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Most of all, he had to change his way of relating to other people.
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It’s unnatural - there’s no logic, no reasoning, and everything in this environment is oppressive.” In time, he realized, “I had to completely accept the conditions that I am living in. “Life in prison hasn’t been easy for me,” he said, sitting in his book-filled cell with a labrador puppy (Harnage works with Wallkill’s dog training program) in a carrier under his bed. He realized that a lack of basic knowledge about the market was to blame, and after being incarcerated, he set out to change that.īut first, he said, he needed to accept responsibility for his own situation. Harnage, 53, who wears his hair styled like Pauly-D and is clean-shaven, said that early on in his financial services career, he realized that while he and his fellow brokers made good money off commissions, their clients didn’t always benefit. He estimates that more than 500 inmates have taken the course, not only at Wallkill Correctional Facility, where he resides, but at two other facilities in New York State. He created an educational program, Trading for Living, a five-day seminar designed to provide a foundation in stock trading for students whose usual idea of trading is a pack of cigarettes for a box of frozen chicken.
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Harnage has a background in finance, and since being incarcerated in 2010, the result of a fatal drunk driving accident, he’s been sharing what he knows with his fellow inmates. In prison, you don’t meet a lot of subscribers to the Wall Street Journal.