Billy Lane Wrenching In
Prison
If the State of
Florida was really smart they would have Billy
teach others how to build a motorcycle and then they would have a job to go to when the get released.
A bike built in
prison could then be auctioned and or raffled off to raise money for inmates their families and the prison
system.
Of course the
action of Billy doing this should be counted towards extra gain time and a earlier release from
prison.
Floridahas a prison industries named PRIDE
and this may be something they would be interested in as well.
With the increase in
motorcycles there is always going to be a need for people to work on them.
Lane wrenching in
prison
Bike builder in
'motor pool,' teaching others to weld
BY KEYONNA SUMMERS • FLORIDA TODAY • January 3, 2010
·
Celebrity motorcycle builder Billy Lane hasn't lost his passion nor shed his "gearhead" persona while serving
time in the state penitentiary.
A state prison spokeswoman says Lane, serving six years
for a 2006 car crash that killed another biker, has spent the last four months using his mechanical skills at
the Avon Park Work Camp to fix Department of Corrections vehicles as part of the "motor
pool."
Lane, 39, was sentenced in August to prison after
pleading no contest to one count of vehicular homicide for crashing his pickup truck head-on into 56-year-old
Sebastian Inlet Park ranger Gerald Morelock's motorcycle while speeding past slow traffic in a
no-pass zone on Sept. 4, 2006.
"It looks like he's using his
skills to help the state of Florida," said corrections spokeswoman Jo Ellyn
Rackleff.
In the meantime, the Melbourne Beach founder of Choppers Inc. has resolved his other legal problems surrounding the
crash.
Court records show a civil suit
filed last year by Erin Derrick -- the passenger in Lane's truck the night of the Labor Day 2006 crash -- seeking compensation for hospital
bills and suffering related to back injuries was settled through mediation.
The suit also held liable
DaimlerChrysler , which provided the promotional vehicle to
Lane despite his prior driving history.
Derrick's attorney, Martin T.
Buckley of Orlando, declined to comment on the suit or its resolution.
Lane's attorney, G. Jeffrey Vernis of North Palm
Beach, did not return a call seeking
comment.
A wrongful death suit brought against Lane and
DaimlerChrysler by crash victim Morelock's family was settled out of court in July 2007 for an undisclosed
amount.
Greg Eisenmenger, Lane's attorney in the criminal case,
said he visited the prison work camp around early October to discuss filing a motion seeking a reduced
sentence for Lane, claiming Morelock's family thought Lane could do more good outside of
prison.
A judge denied the motion, and Eisenmenger said no more
are planned.
Lane has tried to turn the experience into a positive by
helping other inmates learn how to weld, according to Eisenmenger.
"He's adjusting as best he can," Eisenmenger said. "They
are allowing him to work in the shop, help other people and make good use of his time, so I think that's a
positive."
Corrections spokeswoman Rackleff said inmates are
assigned to facilities and work based on extensive mental and physical screens during
reception.
She said Lane was immediately assigned to the "motor
pool," where his skills could be used.
Working doesn't automatically equal gain time, Rackleff
said. Instead good behavior earns that, and working is part of it.
Lane, placed in a minimum custody setting, has not been
the subject of any disciplinary action, Rackleff said.
Eisenmenger said Lane is still willing to comply with a
request Morelock's family voiced at sentencing asking Lane to use his celebrity status to help save the lives
of young people through a foundation they plan to create in Morelock's name.
"While in prison, he's not in a position to do that,"
Eisenmenger said. "But it's still his plan when he gets out."
Contact Summers at 242-3642 or
ksummers@floridatoday.com.
Rogue
Sturgis Freedom Fighters
Motorcycle Hall Of Fame
Member 2005
www.bikerrogue.com
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