tv Frontline PBS June 13, 2018 4:00am-5:01am PDT
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>> narrator: tonight on frontlinhundreds of people are put on parole every day, and many of them wind up back behind bars >> it is not unusual for parolees to come back once or twice once they're out. they didn't commit a new crime, but they're violating the rulesp of theirvision. >> like, right now, even going in this store, i can get, i can end upack in jail. and i'm only getting a coffee. >> narrator: but many states are trying to break the cle. >> he's given me everyeason to lock him up, and i'm still working wi him. >> really didn't know it was that serious... >> it's extremely serious. you're also going on g today. >> narrator: filmed over a year and a half... somebody?uld you do this to my life is pretty much ruined for thnext (bleep) three years. >> nrator: ...with
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unprecedented access to parolees and their supervors... >> ...matter about your family members? >> i only care about you. >> you don't care about me. >> the...of i'm in chargour supervision... >> then say that, don't say you care about me. >> narrator: ...and the make-or-break relationships between them. >> do you understand what you've done. seriously, like, i'm here don't even know if yous, but i understand what you've done. >> some people think that being on parole is, you're free. you're not. >> i have to believe that she is going to do good. i make a living on second chances. that's what parole is. >> narrator: tonight, in collaboration with the new york time"life on parole." >> "frontline" is made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. and by the corporation for public broadcasting. major support is provided by the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation, committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world.ma more infon is available at macfound.org. additional support is provided
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by the abrams foundation,te commto excellence in journalism. the park foundation, dedicated to heightening public awareness of critical issues.ss the john and helen gr family trust, supporting trustworthy journalism that informs and inspires. and by the frontline journalism fund, with major support from jon and jo ann hagler. additional support for "life on parole" was provided by the w.k. kellogg foundation and the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation. (birds chirping) >> narrator: for a year and a half, we followed four people in connecticut as they left prison and were put on parole. >> i've been incarcerated for a little over eighand-a-half
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years. the judge gave me ten years, i thought itas the end of the world, and here i am, ten days i'm going to be walking out the door. starting my life over. >> narrator: the state is trying to use parole as part of an effort to reduce its prison population. hopefully i get out ofandow, stay out of here. i've been here before, so 's easier said than done. >> narrator: it is now giving parole to more of its prisoners than ever before. >> what are you going to doen differy to stay out? >> is abide by all the rules. (laughs) >> always good, all right, good luck. >> thank you.'r >> youwelcome. >> narrator: the challenge isth how to keeem from returning to prison. >> i'm proud to be graduating because i did it with youoday gentlemen. (applause) i've been waiting for this day for the past 21 months. next stop outside. so, pretty sure i'll see you
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there. (woman sighs) >> i just want himome. i've been waiting for this for too long. >> open, open! in >> when erroll was chome, i was more than excited. we were waiting for him to get out on parole and to come home. when you love somebody and you want to make a future with them, you kind of feel like all that is on hold. (woman shouts and squeals) >> narrator: erroll brantley is being released from prison early, after serving 20 monthsse for drug posssion and burglary. >> hey! >> oh my god, it's been so long since i had a hug. i got a bunch of hugs from everybody. >> to just be able to put yourme
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arms around sody is a huge thing. >> i got to go to parole. >> do we know where that is? >> 100 sheldon street, hartford, connecticu i don't even feel like i woke up in prison this morning. you know? i've been coming to prison since 1999 now.ut and i've been in andf jail 11 times. (sirens wailing)th is time i got out was the first time that i was on parole. >> brantley. >> i was definitely frightened. i didn't know what to expect. >> reased from carl robinson correct? yes. >> parole sentence of a littleur less than foears? >> narrator: erroll's parole officer is mark pawlich. f's been a parole officeror 18 years. >> so what was your crime over there? >> burglary. >> burglary, is that kind of your thing? >> no, not at all.
