The Edmond Sun

Features

September 24, 2009

Former bank robber found ministry following crimes

JACKSON, Fla. — JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — A slug from a .357-caliber Magnum ended Ken Cooper’s 13-year career as a bank robber and started him on the path toward redemption and a network of five prison ministries.

Cooper describes the moment when he encountered a sheriff’s deputy as he walked out of his last score in 1982.

“As if in slow motion, fire flashed from the shooter’s pistol. The plate glass exploded into fragments, coming at me like glistening darts. A slug slammed into my chest, knocking me backward. Shards of glass pierced and sliced my skin. Fire burned in my chest. Someone screamed, the sound bouncing around my mind like an echo. Everything faded to black,” Cooper wrote in his book, “Held Hostage: A Serial Bank Robber’s Road to Redemption.”

Cooper details his double life as a respectable husband, father and “gentleman bank robber” and the punishment for his crimes: Spending a few years in “The Rock,” Florida’s toughest prison, known for its murders, rapes and suicides.

But before he got there, he says he found Christ in a county jail while awaiting sentencing. He wrote that his conversion occurred after he fell to his knees and prayed, “Jesus, I’m a horrible sinner; please come into my heart and change me. I’ve made a terrible mess of my life — and the lives of others.”

After being released from prison about four years later, Cooper co-founded five prison ministries, which have sponsored more than 2,000 men coming out of prisons.

They are Prisoners of Christ and 20/20 World Vision, Ken Cooper Prison Ministry, in Jacksonville; House of Hope in Gainesville and Mercy House in Tallahassee.

The ministries provide inmates with a place to stay and help with their adjustment to life outside the bars. They teach classes on overcoming addiction at Lawtey Correctional Institution, one of the state’s four faith and character-based prisons. There are also seven facilities with faith-based/self-improvement dorms. Together, they can house 4,855 inmates.

The faith-based prisons are an effort to reduce the number of people returning to prison by offering character-based programming for prisoners.

“A hundred times a year, my wife and I conduct worship services and discipleship classes in prisons where we share the good news that God will save and deliver ‘a wretch like me’ through Jesus Christ,” Cooper said.

He’s donating 1,000 copies of his book, published by Chosen Books, to Florida’s 67 prisons in hopes of helping current inmates.

“Ken Cooper is the real deal. He is a prison success story who holds out hope for inmates who want to make changes and family members of inmates who hope change is possible,” said Chaplain Alex S. Taylor, the head chaplain for the Florida Department of Corrections.

Now a mild-mannered 72-year-old grandfather of six and great grandfather of nine, Cooper began holding up banks for the thrill it provided.

“Pulling holdups is about that adrenaline rush — staring down death. It’s not in me to hurt people, and it’s really not about the money,” Cooper said, adding he averaged about $8,800 per bank.

His “banking job” ended when he was shot July 26, 1982, by a Hillsborough County sheriff’s deputy who was responding to an alarm at the Exchange Bank in Tampa.

Cooper remembers his terror of the possibility of being raped and assaulted when he entered jail. He was sentenced to 99 years but under Florida’s laws at the time, he only served a fraction of it.

“They lurked like vultures eyeing roadkill,” Cooper wrote. “In my fear I grimaced but continued to pump myself up. I will not show weakness. God is with me. I’m not afraid.”

He was later transferred to the Rock, a notorious walled fortress inside Union Correctional Institution in Raiford. Cooper said he learned his lesson.

Throughout his ordeals, Cooper said he turned to two books: the Bible and a book by Dr. Robert H. Schuller, when dealing with angry inmates and tense situations.

He said he told a parole examiner: “Well, two years of hard time at the Rock convinced me that prison is not the place for me, and I’m determined to never do anything again to get myself locked up. I won’t even spit on the sidewalk, much less look at a bank.”

When he was released from prison, Cooper worked as a newspaper reporter before beginning his ministry.

“I believe God released me at His chosen time, however, so I could fulfill His plan for my life. To express my deep gratitude and devotion, I am serving a life sentence as a prisoner of Jesus Christ,” Cooper wrote.

Features
  • Report says girl teen drivers ‘more distracted’ than boys

    Differences between the sexes are becoming less noticeable when it comes to teenage driving.
    In what seems like a role reversal, girls are expressing a new need for speed, while aggressive driving and speeding by boys is down.

