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Alex Hamil recovers from accident he caused to face jail sentence MARSHALL Alex Hamil lay in a hospital bed last year, tubes sticking out of his bandaged body, injured in a car crash the morning after St. Patrick Day. Linda and David Hamil sat by his side, watching the recovery. They saw the tubes be taken away, Hamil foggy eyes open and, eventually, a look of recognition. He was all right. "We would have been rejoicing that he was becoming more conscious," Linda Hamil said. "But for us, the whole time . you knew there was a trial or jail waiting for him." "That was awful," she said, "and then to have to tell him." Hamil had killed someone: John Allen Hawkins of Okemos, an East Lansing suburb. Hamil had been intoxicated, with a blood alcohol content of .20, two and half times Michigan legal limit of .08. He had stolen the vehicle he was driving, a gray utility pickup owned by Michigan State University, and was operating it under a restricted license. "David told him," Linda said. "(Alex) said, have to be punished. And we said, And then he went back to sleep and he forgot." Hamil began an 8 to 20 year prison sentence on July 22, having pleaded no contest to second degree murder charges. The stolen vehicle charge was dropped in a plea bargain, but he owes the university $43,381.82 for the truck. By most accounts, Hamil was a good kid who made a huge mistake. His life has become a cautionary tale. He knows it. At his sentencing, he wept and said he should have died in Hawkins place. That idea became a steady refrain. "Don get me wrong," Hamil said later, "I happy I alive, and I appreciate life more than ever before, but if anyone should have died in that accident, it should have been me." LIFE AMONG CRACK DEALERS A former prom king, Hamil now begins most mornings at 6 o when he is awakened at Thumb Correctional Facility by the loud, shrill voice of a female prison guard. She yells, "C gentlemen! Time for chow!" "I really hate that," he said. He exercises with crack dealers. He has shared a cell with a few different inmates, the worst a gassy sex offender, Hamil mom said. Right now he rooms with a guy arrested for strong arm robbery, he said. Hamil, now 20, described his cell as having a good sized window in it. He keeps a row of books on his desk, and there a small TV. Other than those small luxuries, it is unwelcoming. "Have you ever been to Albion College and seen the dorm rooms?" he asked. "It a lot like that, just smaller, and it got a toilet in it." Prison life is filled with spare time. Outside of his work handling paperwork as a unit clerk, he spends his days exercising, playing cards, sleeping and eating. It a basic existence with plenty of time for thought. While in Ingham County Jail, Hamil began to read the Bible and, for the first time, made it all the way through, he said. He looks different now. His head is shaved and the exercise has given him more muscle weight. His days are far removed from those spent at Marshall High School. There, Hamil was a prototypical teenager. He ran track, setting a school record as part of a 3,200 meter relay team. He worked part time for Hungry Howie He liked role playing video games and reading science fiction books. In photos, he seen with curly brown hair falling down to his chin and a smile on his face. Some spoke of Hamil good nature. Jim Unruh, the former head track coach at Marshall, recalled Hamil commitment to the sport waning his senior year. For that reason, Hamil and another runner were given a letter by Unruh, informing them they were dismissed from the team. "The one guy got kind of mad," Unruh said. "Alex read it and all he did was, on his way out the door, he shook my hand and said, for all your work coach. It made me feel really even worse. He didn hold anything against me. That was a testament to his character." Hamil also smoked pot and drank alcohol, calling the latter a "rite of passage" which he took at age 16. After graduation, in October 2004, he said he was arrested for possession of marijuana, leading to the restricted license. HORRIBLE DREAM crash itself happened in the early morning on March 18, 2005. The previous night, partying with friends at Michigan State University, Hamil had become heavily intoxicated. He left a friend dorm room and wandered onto the campus, where a light snow covered the ground. There, in a parking lot near the Physical Plant, he found an idling maintenance truck that had been left by an employee. The door was unlocked, the keys were in it, and the engine was warming. He climbed in and drove off through East Lansing. John Allen Hawkins, a 46 year old father of two and General Motors employee, was driving westbound on Grand River Avenue near Maplewood Drive. He had some caffeine in his system. It possible he never saw Hamil coming. Before the head on crash, the teen was ripping through a 35 mph speed limit, with witnesses estimating his rate at over 60 mph and the speedometer stuck at 78 mph after the crash. He was driving with his headlights off, according to an East Lansing Police Department report. The collision devastated both the stolen truck and Hawkins SUV. Pictures provided by Michigan State University show the shredded red steel frame of Hawkins Suburban. The vehicle looks like a crumpled piece of paper. Every bit of it is bent, torn, shattered, misshapen. The truck driven by Hamil was crunched like a can, the hood forced up so it was almost level with the roof. The front of the truck was a black and silver blur of engine parts and steel. The impact partly ejected Hawkins from his vehicle. Paramedics took him out, laid him on the street and tried to resuscitate him. It was futile. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Hamil was removed from the truck with the Jaws of Life and taken to Sparrow Hospital.