Foley's Folly
A Journey Through The Maze Of Corrections
by
Book Details
About the Book
"It meant being led back to my cell in
my wrinkled prison blues by a gargantuan guard
who fingered the baton which dangled from his
waist. Later I came to have some regard for this
guard. Perhaps it was because he,too, had a rib
bon of gray brushed carelessly back from his
temples. I think it was envy more than anything
else. I had always had a yearning to be able to
throw people across the room or grind their skulls
together between my hands, crumbling them like
potato chips.
Don't get me wrong. I'm not looking for sympathy.
I'm beyond that. I must pay for my misdeeds.
Because, you see, I had been the warden of a prison."
In the mid-seventies , Edgar Allan Foley stood trial for a number of
felonies committed while the warden of Solmer State Prison in California.
As he watched the parade of witnesses against him, he could not understand
why his actions had been considered crimes against the State. Apparently
• tremulous bureaucracy was out to get him.
Ed Foley had sought the easy way most of his life and it was only by
• twist of fate that he found himself the warden of a prison. He misread
the trends in the criminal justice system and instituted a number of "innovations"
in his prison. He found that the "system", from the Governor to the lowest
echelons of his staff gave him more trouble than he could handle. He was beset
by apathy, jealousy, confusion and intrigue. He had to spend more time dealing
with the problems of staff than inmates.
Foley was an enigma. He believed himself to be an an imposter and psych
path. His staff saw him as a fool, a misfit, a soft touch and a political hack.
These perceived flaws did not prevent a constant pursuit by some beautiful women
and some very disturbed women. He was a veteran of the Korean war, a former
parole officer and a graduate of the University of Texas. He was different
in that he was not bearded or long-haired when these embellishments were in
vogue. He once described himself as "looking more like Peter Falk than Walter
Mathau." Foley may have had the hang-dog face of a Falk but he was nearly six
feet tall, wore tailored suits and bought Miro prints.
The events over nearly twenty years are a combination of drive, circumstance
and luck (mostly bad). lie follow him as he negotiates with one of the most
bizarre casts of characters ever assembled within prison walls and they are
not the inmates.
Ed Foley is an anti-hero and the only real winners in this volume are the
readers who will learn that the correctional system may be the heaviest bureau
cracy ever devised. As Saul Bellow put it; "he tried to do good for the (staff)
but they wouldn't stand still for it." They caused his downfall.
About the Author
Kendall Jenkins has a varied background. Six years in the Marine Corps during World War II. A veteran and survivor of Iwo Jima. He has a BA degree in Political Science. His career spanned 30 years in the Parole branch of the California Youth Authority and the Dept. of Corrections. He has contributed articles to technical journals such as Public Personnel Review, Police, and the Youth Authority Quarterly. His novel Foley's Folly was published in 2000.