Larry Lawton | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Born | Lawrence Robert Lawton October 3, 1961
North Hempstead,
New York, U.S. | |||||||||
Nationality | American | |||||||||
Criminal status | Released from the federal prison system on August 24, 2007 | |||||||||
Conviction(s) | Interfering with the interstate commerce under Hobbs Act through robbery | |||||||||
Criminal penalty | Four concurrent 11-year federal imprisonment sentences | |||||||||
Imprisoned at | FCI Schuylkill, USP Lewisburg, FTC Oklahoma City, USP Atlanta, FCI Coleman, FCI Jesup, FCI Edgefield, FCI Yazoo, FCI Forrest City, FCI Tallahassee, and Riker's Island | |||||||||
YouTube information | ||||||||||
Channel | ||||||||||
Years active | 2019–present | |||||||||
Genre | Entertainment | |||||||||
Subscribers | 1.48 million [1] | |||||||||
Total views | 189.9 million [1] | |||||||||
| ||||||||||
Last updated: January 6, 2024 | ||||||||||
Website |
realitycheckprogram |
Lawrence Robert Lawton (born October 3, 1961) is an American ex-convict, author, paralegal, motivational speaker, and YouTuber. Lawton gained notoriety for committing a string of jewelry store robberies along the Atlantic Seaboard prior to his arrest in 1996. He spent 12 years in prison, and once released, began a career as a motivational speaker, life coach, and author. [3] [4]
In 2007, he started the Reality Check Program to help educate at-risk youths on the consequences of breaking the law. [5] [6] He has acted as a spokesman for prisoners and prisoner issues, [7] been a vocal advocate for prison reform, and made appearances in the media as an expert on robberies. [8]
Lawton was born in North Hempstead, New York on October 3, 1961. His first encounter with organized crime was through his father, a metal worker who delivered bribes to the New York mafia. [9] In grades one through six, Lawton served as an altar boy at St. Francis de Chantal in The Bronx, [10] where he was sexually abused by a Catholic priest. [9] Lawton attended Intermediate IS 192 and Lehman High School, but did not graduate. In August 1979, he joined the Coast Guard [11] and took part in the Mariel boatlift. [10] In 1983, having earned his GED, he left the Coast Guard and began engaging in criminal activity, mostly loan sharking and bookmaking. [12]
Lawton executed his first robbery when he was 28, an inside job to collect insurance money. [13] He then began robbing jewelry stores along the Atlantic Coast, [5] using his contacts within the Gambino crime family to fence the stolen merchandise. [10] [14] At one point, he purchased an Italian pizza restaurant in North Lauderdale, Florida, which he later burned down as part of an insurance fraud. [9]
In May 1994, three males robbed a jewelry store in Daytona Beach, Florida, netting $500,000 (over $1,000,000 in 2023) [15] worth of gold and diamonds. [16] The robbers had dropped off jewelry for repairs, and later returned to rob the store. [17] Then in October 1994, four individuals robbed a jewelry store in Palm Bay, Florida. The two store owners were bound while two individuals robbed the store and a third acted as a lookout and the other as the getaway driver. [16] The robbers took $480,000 ($910,600.81 in 2022) [18] worth of gold and diamonds making it the biggest robbery in the city's history. [16] [19] Local police believed there was a connection between this robbery and a robbery that took place in May 1994 in Daytona Beach, and contacted the FBI. [16] [19]
In 1996, there was a robbery of a jeweler in Fairless Hills, Pennsylvania. The robbers had been there the day before and returned asking about a ring. The robbers drew what police at the time believed were firearms, and restrained the store owner. The store owner managed to break free and grabbed a .38 caliber pistol and fired five shots at the robbers as they fled. [20] [21] One bullet narrowly missed Lawton, but struck his brother. [10] Lawton later said that he used a BB gun during the robbery. [12] Afterwards, another jewelry store in Lower Bucks County became suspicious of a person they believed was casing the place for a future robbery. They reported the car's license plate, which linked the car to Lawton. [22] Lawton was arrested by the FBI on December 2, 1996, in Florida and charged with the Fairless Hills armed robbery. [23] Fingerprint evidence connected Lawton to the October 1994 Palm Bay heist, and he was charged with that crime as well. [19]
Lawton is believed to have hit around 20 to 25 jewelry stores, [13] stealing a self-estimated total of around $15–18 million worth of high-value items, including watches, diamonds, and other gems. [24] [25] Lawton later claimed that he was the biggest jewel thief of the 1980s and 90s operating within the United States of America. [5]
