Arriving at work at noon on a telephone Oklahoma City Bank, he pitches for non-profit Oklahoma Sheriffs and Peace Officers Association.
In return for a promise, potential donors who would obtain a concentration and a label of the window form child, “said Ramsey.
Ramsey Made $ 8 per hour and receive a commission of about 17 per cent on all commitments from donors paid.
“It was rather funny,” said Ramsey. “Say a little luck. I loved nature. It does not bother me.
Ramsey said he worked in the economy since early 2006 for about four or five months, until he was arrested on weapons charges and eluding and Lawton was then a prison.
The current state of the law will not prevent the continuation of its work in a telemarketing, when it is released.
Indeed, a world verification of some 200 professional lawyers enrolled in the state to find the name of 20 sets of criminal court for certain serious crimes.
The list includes taxes of abduction, rape, burglary, drugs and detention, whose name has been informed of the progress of sex authors Register.
A professional lawyer registered under the same name as that of a sex offender, whose name until the emissions of stories earlier this year. The sex of the perpetrators of Oklahoma, was arrested earlier this year in Arizona, in conjunction with a man presenting himself as a student 12 years and a school.
Oklahoma is a majority of states that allow felons to work as telemarketers.
Registered professional lawyers in Oklahoma, fill out a form listing their names, addresses, companies they work for and pay a deposit of $ 10.
A State - Kentucky - is one of the few felons believed to prohibit the advertising of non-profit organizations.
“There were questions for years about the misuse of lawyers false or misleading places for donations,” said Todd Leatherman, Director of the Division of Consumer Protection for the State of Kentucky Attorney General’s Office.
“People are more and more patients willing to hear that people think outside because they are trying to do good things,” said Leatherman. “I think that even for people reflects the location of their custody. It is this security hole, I think it is behind the idea that we must ensure that felons sentenced to adapt to this type of business.”