What Is A Miracle
What is a miracle? A dictionary explanation might be as follows.
1. An unexpected and welcome event that is not explicable by natural or scientific laws and is divine.
2. A highly improbable or extraordinary circumstance, development, or accomplishment.
Take your pick. I read a book by Kathryn Kuhlman entitled I Believe in Miracles. I’m not ready to announce any miracles have occurred in my Christian Life, but I have an inordinate amount of happenstances that occurred that were “highly improbable” and to my mind happened because of my believing in the Power of the Holy Spirit and answers to prayer.
At the end of my psychiatric evaluation period in the summer of 1972, I returned from the U. S. Medical Center in Springfield, Mo, to the St. Louis City Jail. I would appear again before the court to finalize my sentencing for the crime of bank robbery. I knew at my sentencing that I had to say something to the Judge but was not sure what it would be. There is a point in sentencing defendants where the judge asks the defendant, “Does the defendant have anything to say before pronouncement of the sentence. In 99.9% of most criminals sentencing, the prisoner has nothing to say. I had gone through the sentencing procedures on many such occasions and, like a dumb sheep, had said nothing.
The night before sentencing I was awake and prayed, “God give me the words to say and may they lift you up in glory.” On the following day, I stood before the judge and said. “Your Honor, I know it may be difficult to believe but, I accepted Christ as my Savior. I am a new person and not the one who stood before your Honor previously. I would like you to sentence me to a 25 year B Study and return me to Springfield so that I might further the nurturing of my faith.” I went on to tell the judge about the volunteer program that they had down there and how it had made an enormous difference in my life.
A “25 year B Study” is a particular type of sentence, first it requires a 90 day observational period, second the judge brings you back to court after 90 days and finalizes his sentence based on various aspects of what the institution says about you. The maximum amount of time eligible for the crime of bank robbery is 25 years. A judge can lower a sentence but he cannot raise it. Had the crime only carried 10 years, it would have been a 10 Year B Study.
The Judge looked at me. “Well, that’s a lot better prognosis than the institution or prosecutors have given you.” Well, at least I had said something. “However,” he continued. “I am inclined to go along with you and send you back there. I sentence you to 25 years under the B Study provisions of the court.” Bam went the gavel. My heart was racing as I returned to the jail that night. Did I thank God? I hope so because I was excited, actually excited even with 25 years over my head. I returned to Springfield and resumed my church activities. I was a sentenced prisoner so I could hold a job in the kitchen doing pots and pans. I had worked in the kitchen in every prison I had been in. Comfortable surroundings, you might say. I thrilled to see the volunteers again and yes, even more so, Mary.
It was during this time in the summer of ’72 that I received a letter from Mr. Paul Haglin. Mr. Haglin was a friend of my lawyer, Courtney Shands. Mr. Shands was a probate lawyer. Under provisions of an agreement that lawyers offer their services on a pro bono basis to prisoners, he was appointed to my case. Mr. Shands was also a stated atheist. He had seen something in me in my return from Springfield that prompted him to tell his friend about my change.
But just who was Mr. Haglin? Well, to shorten up the wheel base, he founded and owned the Spirit of St. Louis Airport. Mr. Haglin’s letter was particularly encouraging spiritually. Then; he blew me away. What Mr. Haglin was proposing was that they would petition the court to sentence me to work release. I would stay in the Gumbo County Correctional unit. I would work at his airport. Did he know I was in jail for a bank robbery? Did he not know that I had an extensive criminal record that went back to the age of 13? Did he not know that the State of Illinois had already tagged me as a “Doubtful improvable offender?” Yes, the proposal was exciting but not knowing the reality of the situation, this proposal was preposterous. I didn’t have the heart to write him back and tell him that there was no way the Judge was going to sentence me to work release. There was no way he is going to send me to a county institution when I was a Federal Prisoner and even more so the prosecution was going to howl to the moon in protest.
I continued my church activities and read as many books as I could get my hands on. Mr. Haglin’s proposal drifted out of mind over the next few months and then it was over. I was returning to St. Louis City Jail for final sentencing. The last book I had read before leaving was Kathryn Kuhlman’s “I Believe in Miracles.” Was it a coincidence? Or was it a sign? Kathryn Kuhlman was speaking at Kiel Auditorium the night before my sentencing. Still, how does one believe in miracles? It would take a miracle for the judge to sentence me to Mr. Haglin’s proposal. He’s not even going to consider it. Mary had said, We pray for everything. This was no typing test. Faith is the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen. But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that comes to God must believe that he is and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him. This was something that I certainly hoped for and no, you could not see it. I believe in miracles became my mantra that night as I pleaded to God over everything that I knew to believe in something that I could not see or imagine. If it was not to be, so be it.
There’s something about the reading of an indictment that is stunning. John Thomson vs. the United States of America. Had I taken on the entire country, me against the world? The fat lady was about to sing, concluding my court appearances. As my case was called, I stood before the judge on barely steady legs. The judge was going over the formalities of the procedure and may have directed some words towards me, but I was actually too nervous to understand anything. I was along for the ride. Then the Judge said, “I understand that there is a minister in court that would like to speak.” Courtney responded light heartily, “he’d probably like to be a minister, your Honor, but he is a local businessperson.” The judge acknowledged Mr. Haglin and gave him the floor to speak. Mr. Haglin said some introductory remarks and then launched into his proposal. The judge asked Mr. Haglin a few questions, as if he was gathering further information. Silence as the judge pondered what had to be the most startling proposal he had ever heard sitting on the bench. And then he turned to my lawyer, “Counselor, I want you to write me a memorandum and show me how I can do this.” Oh My! Did I hear what I thought I heard? The judge went on to order the U. S. Marshalls to take me to the Gumbo County jail that night. He said further that I had been in the city jail to long. Wailing and gnashing of teeth arose from the prosecutors as they shouted, “if you can’t sentence him to this we’ll only have to bring him back, and that’s a burden on the Marshalls”, and on and on until the judge banged his gavel. The judge was not happy with them. A date was set for another hearing on the matter, but one thing he did say was that he was going to sentence me to 12 years.
Maybe a week went by before I received a copy of the memorandum that my lawyer drew up. Up to this point, he hadn’t done anything extraordinary in trying to defend me. He had seemed disinterested and detached. But since his friend had become involved, he had taken on a whole new demeanor. The memorandum he developed with a good bit of research and was fairly lengthy. In essence, the judge, “had the power to send him to the moon.”
But the prosecutors had done their work. At the time of my arrest, they had found a bank bag with the name Rhinelander Bank on it. We hadn’t robbed a bank in Rhinelander. We had run off with the proceeds of a hotel that I had been working at. It was they who had the bank bag, and I used it to throw their money in. The prosecutors advised the police on Rhinelander, Wisc., that they needed to file charges against me, which they hadn’t or I was going to be set free, or virtually so anyway. With a detainer of further charges pending from the state of Wisconsin, they had stymied the judge from being able to put me on work release.
Disappointed, sure I was. But not to where I negated having faith in the power of prayers and miracles. The judge concluded the proceedings without fanfare, sentencing me to 12 years. The bureau of prisons would now determine to which prison to send me to. They chose Terre Haute, Indiana.







