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A new normal at the Church of the Razor Wire

Posted: Wednesday, March 19, 2008 11:08 AM by Dateline Editor
Filed Under: , ,

By Liz Brown, Dateline Producer

Carol Kent grew up the daughter of a preacher. Religion has always been her touchstone. That and her love of family. But this devoted Christian doesn't go to church on Sundays anymore.

Carol and her husband have a new Sunday ritual. They still put on their best clothes and pile into their car, minds filled with anticipation for what is ahead. When they arrive, they might chat with their fellow congregants, and nod to the staff as they take their places. But instead of a church, their new Sunday destination is a Florida prison. Their pews are plastic chairs, the congregants are visiting families, and the staff pack guns. Carol calls it the Church of the Razor Wire.

Photo: Jason Kent with his parents Carol and Eugene Kent.

How do you keep your faith when your only child has been convicted of first-degree murder and there is no doubt that he did it? Carol says she and her husband faced a stark choice. "Gene and I both had to decide: Are we going to live," Carol told us in a heartfelt interview, "or are we going to curl up in a ball and die?"  She says they chose life and describes it as "a new kind of normal," which happens to be the title of a book she's written that came out last year

Carol's book got me thinking. Everyone ensnared in this terrible tragedy has had to adapt to "A New Kind of Normal." Whether it's the father of the victim, Doug Miller, who was gunned down in a parking lot by Carol's son in 1999 (he can still barely talk about what happened to his son without breaking down). Whether it's Doug Miller's daughters who lost both their biological dad and their stepfather in that single act of death. Or whether it's Jason Kent himself. Once a bright-eyed Naval lieutenant, he is now an immaculately dressed lifer at Hardee Correctional Institution. What does normal mean for him and does it include accepting responsibility for what he did?

Jason Kent's new kind of normal is a waiting game. He has a tedious daily routine. He helps the prison chaplain. He works in the library. He takes exercise in the yard. But above all the man who wanted to make a difference to the world is now dedicated, he says, to making a difference to his fellow prisoners.

"Recognizing that I can't fix the past," he told us, "what I try to do is try to be a benefit or a blessing or an encouragement to the guys that I come in contact with."

Jason says he mentors and tries to comfort prisoners who are not lifers. Men who will be getting out. Even if he never walks in freedom himself, he says, he will at least have had some kind of impact on the outside world.

But that doesn't mean Jason has given up on the outside world. Jason may have exhausted all his legal appeals, but in April 2006 his lawyer, Reginald Garcia, filed a clemency petition on his behalf with the Governor of Florida, arguing that Jason's sentence should be commuted. It's a longshot. Garcia says that in the last 27 years only 133 commutation applications have been approved.

Even Jason's own dad admits his son doesn't deserve a "get out of free jail card." He just wonders whether Jason deserves to be in prison for the rest of his life. Because of mandatory sentencing guidelines, the judge at Jason's trial didn't have a choice about sending him to prison for the rest of his life. His parents argue that there is something wrong with our justice system when a man who says he killed someone to protect his family is given the same sentence as a serial killer. But then again who really is the best person to make those kinds of distinctions? A life lost is a life lost. Doug Miller's father has said he would fight any move to release the murderer of his son.

Clemency petitions can take years to be processed and until then Jason will live with his new normal. As will his mother and his father. That means spending more time at the Church of the Razor Wire.

The story of Jason Kent's conviction for murder will be told in a very special Dateline airing Friday, March 21 at 9pm ET on NBC.

Field producer Leonor Ayala blogs about going to the Florida prison to interview Jason Kent.

