warden Ryan Reece; Donnelly College in Prison Program director John Hewitt; Donnelly president Msgr. Stuart Swetland; Donnelly’s assistant vice president of student affairs Dr. Mary Pflanz; Donnelly’s chief
operating officer/dean Lisa Stoothoff; and Archbishop Joseph F. Naumann. Donnelly began offering classes at the prison in 2001. Since then, 38 men have earned their college diplomas. Earning a college degree is the most effective means to lower recidivism. Inmates who earn an associate’s degree are around 85% less likely to return to prison, while those who receive a bachelor’s degree are more than 95% less likely to return, according to research conducted by prisonstudiesproject.org. Msgr. Swetland knows well the data >> See “CEREMONY” on page 16