A convicted felon whose record exempted him from washing dishes at Uno Pizzeria is about to open a college

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Dan Geiter
Dan Geiter

(Ex-felon Dan Geiter wants to transform the lives of other previously incarcerated people.Dan Geiter)

When Dan Geiter was 15 years old, he stole a few checks from the handbag of a faculty member at his high school. He forged them and cashed them, easily making a few bucks.

That landed him in jail for the first time.

Throughout his teenage years, Geiter continued to commit similar crimes of fraud and theft, with intermittent periods of time behind bars. Such was the pattern for the next 17 years of Geiter's life.

One day, however, he decided he was done living a life of criminality.

"I was sitting in my cell, and it was about 108 [degrees] in the Shawnee National Forest that day. It was so hot the concrete cinder blocks were sweating," Geiter told Business Insider. "I was thinking about all the things I could do if I were free."

Once released in 1999, Geiter stayed true to his word; he has never been back in prison. But he soon learned the label he carries as a convicted felon tarnished many of his future opportunities.

"There is still a lifetime of incarceration even after you served your time, and you've paid back what supposedly is your debt to society," he said.

Nearly two decades after Geiter was released from prison, he defied the odds and earned a doctoral degree in education, all while continuing to fight the stigma being an ex-felon carries. Now, with the help of a few non-profits, he's creating a college for those in a similar predicament.

'The biggest discriminator against offenders'

Dan Geiter
Dan Geiter

(When Geiter moved to Chicago he learned that there were many impediments to finding work and housing due to his previous sentences.Dan Geiter)

Geiter relocated to Chicago, Illinois in 2007 in search of better employment opportunities and a fresh start. Immediately, he encountered difficulty finding a place to live.

"Statistically, 80% of all the housing in Chicago is off limits to individuals convicted of a felony, and they don't discriminate on what type of felony," he explained.

While the Chicago Housing Authority doesn't publish statistics around ease of housing for ex-felons, that individuals around the US with felony convictions face incredible difficulty securing places to live has long been recorded.

Additionally, using criminal background as a reason to turn down applicants was legal until recently.

A new set of guidelines released by the Department of Housing and Urban Development in April, however, have attempted to make denying applicants based on criminal history more difficult for landlords. Still, no guarantees exist that discrimination won't occur.