Lawton was offered a three-year sentence in exchange for disclosing his accomplices but did not take the deal. [12] He was sentenced for racketeering and robbery and spent 11 years in prison before being released in 2007. [26] He received an additional sentence in 2002 for giving false witness. [12] While in prison, Lawton earned a paralegal qualification and became a gang mediator. [27] He was incarcerated in many prisons during his sentence, which included Jesup in Georgia, Riker's Island in New York, Edgefield in South Carolina, and Yazoo City in Mississippi. [12] [27] While recounting his prison experiences he said: "I saw inmates stabbed and friends die" and "I saw young men raped and pimped out as prostitutes for other inmates." [28] Another time he said: "I had my arms pinned down, and I was beaten and peed on — by the guards. I was kicked. My ribs were broken. I was beaten once a month." [12]
While in prison in 2003, Lawton was sent to solitary confinement for 27 days as punishment. Lawton filed a lawsuit against the prison and staff alleging that they violated his rights. The suit was later dismissed. [28] Lawton says he regrets his time spent in prison, because he missed out on seeing his children grow up; his grandmother died, and his father became afflicted with Alzheimer's disease while he was inside. [29]
After release he went to Palm Bay, Florida and started LL Research and Consulting and met a business partner. [12] He also founded the Reality Check program which aims to show teens the consequences of a criminal life. [30] [31] The program is four hours long. [27] Lawton does not hold a degree in child psychology or criminology. [12] High school students can use the time spent in the program towards the 75 hours of community service required for the Bright Futures Scholarship Program. [26]
Law enforcement officials and judges have supported the program. [32] In 2009, the Brevard County Sheriff's Office spent $4500 on 500 DVDs from the Reality Check program. [33] The DVDs contained condensed versions of Lawton's program and were 67 minutes long. In 2009 the Rockledge Florida police used the DVDs as part of a community policing project with the money to buy the DVDs procured through asset forfeiture. [34] By 2010, Lawton had shipped 10,000 DVDs across the country. [29] In 2013, Lawton was made an honorary police officer by the Lake St. Louis, Missouri Police Department due to his work after prison. [32] [35] He was the first ex-con to ever become an honorary police officer. [32] The Lake St. Louis police chief praised Larry's message about the consequences of going to prison and said it is not a scared straight program, noting that Lawton said "fear doesn't have a lasting impact." [35] Lawton and the police chief later appeared before United States Congress in recognition of the program. [24] [36]
The superintendent of student services at Brevard Public Schools declined to use the program and questioned its effectiveness: "[w]hile the program is well-organized and well-intentioned, it does not follow the scientific evidence-based research guidelines". [12]
Lawton also founded the Reality Check Foundation, which is a 501(C)(3) charity that includes a mentoring program, and an annual golf outing. [37] [38] It also hosts an annual bowling tournament. [39]
Lawton is an advocate for prisoners and their rights, and comments on the justice system. [40] [7] [11] In 2013, the Brevard County Jail re-introduced chain gangs as a pilot project with the goal of deterring crime. Lawton was critical of the move, saying that "[c]hain gangs send a bad message about [the US]." Instead he proposed a better use of law enforcement resources would be to "help inmates with drug addiction." [4] He was critical of Brevard County stopping letters to inmates in 2013. He said that some of the recipients could be innocent. [41] Other issues he is concerned with include prison conditions as well as post-release debt loads and their influence on unemployed ex-convicts. [42] Lawton has also shown concern over the prevalence of fentanyl-laced heroin, noting that in the past dealers had tried to sell pure heroin without any additives. [43]
In 2017, he appeared in a middle school in Havelock, North Carolina to explain his prison experiences. His appearance was part of the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program. [44] [31]
Lawton has made many media appearances. He has appeared on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, Christian Broadcasting Network, and Fox News. [29] Often he appears discussing crimes in the media as an expert on robberies. [8] [13] In 2010, Lawton filmed the pilot and sizzle reel for Lawton's Law, a reality show based on his work with at-risk youth. [45] He also hosted a local talk radio show. [12] In 2012, Lawton self-published Gangster Redemption, an autobiography co-written with Peter Golenbock. [10] [11] The 367-page book covers his early life, his string of crimes, and his post-release career. [10]
In 2019, he made a video with Vanity Fair where he analyzed fictional robberies from films such as The Italian Job and Heat. [46] Lawton has a YouTube channel, and he has made videos analyzing heists in movies and video games such as Grand Theft Auto V; he also plays Prison Architect. [46] [47]
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)