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Comments

That Jason's sentence is the same as a serial killer's is disappointing.  I commend him and his parents for trying to make the best of a bad situation--not just for themselves, but in the lives of others, too.  Everyone deserves hope.
I agree he should be in prison and serve his entire sentence but I also think his wife pounded him and pounded him until he lost it. I feel for his family and for Doug's family and I also feel sorry for those two little girls being raised by a mother-who obviously caused it all.
This is a really sad story for both parties. A decent man who was trying to protect those young children from being abused. He got caught up in his wife's accusations of child abuse, not only with her, but with her children, and I see him as a victim himself. I do believe that with his military background, that did come into play when the murder was planned and commited. He was taught by the government to protect what he loves and stands for. Yes, he does deserve punishment, but I don't belive life in prison is the answer. He didn't commit this murder for no reason, he committed an act of protection. I don't believe that he would commit an act like this again if put into the same situation. We all learn from our mistakes, and I believe this is one of those cases that a lesson has been learned. I do feel for Doug Miller also, to loose his life isn't the punishment he deserved. I think it's is fabulous that Jason's family stands behind him. I can only imagine what it must feel like to loose a child, father, son to death or prison. I have sympathy for both families. I am sorry it has happened this way. I do have a question, what happen to the wife and kids?
As I sit here reading the comments previously posted, I feel a sense of anger... How can someone who doesn't even know JP make such cruel comments about him...JP is my big cousin and for so many years I’ve  looked up to him, and still do!  Every since I was little JP has always been the big cousin, and to this day I can truly say that I am so proud to still call him my big cousin.   He is a man who made a mistake and is now paying or that mistake.  I am not saying that what he did was right, but please don't make pre-judgments about someone by their actions...I realize it is hard...but imagine how hard it is on us family.  
I feel for Jason, I believe it was almost instinctive for him to protect those children. He deserves punishment for his crime, but I think life with no parole is a little harsh considering people commit much much worse crimes everyday and get away with it.
In reading the exerpts from Jason's wife's 14 page letter,and tryig to better understand his fears for for the little girls, a sad portrait emerges of April.  She had been homeschooled, sheltered and had few friends.  She met Doug--(who was inappropriately older than she was) when she was 15 years old, and he proceeded to sexually touch/abuse her in a manner that if reported, would have sent him to jail.  Where were her parents in all of this?  Instead of protecting her, we find her married at age 16--something her parents would have had to give their permission for.  Before the marriage ends, we learn  that April has two children, leaves Doug three times, files for a personal protection order, and Dateline mentioned that Doug wasn't perfect--that he was a drug addict before he found the Lord.  I found myself thinking that it probably took great courage for a young girl to leave with two babies and no money from an abusive husband with a drug problem, and that perhaps Dateline and some of the bloggers had been overly harsh on April Kent.  I wish there had been testimony offered from a counselor who was an expert on abused women.  I'm certain her fears for her daughters greatly inflamed Jason's Kent's thinking and heightened his fears, but her own story is tragic rather than sinister.
Carol Kent has written a book about this family tragedy:  When I Lay My Isaac Down.  Her website is www.carolkent.org.
As the daughter of a murdered father, its an eye for an eye, think about your actions before you act or else you deserve to rot and die in prison. Fortunatly my father's murderer killed himself so i dont have to deal with this exact situation. No one deserves to lose a family member this way and i feel for both families but no sympathy for Kent himself. THINK BEFORE YOU ACT and you won't be in this situation buddy.
no single person, law, country, religion or any god has the right to take a life, that includes any death penalty.
lets have no firing-squads, hangings, gas chambers or electrocutions.
just let all merders rot in prison and working on chain gangs
I can honestly say I know exactly how this family feels.  I don't think you really know until you have been through something as awful as this.  I am the sister of an Eagle Scout, #1 Senior Patrol Leader in the Nation, Christian Brothers Graduate, West Point Cadet, Invited Presidential Guest to Meet President Ronald Reagan, and Civil Engineer. This is my brother. The hope for everyone in our family.  He could do no wrong. Everything he touched turned golden, he has a loving, polite, and giving demeanor.  He is also convicted of murder and is serving a life sentence.  We are a normal loving tight christian family. What went wrong?  I know exactly how you feel Kents, like someone pulled the rug out from underneath you.  Not only do I ache for my brother, but for the victim and his family.  I think both books "When I Lay My Isaac Down," and "New Kind of Normal," are the perfect titles for the experience.  I would love to talk with the Kents someday, I am sure we are mirrors.  I pray for your son and all the victims in this tragedy, as well as for my brother and all the victims in ours. I tried to get a hold of the Kents a few years ago when this happened to our family, and I happened upon the book "When I Lay My Isaac Down."  Thank you for writing this book, I was sure when I read it you wrote it just for me, my mom, and dad. God whispered and you wrote it all down, then He whispered to me to read it.  Thank You from the bottom of my heart.
Yes, this young man committed a horrible crime.  No, he doesn't deserve to get out of prison.  But if you think about it, he wants to make a difference to the world and is now in the most perfect place to do it.  No, this isn't the way he envisioned making the world a better place, but he can touch so many that really really need it.  He's where God wants him to be.
As I scrolled through and read the messages posted to this BLOG, I became increasingly sad, because I recognized my own beliefs and attitudes--as they were before this incident. I'm not proud of my old attitudes and beliefs through which I used to "lump together" all prisoners who had murdered someone into a "lock 'em up and throw away the key" cell. You see, acts of tragedy of this type or magnitude had never touched my world.

