TESTIMONY
		
		John Collier: A Dirty Cop Comes Clean
		
		By Rod Thomas
                	The 700 Club
                	
		
		
		 
		CBN.com 
		 When John Collier was a child, his house was not a home. It  was more like a battle zone.  
		"My father had a background of violence," John tells The 700 Club. "He abused alcohol  and drugs.  He was a womanizer, and he pretty much terrorized our home."
		John’s anger toward his father grew.  He stayed in trouble at school and ran away  from home twice.
		"There was always that little boy in me that loved my  dad. Then there was that other side  of me that started to hate him and never want to be anything like he was."
		John was only eight when his parents divorced.  While his mom loved him, she could no longer  handle him.
		"I didn’t realize that John had so much anger inside of him," Mary Toneff, his mother, says.  "I know that he liked to kind of fight, and then  John started getting into trouble."
		After a failed attempt at running away, the police officer  that brought him home left a lasting impression on the young boy. John saw  something in this stranger that he never saw in his dad.
		"That police officer actually seemed to care about me or take  an interest in me," he says. "When he did, I wanted to be like him.  I saw him as the hero.  So that’s something I wanted to  pursue.  I wanted to pursue a career in  law enforcement."
		John was eventually placed in a foster home. His foster  parents gave him the support and guidance he needed, but the anger was always  just below the surface.
		"I wanted to be everything my father wasn’t.   I think that part of that anger and that  hatred I carried propelled me to be like an over-achiever.  It accelerated this something in  me.  It drove me."
		After college, he started a career as an Indiana state  trooper. Meanwhile, during this time, his dad was in and out of prison. His mom  had become a Christian and reached out to her son.
        Mary recalls, "I was so proud of him becoming a  state trooper, but right down deep in my heart, I wanted him  to know Jesus. At every chance I got, I would witness to John about how the Lord  had transformed my life."
        John wasn’t interested in his mother’s faith.   His main focus was his work as a state trooper,  where his service was exemplary.  
        "I had received a lot of awards from the superintendent," John says. "I’d  been assigned to the governor’s detail.  It  was like everything I did was to basically just credit myself, pat myself on  the back."
        But, after a heated dispute with a supervisor, the model  officer found that the rebellion he had as a child was still there.
        "Something kind of rose up inside of me, something I couldn’t  quite understand and I couldn’t control.  I resented those who were in authority over me  that I worked for, and so I began to act out. Part of that was through  alcohol and then I started using drugs.          I became like a rogue cop, just kinda doing my own thing. People that I would stop on the highway, if  they had drugs in their possession, instead of arresting them like I had done in  the past, I would take their drugs.  If they had their money, I would take that, and I would say, 'Hit  the road.'”
        One day, John’s mother got a visit from the police.  He was under investigation. She says, "They were telling me about John and  I couldn’t  believe it.  I said, 'My son’s a great  state trooper.  He’s got all kinds of  awards and everything. You can’t be talking about the same person!'  I was devastated. I couldn’t believe that this  was really truly happening."
        John lost his badge, and his respect for the law.
        "I had skills I had learned as a police officer and I used  those skills to begin breaking into businesses, taverns and grocery stores,  those types of business where I knew there would be cash on hand," John says. 
        He was caught breaking into a store and was sentenced to 18  months behind bars. After his release, he tried to stay clean, but the lure  of fast money was too great. One night, he cracked open the safe at a local  business.  Just as he was about to empty  it out, the police showed up.  John ran.
        "They chased me probably for 30 minutes or so, and they caught  up to me. Then I knew it was over  for me."
        As a repeat offender, John was given 8 to 15 years.   It was just too much for his mother to take.
        "The first time you say, 'I forgive.'  The second time I was very adamant about not  wanting him in my life every again.   As far as I was concerned, I didn’t have a son anymore," Mary says. 
        John responds, "I felt pretty much rejected by the whole world at that time,  and I just wanted my life to be over."
        A prison chaplain  began visiting John, sharing the message of God’s love and forgiveness of sins.  That reminded John of his mom’s words.
        "I remember what she had told me about the Lord and how He  loved me and how He had a life for me," John says. "I’d been in jail about four months, and I gave my life to Jesus Christ.   I just decided that it was time for me to turn my life over to Him  and put my life in His hands."
        His mother knew he needed her, but she couldn’t forgive  him.
        "I said, 'I’m not going.   I don’t want anything to do with him.'   I was very adamant about that," Mary says. "The Lord spoke to me and  said, 'He is flesh of  your flesh and bone of your bone, and to deny him is to deny Me.'”  
        John says, "She came to see me some time later, and we began to build a  new relationship.  It developed  and grew out of a common bond, and  that became Christ."
        John was released from prison after eight years. By then his  father was on his deathbed.  John went to  him  with a message.
        "I said, 'Dad, I’m  here because God sent me to see you. If I die today, I know where I’m going.  If you died today, I want you to know where  you’re going.' I prayed with my father, and he  accepted Christ. After that day God used me to  disciple my father up 'till the day he died."  
        John started an outreach ministry to prisoners.  He also met his wife Laurie  in church. He  knows that his life has been changed by the faithfulness of God and a praying  mother.
        "It took several years for this mother to continue to pray,  but John is where he’s at now," Mary says. "He’s  preaching. He’s teaching. Praise God! Wonderful things have happened in  his life."
        "I’m so grateful that God has always been there for me  through the good and the bad," John says. "One thing I  can honestly say is  my best day without Jesus was never as good as  my worst day with the Lord."
		
		
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