Larry Lawton | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Born | Lawrence Robert Lawton October 3, 1961
North Hempstead,
New York, U.S. | |||||||||
Nationality | American | |||||||||
Criminal status | Released from the federal prison system on August 24, 2007 | |||||||||
Conviction(s) | Interfering with the interstate commerce under Hobbs Act through robbery | |||||||||
Criminal penalty | Four concurrent 11-year federal imprisonment sentences | |||||||||
Imprisoned at | FCI Schuylkill, USP Lewisburg, FTC Oklahoma City, USP Atlanta, FCI Coleman, FCI Jesup, FCI Edgefield, FCI Yazoo, FCI Forrest City, FCI Tallahassee, and Riker's Island | |||||||||
YouTube information | ||||||||||
Channel | ||||||||||
Years active | 2019–present | |||||||||
Genre | Entertainment | |||||||||
Subscribers | 1.48 million [1] | |||||||||
Total views | 189.9 million [1] | |||||||||
| ||||||||||
Last updated: January 6, 2024 | ||||||||||
Website |
realitycheckprogram |
Lawrence Robert Lawton (born October 3, 1961) is an American ex-convict, author, paralegal, motivational speaker, and YouTuber. Lawton gained notoriety for committing a string of jewelry store robberies along the Atlantic Seaboard prior to his arrest in 1996. He spent 12 years in prison, and once released, began a career as a motivational speaker, life coach, and author. [3] [4]
In 2007, he started the Reality Check Program to help educate at-risk youths on the consequences of breaking the law. [5] [6] He has acted as a spokesman for prisoners and prisoner issues, [7] been a vocal advocate for prison reform, and made appearances in the media as an expert on robberies. [8]
Lawton was born in North Hempstead, New York on October 3, 1961. His first encounter with organized crime was through his father, a metal worker who delivered bribes to the New York mafia. [9] In grades one through six, Lawton served as an altar boy at St. Francis de Chantal in The Bronx, [10] where he was sexually abused by a Catholic priest. [9] Lawton attended Intermediate IS 192 and Lehman High School, but did not graduate. In August 1979, he joined the Coast Guard [11] and took part in the Mariel boatlift. [10] In 1983, having earned his GED, he left the Coast Guard and began engaging in criminal activity, mostly loan sharking and bookmaking. [12]
Lawton executed his first robbery when he was 28, an inside job to collect insurance money. [13] He then began robbing jewelry stores along the Atlantic Coast, [5] using his contacts within the Gambino crime family to fence the stolen merchandise. [10] [14] At one point, he purchased an Italian pizza restaurant in North Lauderdale, Florida, which he later burned down as part of an insurance fraud. [9]
In May 1994, three males robbed a jewelry store in Daytona Beach, Florida, netting $500,000 (over $1,000,000 in 2023) [15] worth of gold and diamonds. [16] The robbers had dropped off jewelry for repairs, and later returned to rob the store. [17] Then in October 1994, four individuals robbed a jewelry store in Palm Bay, Florida. The two store owners were bound while two individuals robbed the store and a third acted as a lookout and the other as the getaway driver. [16] The robbers took $480,000 ($910,600.81 in 2022) [18] worth of gold and diamonds making it the biggest robbery in the city's history. [16] [19] Local police believed there was a connection between this robbery and a robbery that took place in May 1994 in Daytona Beach, and contacted the FBI. [16] [19]
In 1996, there was a robbery of a jeweler in Fairless Hills, Pennsylvania. The robbers had been there the day before and returned asking about a ring. The robbers drew what police at the time believed were firearms, and restrained the store owner. The store owner managed to break free and grabbed a .38 caliber pistol and fired five shots at the robbers as they fled. [20] [21] One bullet narrowly missed Lawton, but struck his brother. [10] Lawton later said that he used a BB gun during the robbery. [12] Afterwards, another jewelry store in Lower Bucks County became suspicious of a person they believed was casing the place for a future robbery. They reported the car's license plate, which linked the car to Lawton. [22] Lawton was arrested by the FBI on December 2, 1996, in Florida and charged with the Fairless Hills armed robbery. [23] Fingerprint evidence connected Lawton to the October 1994 Palm Bay heist, and he was charged with that crime as well. [19]
Lawton is believed to have hit around 20 to 25 jewelry stores, [13] stealing a self-estimated total of around $15–18 million worth of high-value items, including watches, diamonds, and other gems. [24] [25] Lawton later claimed that he was the biggest jewel thief of the 1980s and 90s operating within the United States of America. [5]
