Robert Downey Jr. Gives Rare Insight Into His Time in Prison

He was arrested on the spot, although was later released on parole. The following month, he was again arrested when, while under the influence of drugs, he found his way into a neighbor’s house and fell asleep. Downey was placed on three-year probation, requiring the actor to complete non-optional drug testing. The following year he missed one of these appointments and had to spend six months in a Los Angeles jail for violating parole.
Arrest and sentencing
In 1999 he failed to appear for a second drug test and was this time sentenced to three years at the California Substance Abuse Treatment Facility and State Prison – although he only served one. He said of this experience, “I’m in court, I’m being over-sentenced by an angry judge, and at some point he said something in Latin. I thought he was casting a spell on me.” He went on, “Two weeks later, I’m in a place called Delano, which is a receiving center where they decide where you’re going to go.”

He added that it was “Arguably the most dangerous place I’ve ever been in my life because nobody is designated. If they’re a level 1, 2, 3 or 4 criminal, [everyone’s there]. You could just feel the evil in the air.” One particular moment there stood out to him, and he shared it with Shepard. Once, when he went to take a shower, he had his underwear on backward. It elicited “some strong chuckles and jeers from my fellow inmates.”
‘Sent to a distant planet’
Eventually, Downey explained, he was transferred to the prison where he would serve his actual term. He recalled, “Walking onto the yard that you’re gonna be doing more than a year on for the first time, the closest thing I can associate it to is being sent to a distant planet where there is no way home until the planets align…” Yet the actor also talked about how he adapted to his situation, and it didn’t remain horrific the entire time.

“We are programmed to, within a short amount of time, be able to adjust to things that are seemingly impossible (…) Day 15 was a ball. By day 15 I’m playing, literally, I’m dialed in.” That doesn’t mean that it was smooth sailing, there was still a certain level of ‘prison culture’ one had to adapt to: “As long as you have a willingness to do harm, it is unlikely that you will be targeted. It really is that thing of what is the difference between acting like you’re willing to do harm and being willing to do harm.”
Downey was ultimately pardoned by the Governor of California in 2016 and had his right to vote restored. His conviction remains, but it was a gesture of goodwill toward the actor for getting clean and staying out of prison.

 

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Robert Downey Jr. Gives Rare Insight Into His Time in Prison