Today, the Narconon
program has spread from that one program in Arizona
State Prison to include community programs in many
states and countries such as Denmark, Italy, Holland,
Germany, France, Sweden, Spain, Canada, Russia, Ukraine,
Kazakhstan, Mexico, Colombia, Switzerland, New Zealand,
South Africa, Ghana, the United Kingdom, Australia,
Indonesia, Taiwan, Argentina and Brazil.
Until he died from a
sudden illness in 1999, Mr. Benitez was a Hearing
Officer with the Arizona Department of Corrections, the
same system which once kept him under lock and key.
Below, he tells his own story:
I started smoking pot in 1947, when I was thirteen.
Then I went on to injecting opium and other drugs when
I was about fifteen. I started to get into trouble and
was arrested for various crimes, so I decided to join
the Marines to see if I could get away from drugs.
Instead, I ended up getting arrested on drug charges
during the Korean conflict, received a military court
martial and was discharged as undesirable.
In the following years, I kept trying to stay away
from drugs. Sometimes I could stay clean for a short
while, then I would go right back on the needle again.
I carried the monkey for about eighteen years, and it
cost me thirteen calendar years of being locked up. In
addition to doing time in the Marines, I did a Federal
prison term and also was convicted three times in
Arizona state courts.
On my last trip to prison, I pled guilty on
December 22, 1964 to possession of narcotics. Because
I was being sentenced as a habitual offender, the
sentence called for a mandatory fifteen years, and up
to life. I remember speaking to one court official and
telling him how I was still going to leave drugs alone
and maybe even start a drug program. I remember his
words so well: "The best thing to do with guys like
you, after the first time, is take you behind a
building and do you and everyone else a favor and put
you out of your misery."
My attorney arranged for me to go before the judge
just before Christmas, feeling that the spirit of the
holiday might be in my favor. It may have worked. I made
my plea to the judge telling him of all the attempts I
had made over the years to stop using drugs, such as
joining the Marines, committing myself to hospitals for
psychiatric care and therapy on several occasions,
isolating myself in mining towns in a personal attempt
to kick the habit, and even how two marriages had not
helped me straighten up. I told him that in spite of all
those failures, I was still going to make it and was
going to find a solution to my problem, that I had not
yet quit. He must have believed there was still a spark
of hope for me. He sentenced me to the mandatory fifteen
years, but instead of running it to life, he made the
term fifteen to sixteen years.
After arriving at prison, a friend of mine gave me
some reading material to keep me occupied while I was in
the Orientation Cellblock pending transfer to general
population. Among the material was an old, tattered
book, Fundamentals of Thought, by L. Ron
Hubbard. I had heard of his writings when I previously
served a ten-year sentence at Arizona State Prison, but
had never read them. I had always been an avid reader of
books dealing with human behavior. Yet, this small book
impressed me more than anything else I had ever read
before. I read it over and over and then purchased
additional books by Mr. Hubbard and studied them very
carefully during the following year, even into the late
hours of the night in my cell.
The material identified human abilities and their
development. I was amazed I had never run across such
workability within a multitude of other works I had
studied over the years. I'm not a gullible person when
it comes to accepting new or different approaches or
ideas. If they work, fine. Otherwise, throw them out the
window. They either work or they don't. I was tired of
experimenting with so many ideas and philosophies, many
having credence only because some "authority" had
written them.
What impressed me the most about [Hubbard's]
materials was that they concentrated not only on
identifying abilities, but also on methods (practical
exercises) by which to develop them. I realized that
drug addiction was nothing more than a "disability,"
resulting when a person ceases to use abilities
essential to constructive survival.
I found that if a person rehabilitated and applied
certain abilities, that person could persevere toward
goals set, confront life, isolate problems and resolve
them, communicate with life, be responsible and set
ethical standards, and function within the band of
certainty. I finally realized I had developed the
essential abilities needed to overcome my drug problem.
Feeling myself on safe ground, I knew I had to make this
technology available to other addicts in the prison. I
thought back over the years of all the junkies I had
shot up with, and remembered their most treasured
conversation, "One of these days I'm going to quit." I
had found the means and was going to share it with them.
That's when I made the decision real by writing it down
on my calendar page in my cell.
So effective was the technology I had learned, that I
experienced a freedom long lost to me. The tall prison
walls became only temporary barriers. I realized that my
6x8 foot cell was all that I needed as a command post.
Even back then, I knew Narconon would reach
international proportions, and even wrote an article on
it in 1967, "The Purpose of Narconon."
The program was sanctioned by the warden, and it soon
began to expand from its original twenty members. I then
started to get requests from non-addict inmates who
wanted to get into Narconon. They told me they were
impressed with what Narconon students had told them
about the program and what the technology taught. I
approached the Administration for permission to include
non-addicts. At first it resisted, saying that
non-addict members didn't need the services of Narconon,
and that they might disrupt the program. I
demonstrated to officials that any person, inmate or
otherwise, could benefit from Narconon because its
attention was on increasing abilities, that we had an
ethics mechanism built into the program, and that the
responsibility and involvement required of a member
would soon dissuade anyone not serious about
improvement. I convinced the prison officials. The
program met its expectations so well that seven months
after the beginning of Narconon, I was asked to start
another program for young offenders housed in the annex
outside the prison walls.
I then wrote to Mr. Hubbard about Narconon. He and
his organizations supported our program by donating
books, tapes and course materials. We received hundreds
of letters from throughout the world validating our
efforts to make drug addiction and criminal or illegal
behavior a thing of the past in our lives.
Shortly after founding the Narconon program,
William Benitez researched his court conviction and
discovered he had been tried under the wrong statute and
was sentenced in excess of that prescribed by law. Upon
return to court, Mr. Benitez was advised that he could
conceivably be re-sentenced to time served and be
released based on his eighteen months already served
because of the miscarriage of justice.
The Narconon program was only a few months old at
that time and Mr. Benitez believed the program would
collapse if he didn't return to complete it. Rather than
petitioning for his immediate release, he requested a
smaller sentence which would allow him to fully
implement Narconon program development. The Court
re-sentenced him to four to six years, leaving him
sixteen months to serve. Mr. Benitez returned to prison
and developed the program to its full capacity. As he
states, "It was the best, but toughest decision I ever
made in my life. I would have loved to walk away from
that court a free man."
The Narconon program subsequently came to the
attention of the public when reporters from the
Arizona Daily Star secured permission from the
warden to interview the inmate who requested to be
returned to the walls. The Star printed a
two-part series on the Narconon program in August 1966.
TV Channel 10 News from Phoenix also took its cameras to
the prison to interview Mr. Benitez and members of the
Narconon program and to observe its functions.
Mr. Benitez completed his prison term and was
released in October 1967. He moved to California to
expand the Narconon organization and to make it
available to persons in need. Mr. Hubbard and his
organizations supported the effort, resulting in
worldwide expansion.
Years later, Mr. Benitez returned to Arizona and
was hired as Inmate Liaison by former Arizona Department
of Corrections Director, Ellis McDougall, in 1981. Until
his death in 1999, he served as a Hearing Officer on
inmate complaints for the Corrections Director at
Central Headquarters.
|