I had never known anyone personally who had been put in jail, or who had been accused of any crime, or who had been murdered. But, that all changed when JP Kent, the son of my long-time friends, Carol and Gene, committed this horrific, shocking, terrible act.

I have known the Kent family for more than 30 yers. I know the Christian upbringing JP received and that he had accepted Jesus at age five. When I learned that JP had committed this terrible crime, my mind and my heart just couldn't comprend how this young man, from such a solid family, with such a high character and love for life and people and the Lord, and who was raised in such a strong Christian home, could have done something so horrible. I still can't comprend or make sense of it, and I certainly don't condone his actions. However, JP's situation has caused me to look long and hard at my own attitudes and beliefs, for I realize that, if such a tragedy can happen in such a strong, Christian family as the Kent family, "but for the grace of God" go me and my family, because such a tragedy can happen to any family without any warning at all.

As I have said, I do not condone JP's actions. I believe that he should pay a price for those actions, but not such a hopeless sentence as life without any possibility of parole. He is not a serial killer, and he had never been in any kind of trouble or have a "record" at the time this tragedy happened. JP was a man with special ops military training trying to protect his family. I trust and hope that at some point JP will receive a comuted sentence through clemency proceedings that can change the "without possibility of parole" to "possibility of parole after a certain number of years."

I can only imagine how the Millers feel, having lost their son as a result of Jason's actions. I know that the Millers are also serving JP's life sentence right along with him, and I wonder if their life sentence would somehow be commuted also if JP's sentence were changed. For I believe that if JP were given the chance, he would spend the rest of his life trying to prevent such a tragedy from happening in the lives of other families. It wouldn't bring the Miller's back, but it would provide the opportunity to bring good out of this horrible situation in a way that can't happen as long as JP is in prison. In saying this, you are seeing how JP's case has changed my attitudes and beliefs about prisoners, whom I used to lump together into a group, but whom I now look at as individuals.

As a result of JP's case, I have been actively involved in prison ministry through my church for more than five years. I do what I can to bring hope into an environment that can be hopeless, especially for those serving very long sentences. I serve as a voluneer along side many people who have been in prison, and I have learned much about prison and myself through this opportunity. I regret that it took the tragic act of my friends' son to cause me to have compassion not only for the victims of crime but also the persons who commit such crimes, because "but for the grace of God," go all of us whose lives are untouched by such events.

