Horses, Convicts Not Out to Pasture

Unique Program Partners Retired Race Horses With Prison Inmates

They are proud and powerful creatures -- thoroughbreds all. But they're losers. That's how they ended up at James River Correctional Institution, Virginia's oldest prison.

Horses/also-rans of Pimlico and Churchill Downs.
Horses/also-rans of Pimlico and Churchill Downs.
(ABC News)
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But what's true of the horses is also true of the inmates: There are plenty of good candidates for rehabilitation.

The Second Chances program at James River helps retired racehorses transition out of the fast lane into the slower-paced life of the farm. Second Chances allows the horses to escape the glue factory. The program also helps prison inmates escape a life of crime.

The day ABC News visited, Kevin Edwards, who's currently serving time for grand larceny, was bandaging the leg of a huge black stallion.

"What's this fellow's name?" we asked him.

"Believe it or not, his track name was Life Behind Barz," Edwards said, smiling. "But we call him Dusty."

The nine inmates enrolled in the program wear prison-issue dungarees with an orange stripe up the side. A single correctional officer keeps watch over them, with the help of local horsewomen who look slightly out of place in the prison atmosphere.

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Robin Williams of the Thoroughbred Retirement Foundation wore a prim red cardigan with matching earrings. She and several other horse owners from neighboring farms raise money for the program, organize veterinary care and teach the inmates the basics of how to care for horses.

"I really got involved to save horses, that's what I've been involved with all my life. But as soon as I came over here and saw it in action, I realized we're saving people," Williams said.

The program started more than a year ago. It is based on similar programs in New York and South Carolina. The horses at James River would have been destined for the slaughterhouse had they not been sent to prison.

As racetrack losers, their original owners considered the horses too expensive to keep and useless to breed. The owners were happy to give them to the prison.

The prison renovated an old cow barn just down the road from the main prison compound, an intimidating fortress of brick and razorwire. But the barn, refurbished with private donations, seems like it's a world away, surrounded by lush green pastures in the middle of prime Virginia horse country.

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