tkgrrett wrote:masterthearts wrote:I googled Jason Bohn (Columbia grad). I am under the impression that his columbia degree is undergrad. He was to enter Univ. of Florida Law..if it's the same jason bohn
Pretty sure this is the guy:
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You are incorrect. The Jason Bohn in the NYT article says he was a ward of the state. THIS is the Jason Bohn. In this article, he talks about how he was a ward of the state:
In My Own Words
Jason Bohn
Each year, the JCCA Scholarship Fund helps young people from programs throughout the agency continue on with their education. Over the years, there have been many, many success stories of young men and women who overcome tremendous odds to rebuild troubled lives. Jason Bohn is one. A resident at Pleasantville Cottage School during the mid-1990s, Jason graduated from Columbia University in 2005, and spent the past year working as a paralegal for a large New
York Law Firm. In September, he will enter the University of Florida Law School on a full scholarship. We are very proud to publish his story, told in his own words. (106)
“ I am a 27-year old law student, Ivy League graduate and former ward of the court. My entire identity is one of juxtapositions. While I am originally from “Da Bronx”, I now live in Riverdale. My father was addicted to drugs and physically abusive. My mother was addicted to success and eventually abandoned me for a new life and family. I was thirteen years of age, depressed and extremely angry when I went to live at the Pleasantville Cottage School in Westchester County. Upon my arrival to Cottage 8, I was sincerely determined to do whatever it took to get kicked out. I was physically violent against fellow cottage members and disobedient to concerned staff members such as Andre and Clarence. I also went AWOL every other week to escape to the city. Retrospectively I can honestly say that I didn’t give a &%#@ about much. In reality, I was suicidal.
This sort of behavior continued through my first year of placement. In fact, it wasn’t until I realized that the people at PCS were not just going to abandon me that I begin to look at my life as something with value. I remember thinking, “why won’t these people just leave me alone?” But they didn’t. And heading into my second year at PCS, I begin to see my life as an opportunity worth investing in. Indeed it was no secret that I was a very good student despite my behavior. I remember my favorite teacher, Mr. Heine, remarking on one of my report cards that “it is amazing how well Jason performs academically despite his unruly behavior”. It was individuals such as Mr. Buckstein, then the head of PCS who is now at Edenwald, who helped me understand that if I ever got my behavior and emotional issues under control, I could make it. On the whole, my experience at PCS was positive—especially once I became more cooperative and less self-destructive.
After leaving PCS, I began to slowly redefine myself. There were many falls along the way. But I got up. And after graduating from community college some years later, I received a partial scholarship to attend Columbia University. At the time, I was ecstatic that I had been accepted but distraught over the funding shortfall. Like compassionate parents, Helen Solomon and the JCCA Scholarship Fund stepped in and helped make up the difference. Furthermore, Helen provided sound guidance throughout my time at Columbia and during the application process to law school. It made all the difference.
To the wonderful people at PCS and JCCA, I am indebted to you for life.” (436)