Pat Nolan

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File:Pat Nolan & Sheriff John Rovick.jpg
Pat Nolan looks on as children's TV host Sheriff John speaks at a public gathering. Circa 1980

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Patrick J. Nolan (born 1950) is an American lawyer, politician and conservative activist.

Political career

In 1978, Nolan was elected to the California State Assembly, serving the 41st district comprising Glendale, Burbank, Toluca Lake and Sunland-Tujunga.[citation needed]

In 1984, he was elected Assembly Republican Leader, and began an aggressive campaign to elect a Republican majority in the Assembly.[citation needed]

Incarceration and corrections work

Nolan was prosecuted as part of an FBI sting operation called Shrimpscam to target elected officials who accepted illegal campaign contributions. After entering a guilty plea on one count of racketeering in the mid-1990s, Nolan resigned his seat and spent 25 months in a federal prison and four months in a halfway house. His experiences in prison changed his outlook and the course of his work.[1] [2]

After his release, he was recruited by Chuck Colson's Prison Fellowship Ministries to be President of Justice Fellowship, the Prison Fellowship affiliate that works to reform the criminal justice system. During Pat's time at Prison Fellowship, they have formed broad bi-partisan coalitions with civil rights and religious organizations to support important issues in Congress. They successfully protected religious freedom for prisoners in the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, and the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act. A similar coalition successfully pressed for the passage of the Prison Rape Elimination Act. Nolan was later appointed to serve on the National Prison Rape Elimination Commission, National Prison Rape Elimination Commission, a bipartisan panel aimed at curbing prison rape.[1] Nolan also served on the Commission on Safety and Abuse in America's Prisons.[citation needed]

Prison Fellowship was a major force in another left-right coalition that developed legislation to focus prisons on preparing inmates to successfully return to their communities. Called the Second Chance Act, the bill had strong bi-partisan support and passed both houses overwhelmingly.[citation needed]

Nolan authored "When Prisoners Return" a guide for churches and community groups on ways they can help prisoners as they make the difficult transition from prison to their home community.[citation needed]

Personal life

Nolan's family includes his wife, Gail, and three children, Courtney, Katie and Jamie. They live in Leesburg, Virginia.[3]

References

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  2. August 27, 1996, Ex-Assemblyman, Jailed in Federal Probe, to Run Prison Reform Group by MARK GLADSTONE, TIMES STAFF WRITER,[1]
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Party political offices
Preceded by California State Assembly Republican Leader
November 8, 1984–November 10, 1988
Succeeded by
Ross Johnson