This case reminds me of O.J. Simpson trial.
If Jason Kent can afford to hire 100 trial attorneys;  he will be walking on the beach right now.    
O.J.  Simpson case was a  DOUBLE- murder trial.  
"How to get away with a murder" written by  O.J. Simpson.
In my opinion,  April's testimony was a INCOMPETENT.
As a  rape victim myself,  you will carry on the rape trauma to your own graveside.   Rape victims will have to deal with it until the naturla life, eternal life.    April lied under the oath, during the course of the trial.   LOSE LIP SINKS THE SHIP !!!
April used Jason Kent as a some sort of  INSTRUMENT (equipment)  to  get rid of her Ex, Doug Miller.
April's testimony did not help the Defendant.
She was not a  creditable witness.  I have questions about her history of drug use.
My favorite phrase:  would have,  should have, could have.
Isn't this every parent's second worst nightmare??  Worst is that your child would die.  The idea of your child committing a crime and being in prison for life--that seems painful.  Jason Kent's parents won't have grandchildren or any of the "normal" events people work toward.  To pick up the pieces, create a prison ministry and find joy in their lives is so impressive.
I HHAVE 2 BROTHER IN LAWS IN PRISON BOTH FOR MURDER AT DIFFERENT TIME. THE OLDEST DID WHAT DID AND SHOULD ROT WHERE HE LAYS. THE YOUNGER WAS 16 WAS THERE WHEN IT HAPPEN AND ALL THE "FRIENDS" THAT WERE WITH HIM WERE RELATED SO THEY PIONTED THE FINGER AT HIM. POLICE FELLED TO TEST HIS HAND. EVERYTHING THAT COULD HAVE WHEN WRONG WENT WRONG BAD LAWYER JUDGE WANTED TO MAKE EXAMPLE OUT OF HIM GAVE HIM 45YR. WE RAISE MONEY FOR APPEAL 5000 WE GAVE TO NEW LAWYER AND SHE SPLIT . JUSTICE SYSTEM DONT ALWAYS WORK
PLEASE KEEP MY LITTLE BROTHER IN YOUR PRAYERS IT IS HAD ON THE FAMILY HIS DAD IS 85 HE WILL NEVER SEE HIS SON WALK IN THE FRONT DOOR AGAIN IF WE DONT GET HELP
My prayers go out to both families. I was saddened to hear that April no longer is standing by Jason's side.
Its unfortunate that her love wasnt forever.
My prayers go out to both families. I was saddened to hear that April no longer is standing by Jason's side.
Its unfortunate that her love wasnt forever.
I think that if the guy really was protecting his family that god will decided if he deserves to be out....as for the other guys friends and family....you never truly know anyone, just because you thought he was a good guy doesn't mean he was....trust me, i know what im saying when i say that, i thought my brothers were good people, they turned out to be murderers....
I can empathize.  On extreme pressure you can snap.  Your judgment gets warped. You're "only human".  Jason Kent should get clemency.
I am relieved to read the comments by Dave E. and Luanna.  I am also scared to think that those who sit in such pious judgement could be called to serve on a jury.  

All things being equal, our concept of justice should be a good one.  However, all things are not equal and anyone who has had a family member tangled in it knows that fact. Sadly, our justice system is flawed and polluted. I do vote, but I will be much more careful about who gets my vote.  I will never again vote for an incumbent unless that person has earned that vote. I urge everyone to be very careful about who you place in powerful positions.  This country is in dire need of a major clean up.
all i know is if someone had the intent to cause my family or i harm i would put a bullet in him/her. i do not know the circumstances of this case but i beleive everyone has the right to protect themselves.i do agree that it is fummy that once someone is imprisoned they seem to find their"god".the only ones that need to be locked up forever are the baby rapers and the people who have taken a life without reason.
 I think April should have been doing some time for this killing. I think she also planned this whole thing. I find her story hard to believe. I think she just didn't want to loose her daughter's. She would have had to pay child support, and not the father.If the story were true about the father molesting them, then any mother in their right mind would have reported this!No reports made. No doctor's exam's nothing! I don't buy her story! She may have told this story to Jason, but I'm thinking he was a pawn inorder to get rid of her ex.I think this woman ruined two mens live's, and she deserves some sort of punishment. Hopefully God will see to it she gets it!
Vengence is mines saiteth the Lord I will repay! I too have been incarcerated saved by grace through faith before my incident - and have been released...The God I serve is a God of the living to included those behind the walls and on the bricks.
Did anyone here actually listen to what Jason Kent said during his interviews with Dateline?  His defense attorney was a complete idiot.  He should have had Jason Kent testify during the trial.  
Obviously Jason should not have killed, but he did this to protect his family.  As another reader said, he was in the military, and that's what he was trained and indoctrinated to do.  If you listen, really listen to what Jason Kent said during his interivew with Dateline, you could understand (although not justify) why he did what he did. He honestly believed there was a threat to his children and to his family, and he did what he believed needed to be done to protect them.  He even goes so far as to say that his family- his children and his wife-are going through more pain and suffering than he is.  Unebelieveable.  Yes, this man was driven to insanity. All those times he had to drive for 6 hours to take his kids to his wife's ex-husband's house, to someone he believed was molesting his children, all because the court required these visits.  He and his wife tried to deny custody of the kids to the ex-husband, but that failed. They tried to do things through the court system, but the court system failed them.  

