Thank you to Pam Louwagie, Aaron Lavinsky and the Star Tribune for the excellent article about John LaDue ("Trying to escape shadow of dread," May 21). It's a complicated situation, and it's absolutely understandable that people in Waseca, Minn., would be wary. I believe, as someone who works directly with people who are about to be released from prison, that LaDue and his family are making the right choices about how to move forward. I'm encouraged by John LaDue's realization that his behavior, not his words, is what will help his neighbors to allow him to reintegrate into the community, and I'm glad that he is taking steps that give him options. People wind up in prison because they have made disastrous choices, often because of mental illness or past trauma. I keep on with this work because I know it's possible to do just what LaDue seems to be doing: learn new ways of coping with stress, set new priorities, think differently, and keep showing up for work — all that work — every day.
Is it easy? Never. Ever.
But possible?
I know it is, if we commit to helping our neighbors who've done time by hiring them, renting to them, including them and keeping them accountable.
Baya Clare, St. Paul
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The article about LaDue makes me question his insight into what caused him to put into motion plans to kill his family and people in his community. I get no sense that he understands himself, or his motivations, or that he has put in the work or matured sufficiently that a reasonable person could say "I'm sure that's all in his past." While this is a sad situation for the LaDue family, it has the possibility to become a tragic one for Waseca. The court system made a mistake in allowing his treatment and supervision to end. An alert person gave us a chance to avoid a massacre; the courts should have given Waseca more of an assurance that John is no longer a threat.
Lisa Bennett, Minneapolis
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I hope that I am not the only white citizen who noted the difference in attitude toward a white child who held murderous thoughts and intent and the way that innocent black teens and early 20-year-olds have been treated by the police.