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Newsroom Home > Multimedia
Multimedia
The sound bites below include questions and answers from Chuck Colson, Warden Burl Cain and Rocco Morrelli regarding Prison Fellowship's in-prison programs.
Chuck Colson, founder of Prison Fellowship Ministries:
Once known as the White house "hatchet man," former aide to president Richard Nixon Charles W. Colson, entered a plea of guilty to Watergate-related charges in 1974 and entered Alabama's Maxwell Prison as a new Christian and as the first member of the Nixon administration to be incarcerated for Watergate-related charges. After his release, Colson founded Prison Fellowship, which has become the world's largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners, and their families. Prison Fellowship is also a lead collaborator for the Operation Starting Line program. Colson's personal prison experience and his work in prisons throughout the world for nearly 30 years has made him one of the nation's influential voices for criminal justice reform.
Warden Burl Cain, Louisiana State Penitentiary:
Burl Cain has been the warden of Louisiana State Penitentiary, Louisiana's largest maximum-security prison since 1995. Once known as the "Bloodiest Prison in America," under Warden Cain's leadership it has become one of the safest, most secure and progressive maximum-security prisons in the nation.
Rocco Morelli, ex-offender:
Once known as the "Wall Street Gangster," former Mafia hit man and ex-prisoner Rocco Morelli now shares the story of his radical life-change with incarcerated men and women across the country as a speaker for a national prison outreach called Operation Starting Line.
Below are links to Prison Fellowship multimedia files. (You may need RealPlayer, Quicktime, or Windows Media Player to view these files.)
- Colson 1: Prisons are an important place for people & faith-based groups to spend time/resources
- Answered by Prison Fellowship Founder Chuck Colson
- Play
- Download
- Colson 2: Prisons are an important place for people & faith-based groups to spend time/resources
- Answered by Prison Fellowship Founder Chuck Colson
- Play
- Download
- Cain 1: Prisons are an important place for people & faith-based groups to spend time/resources
- Answered by Warden Cain, Louisiana State Penitentiary
- Play
- Download
- Cain 2: Prisons are an important place for people & faith-based groups to spend time/resources
- Answered by Warden Cain, Louisiana State Penitentiary
- Play
- Download
- Cain 3: Prisons are an important place for people & faith-based groups to spend time/resources
- Answered by Warden Cain, Louisiana State Penitentiary
- Play
- Download
- Morelli: Prisons are an important place for people & faith-based groups to spend time/resources
- Answered by ex-offender Rocco Morelli
- Play
- Download
- Morelli 1: How does faith help someone turn and be reformed from a destructive criminal lifestyle?
- Answered by ex-offender Rocco Morelli
- Play
- Download
- Morelli 2: How does faith help someone turn and be reformed from a destructive criminal lifestyle2
- Answered by ex-offender Rocco Morelli
- Play
- Download
- Morelli 3: How does faith help someone turn and be reformed from a destructive criminal lifestyle?
- Answered by ex-offender Rocco Morelli
- Play
- Download