There are no inconsistencies whatsoever in his interviews with Dateline.  He is a person who stood by his principles, his beliefs.  He believed he had to do what was necessary to protect his family, that he had no choice.  

I have no idea why the defense attorney didn't have him testify in his own trial, what a colossal mistake.  He at least should have received less time.  He did what he thought he needed to do to protect his family.  Even when he was in prison, life in prison, he said at least my children are safe.

Listen to someone before you judge.  Obviously killing is not right, but he was driven to do this.  I think it is a possibility that his wife manipulated him, but we can't be sure of that.  

Who the heck is representing Jason Kent in his appeals, which sound like they are all gone now, and all he has left is a clemency hearing. He should have fired his defense attorney a long time ago.  

Anyone who does not believe that Jason Kent should not spend the rest of his life in jail should watch thie entire show again and really listen to what Jason said.  There are absolutely no inconsistencies in his interview.  He readily admitted that he killed
Doug Miller.  He felt that he had to.  

It may be easy for us to look at the whole story and say why the heck did you kill him, or why did you believe your wife when she said her ex molested her children, but if you look at how Jason Kent grew up, in a strongly religious family, based on principles, you would understand that.  I know that sounds contradictory but he did what he thought he had to do to protect his family.    

I look at Jason Kent and I feel a great amount of sadness.  I see a young man who was too innocent ( I am not speaking legally here, I am saying he just was someone that would believe whatever his wife told him and take it at its face value, never questioned if his wife might have her own motives) and too naive, but one that stood for his principles and did what he believed he had to do.  Because of this, I believe he should serve jail time but certainly not life.

His clemency hearing should be granted immediately by the Governor of Florida. His defense attorney failed him, plain and simple. I will be following his case.
Even the father of Doug Miller himself said he thinks that Jason Kent may have been manipulated by his wife, to lead him to believe this molestation was happening his children, whether that was true or not. He defended his wife and family's honor and protected them.  He did what the thought he had to do, and he should not be in jail for life.

