Our Capuchin brother Ben Regotti played an important role in the life of Seth Williams. Seth was once Philadelphia’s top prosecutor, building a promising political career, but then came a five-year prison sentence. He's now a part-time chaplain and, as he told a reporter for the Philadelphia Inquirer, "there was one thing that helped him endure isolation: Friar Ben Regotti." The riveting article was published on Monday, February 2nd in the Inquirer. You can read it in its entirety here. What follows are just a few excerpts highlighting Seth's lifesaver and, in many ways, his "life-maker."

  During the first five months of Williams’ incarceration, he was held in solitary confinement at Philadelphia’s Federal Detention Center. That was intended to protect him — former law enforcement officers can become targets behind bars — but it left him confined to a cell for 23 hours a day.
  Beyond the once-monthly 15-minute phone call he was allowed to make to his daughters, Williams said, there was one thing that helped him endure isolation: Friar Ben Regotti.
  Regotti, then a resident at Center City’s St. John the Evangelist Catholic Church, served as the detention center’s chaplain. And when Williams was in solitary, he said, Regotti came to his cell every day and offered an escape: praying with him through a slit in the thick steel door, hearing his confession, and offering him books, including the Bible, which Williams — who was raised Catholic — said he finally read cover-to-cover for the first time.
  “I’d lost everything,” Williams recalled. “But Father Regotti was the kindest person to me.”

  . . . Regotti, the chaplain Williams had encountered in solitary, said in an interview that even though they first met while the former DA was behind a thick steel door, Regotti could immediately sense his curiosity, intellect, and desire to better himself.
  “Going from feeling absolutely desperate to finding ways to cope, it was kind of a mark of his own personal resilience,” Regotti said. “He really developed into somebody that was in touch with God’s grace.”
  Williams said he now aspires to be for people what Regotti was for him — a comforting presence in a dark place, and someone who, he hopes, can help provide guidance that can last well beyond someone’s time in confinement.
  “The cheapest way to do that is by spreading the gospel,” he said. “People don’t want you to preach to them. They just want your presence — they want you to be there.”