    March 12, 2010

  • 4-year-old jealous of attention given to newborn

    Q: Shortly after our second child was born a year ago, my 4-year-old son began asking me to stop what I’m doing — usually something with the baby — and see something he’s done or “watch” him do something. Over the past year, this seems to have become a compulsion. He makes these (usually trivial) requests of me at least once an hour. Is he insecure because of the attention I’m giving his younger sister? Is this his way of being reassured I still love him? In any case, I can’t keep this up. Help!

    March 12, 2010

  • A breakdown of the word break

    Break, broke, broken, breaking. Those words are apt to paint a dreary picture, but not always; i.e., a break in the weather would be nice.
    Other than that, we’ve got broken hearts, vows, treaties and bones; jail breaks; teen break-ups and the occasional zits breakout; 7-11 break-ins, and “But, Mom, you said I could!” when Junior misinterprets your “We’ll see” as a promise you’ve broken.

    March 12, 2010

  • 3-12 Faith: religion news

    Ministry name change reflects vision
    Jimmy Hodges Ministries International, an Oklahoma based-missions ministry, has been reaching the people of Africa and India since 1986.
    Supporting national missionaries is the pivotal difference between the way traditional missionary work is done and the way the ministry has approached the same work.

    March 11, 2010

  • Can a racist go to heaven?

    I’m old enough to remember when theaters forced African-Americans to sit in the balconies, public transportation authorities required them to sit in the back of the busses or train cars, and restaurants served them only if they came to the back door. The motto of most businesses in the ’50s and ’60s in my neck of the woods could very well have been, “If you’re black, go to the back.”
    The belief in white supremacy was seldom questioned in my home town.

    March 11, 2010

  • RELIG-MOBILE-CLINIC_1_LA.jpg Group drives to fight abortion

    LOS ANGELES — Last year Dave Wilkinson asked God for guidance. He wanted to know what he could do to better fight abortion.
    Wilkinson, an evangelical pastor, runs three Ventura County, Calif., pregnancy clinics that encourage women to choose alternatives to the procedure. He believes the prevalence of abortion is the biggest test Christians face. “It’s probably one of the things that American Christians are going to have to stand before God and answer for,” Wilkinson said. “He will say, ‘You, as Americans, what did you do to fight abortion?’”

    March 11, 2010 1 Photo

  • PETS_dogsavestoddler.jpg Young dog saves toddler’s life in bitter cold

    PIERCE CITY, Mo. — The first night that Kalina and Jeremy Fortin decided to wean their 2-year-old son of a habit of sleeping with them, the toddler proved way too footloose.
    Sometime shortly thereafter on Sunday morning, Jan. 10, Brody apparently got up on his own and wandered out of the rural Pierce City home. The temperature outdoors was just below zero, and Brody wasn’t wearing much more than the long-sleeved pajama top, sweatpants and socks he had gone to sleep in.
    If not for the family’s young German shepherd, Lobo, the consequences may well have been fatal.

    March 8, 2010 1 Photo

  • Time, effort will alleviate dog’s separation anxiety

    Q: We have a 5-year-old Australian Shepherd named Kati that we have had since she was 12 weeks old. She gets along with all our cats and likes to go outside and run like the wind. When she was a puppy we got her in the late fall and because of the weather, trained her to puppy pads, especially if we were going to be gone more than five or six hours. She has never really stopped urinating on the floor when we leave the house. She will urinate on the floor beside a puppy pad, which I regularly place on the floor when I have to leave. I had our veterinarian check her over and do all the appropriate testing and she does not have a urinary tract infection or anything else wrong that we can find. Is she just doing this to spite me when I leave her alone at home?

    March 8, 2010

  • Whispering Pines 1 Whispering Pines stands atop state scene

    The story of Whispering Pines Bed and Breakfast Inn and Restaurant is like an onion. On the surface, it looks simple — large, Victorian-style house, three suites in the house plus four cottages, located on State Highway 9 southeast of Norman.

    March 5, 2010 3 Photos

  • Writing, baking dual challenges

    The Challenged Pens are my writing group. They’re coming to my house this afternoon, and there’s not so much as a cookie in the place.

    March 5, 2010

Featured Ads

NDN Video

Twitter Updates

Follow me on Twitter