As a parent who has faced the brick wall that is our legal system, my first job as a mother is to protect my children.  I don't know what Miller did or did not do, but I do know that there are times that the legal system fails to protect our precious children.  God bless all the victims (whomever they are) in this story.
I TRUELY CANT BELIEVE THAT APRIL STOP VISITNG JASON IN PRISON... I KNOW THAT IT MUST HAVE BE VERY HARD FOR JASON... MY HEART GOES OUT TO THE FAMILY AND AS FOR MR.MILLER WE WILL NEVER KNOW IF HE DID OR TRY TO HURT APRIL OR HIS DAUGHTERS... I CAN JUS PRAY THAT APRIL TAKES CARE OF THOSE LITTLE GIRLS...
a note my name pat woolley and i'm from Port Huron,mich also. the story caught my eye and my feelings for all involved. for Mr Miller who i fee caused his own demise to a woman who sounded lecheriious and to a man trained in the military growing up in the church but hell bent in living as Jesus would have him took life in his own hands feeling right and in the way of life he did wrong. from me jason a Prayer for God to for gige and others to open there hearts and minds to how he thought. what he did was wrong to take anothers life what we can do is forgive him for being Human . Amen
I just read Carol's book "Now I lay my Isaac down" and I listened on the edge of my seat. At times I was shaking my head at the titles Jason was given as an outstanding naval graduate and wanting to convince the reader her son was temporarly INSCANE.  I believe this is part of someone pulling at anything to keep from the consequences to our wrong actions. He was no more insane than anyone else doing something against the law and busted for it. I was not buying that and the jury was not either.
I did put myself in his place and thought about my children and what I would have done. I have a hard time believing I would shoot and kill because it is so over the top final. I would be torn to go into hideing and skip the country and rescue the kids in London or Spain or something but to kill the guy, hum no. That guy never gets the time allowed by God to find himself repentant and forgiven by God in this life. Jason was the judge and jury and that does not seem right no matter how I look at it.
I think about the victim's family and would have walked away with a bad taste in my mouth for the poor suffering family of JP when they don't get any time at all with their dead son.
This is a good example of watching my heart not to be rooted in anger and hate towards another person because over time we all may find ourselves temporaraly insane (in sin) and in a murderous act towards another person.
I was encouraged at the family's support to love their son so deeply. They seem to even love April ( the wife of Jason) very deeply too. I did not hear blame but rather heart felt love. That is hard to find in a mother in law!
I was sad for Carol Kent not to be able to have the dream she always wanted to have with the future of family dinner with grey hair, half eaten dinner plates and laughter at the long and pleasant life they enjoyed with their son JP and the family. That is the main thing I walked away with is how sad one's sin effect's others lives. He made a stupid judgment call the day he committed murder and sentenced MANY to life in a prison of sadness and life with out ecsape of the pain it has caused mother's father's, aunt's, uncles, step children, wife and anyone dealing with the situation. I feel for the 2 little girls and that is it! They were victims by both men it looks like to me. One father has allegedly sexually molested them and the other taught them a terrible lesson in life of murder, hate with rage to kill and took the normal away from what they will ever know of what a family should have. I think the sentence was a bit to harsh because of the nature of the act and his history. Why are sexual offenders living in my neighborhood off the hook for the most part and he is locked up. We need a King Solomon of our day that will judge rightly and fairly. If I were on the jury he would have gotten 20 year and that would be it. All I can hope is that the real father to the two girls was not falsely accused. He is dead so only God knows.
Our ways our not God's ways. His ways are higher...
I find it intresting that Dan on Mach 16 made the comment about the athiest president. I guess that is another misconception. I am not an athiest, however I think that even if you are you can still have compassion, grace and mercy for people. I truly believe that statement was made out of ignorance.

Dan, what if the person that was serving a life sentence and being beaten down in jail was someone you loved, would you be so quick to have that same attitude?
Its a really sad situation for everyone. both sets of families are having to suffer because of what has happened. i guess in life there are consequences for our actions, and for jason its his life prison sentence. I dont think its our place to judge people and circumstances. i think leave that up to God. just remember one day we will all have to come face to face with God and be accountable for our lives. we get to make choices everyday of our lives, so make sure of what path you choose
Saying sorry comes a little too late.  My fiancee was brutally murdered and the murdered just kept saying sorry and is now trying to get his life without parole shortened.  Sorry doesn't bring that person back they chose to end a life why should they be able to walk among their family memebers when their victim is now unable to.
I am not here to  judge,because I believe only god can judge,but I think any parent would have done the same to protect ur kids.Maybe killing Doug was not the right thing to do,but I also think Jason should be release.If doug was found guilty of molesting his own children, he would have been life in prison.Jason deserve to be a free man.I believe he is a good man
Had I done something like this, my family would have disowned me, and probably would never have spoken about me again, peroid.

It is the same for everyone, Mom, dad, grandma, grandpa, EVERYBODY.

I can't help but wonder if Doug Miller was cut from the same cloth as Mickey Hughes of "The Burning Bed": a man loved by his family and friends but an alcoholic and incorrigible wife abuser whose ex-wife finally had enough one day. Sad story, really. Glad to see that Jason is able to make a difference behind bars.
The hate in some of these postings is what makes me so sad. Although hate kills, hate of injustice or evil can turn into passion with God's direction. Jason hated the evil in Mr. Miller...but let's not let hate turn us into evil-doers, too. There is a battle raging between good and evil, plain and simple. And, there are a lot of mysteries. But the war is not between flesh and blood, but in the heavenlies. May God's grace and forgiveness fall upon all of the families involved, and if you have a chance to hear Carol Kent speak, please do so. 1 Corinthians 15:10
But by the grace of God I am what I am, and His grace toward me did not prove vain; but I labored even more than all of them, yet not I, but the grace of God with me.


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