Lawton was offered a three-year sentence in exchange for disclosing his accomplices but did not take the deal. [12] He was sentenced for racketeering and robbery and spent 11 years in prison before being released in 2007. [26] He received an additional sentence in 2002 for giving false witness. [12] While in prison, Lawton earned a paralegal qualification and became a gang mediator. [27] He was incarcerated in many prisons during his sentence, which included Jesup in Georgia, Riker's Island in New York, Edgefield in South Carolina, and Yazoo City in Mississippi. [12] [27] While recounting his prison experiences he said: "I saw inmates stabbed and friends die" and "I saw young men raped and pimped out as prostitutes for other inmates." [28] Another time he said: "I had my arms pinned down, and I was beaten and peed on — by the guards. I was kicked. My ribs were broken. I was beaten once a month." [12]
While in prison in 2003, Lawton was sent to solitary confinement for 27 days as punishment. Lawton filed a lawsuit against the prison and staff alleging that they violated his rights. The suit was later dismissed. [28] Lawton says he regrets his time spent in prison, because he missed out on seeing his children grow up; his grandmother died, and his father became afflicted with Alzheimer's disease while he was inside. [29]
After release he went to Palm Bay, Florida and started LL Research and Consulting and met a business partner. [12] He also founded the Reality Check program which aims to show teens the consequences of a criminal life. [30] [31] The program is four hours long. [27] Lawton does not hold a degree in child psychology or criminology. [12] High school students can use the time spent in the program towards the 75 hours of community service required for the Bright Futures Scholarship Program. [26]
Law enforcement officials and judges have supported the program. [32] In 2009, the Brevard County Sheriff's Office spent $4500 on 500 DVDs from the Reality Check program. [33] The DVDs contained condensed versions of Lawton's program and were 67 minutes long. In 2009 the Rockledge Florida police used the DVDs as part of a community policing project with the money to buy the DVDs procured through asset forfeiture. [34] By 2010, Lawton had shipped 10,000 DVDs across the country. [29] In 2013, Lawton was made an honorary police officer by the Lake St. Louis, Missouri Police Department due to his work after prison. [32] [35] He was the first ex-con to ever become an honorary police officer. [32] The Lake St. Louis police chief praised Larry's message about the consequences of going to prison and said it is not a scared straight program, noting that Lawton said "fear doesn't have a lasting impact." [35] Lawton and the police chief later appeared before United States Congress in recognition of the program. [24] [36]
The superintendent of student services at Brevard Public Schools declined to use the program and questioned its effectiveness: "[w]hile the program is well-organized and well-intentioned, it does not follow the scientific evidence-based research guidelines". [12]
Lawton also founded the Reality Check Foundation, which is a 501(C)(3) charity that includes a mentoring program, and an annual golf outing. [37] [38] It also hosts an annual bowling tournament. [39]
Lawton is an advocate for prisoners and their rights, and comments on the justice system. [40] [7] [11] In 2013, the Brevard County Jail re-introduced chain gangs as a pilot project with the goal of deterring crime. Lawton was critical of the move, saying that "[c]hain gangs send a bad message about [the US]." Instead he proposed a better use of law enforcement resources would be to "help inmates with drug addiction." [4] He was critical of Brevard County stopping letters to inmates in 2013. He said that some of the recipients could be innocent. [41] Other issues he is concerned with include prison conditions as well as post-release debt loads and their influence on unemployed ex-convicts. [42] Lawton has also shown concern over the prevalence of fentanyl-laced heroin, noting that in the past dealers had tried to sell pure heroin without any additives. [43]
In 2017, he appeared in a middle school in Havelock, North Carolina to explain his prison experiences. His appearance was part of the Drug Abuse Resistance Education program. [44] [31]
Lawton has made many media appearances. He has appeared on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, Christian Broadcasting Network, and Fox News. [29] Often he appears discussing crimes in the media as an expert on robberies. [8] [13] In 2010, Lawton filmed the pilot and sizzle reel for Lawton's Law, a reality show based on his work with at-risk youth. [45] He also hosted a local talk radio show. [12] In 2012, Lawton self-published Gangster Redemption, an autobiography co-written with Peter Golenbock. [10] [11] The 367-page book covers his early life, his string of crimes, and his post-release career. [10]
In 2019, he made a video with Vanity Fair where he analyzed fictional robberies from films such as The Italian Job and Heat. [46] Lawton has a YouTube channel, and he has made videos analyzing heists in movies and video games such as Grand Theft Auto V; he also plays Prison Architect. [46] [47]
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)
{{
cite news}}
: External link in |trans-title=
(
help)