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i was... for drugs. >> and drug of choice is? >> heroin.ou >> mr. brantley, you just read, had a long, long history and if you're in this business long enough, you know the chances are at some point it r wir its ugly head. so, now he's on your watch, soou you got to make suree dotting i's and crossing t's, that's for sure. so what we're gonna do today is nditions now.e you review these so what i need you to do is read every one and make sure you understand each condition an then sign at the end. >> narrator: among the conditions of his release, erroll will have to undergo mandatory dr testing, and he's barred from contact with prior victims, which includes his gifriend, katherine. >> and is long-term planning with your mom at that address? >> no, i want to go back home. i don't live with my mom, i actually live with my girlfriend katherine. >> that's why i'm asking. a>> but there was a probl the jail. they said that she was a victim and they took her off my visiting list after, like, 17 months. t >> who person? >> katherine eaton. >> was she a victim or not
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>> no, she wasn't. >> what are they saying she was a victim of? >> burglary.bu >> did you everglarize your own house that she lived in? >> no, yeah, i took my tv to the pawn shop. >> all right. the department of corrections has a policy. when an fender is released, they can have no contact with previous crime victims or co-defendants. she called the police on him, least got him sober-- or cleaned up for a while. but she then created a... the situation in the department's eyes that she was a crime victim because he took her tv set. there's no staying overnight there, there's no nothing. >> yes. >> all right, following you out. >> narrator: erroll leaves and goes straight home with t katherine, violati terms of his parole on his very first day. i >> just wanted to stay close to the people that i love and feel protected, and i understand that parole, they have to do what they have to do. but i was happy, i was home. that's all i have up her that's all i need.,
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yeah, welcome hosolutely. it's a good place to be. i've been trying to get here for a long time. >> narrator: for the past several years, connecticut has been giving offenders likeer ll more opportunities to earn early release, and there are now almost 5,000 people supervised by parole here. but about a third of all parolees end up violating the terms of their release and are reincarcerated. >> ...sentenced to prison, and leased from prison. being if you're on parole, you're still sort of in the departmento of corre you're being monitored in the community by a parole officer but in any day, for any type of violation, they can take you directly back into prison because you're still technically serving your sentence, right? >> narrator: mike lawlor is one of the officials trying to turn sthis around and give parnc more chancesthey're out. >> it is not unusual forac parolees to comeonce or twice once they're out, right? they didn't commit a new cri, but they're violating the rules of their supervision.
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>> narrator: one change has been the crtion of a special unit devoted exclusively to the needs of women parolees. officer katherine montoya helped start the unit. >> women are a different populaon, they have different needs, their supervision needs to be different.es my ladies oftentre the primary caretakers of their children. if they're not doing good, if i remove them from the situation, who's going to te care of those kids? so, you know, it's... do a lot of thinking after houre whr the decisions that i am making are correct or not, so 's hard. so, jessica. i haven't met her yet, but i read her case. she came in when she was 18 years old.g she's going to be dove years of parole with me. this is a pivotal time for her. she needs to make a decision right now whether this was just a one-time deal that happened in her life and she's going to move on from this, or whether she is going to be a returning customer-- someone who keeps
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coming in and out of the system. >> i did ten years. i was young, i was 18 years old. i don't think i should be on nobody else's supervision. i've been getting watched for ten years, okay? people stripping me, all that. i've been through it.li , i don't think that i need to be on nobody's parole. >> narrator: jessica pctor went to prison for slashing blade.r girl's face with a razor >> i didn't kill nobody, but you would have thought i did kill somebody, though. ten years? five years parole? i think that was a little bit excessive.om so i do hold se type of resentment. >> narrator: she got out of prison six days ago. this is her first meeting with officer montoya. >> so hi, jessica.mo i'm offintoya, your parole officer. how's everything? so when you come here you have to clear the metal detecr. a lot of people think that being on parole is like you're free. they're not free, but there's going to be a measure of freedom that is going to be afforded to
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you. we're going to be together for while, it's going tofive years. we mig not see eye-to-eye every single time. but the point is that we have to work together, and t better you and i get along, the chances are your supervisi is going to be successful. let's go pull a urine. jessica was young, got in trouble, went to jail for a substantial amount of time, came back out. she really wants to reconnect with her son. that's onef her biggest goals in her life, to get her son back into her life, to be a mother to her son. >> so this is donte's bio mom, jessica, my cousin. this is when she first went into prison. >> narrator: jessica gave up custody of her son, donte, and for now they are not living together. >> i think for a long time he thought that i was hisio mom, until my sister got pregnant.in and he said, "i waour stomach like that," and i was like, "no, papa, you weren't in
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my stomach, you were in mommy jessica's stomach." and then from then on i would just tell him, "you're different than most kids, because most people only have one mom, and you have three moms. >> when i was growing up the only thing i really knewas, like, she's locked up, and i'm like, "she's locked up, so, when is she coming out? when can i see her?" is reconnecting with famil so difficult. reunification with their kids, i always advocate for family counseling, for... not only for the offender but as a family,ec everyone together,se there's a lot of hurt feelings, there's a lot of anger. and people don't have a lot of skills to be able to maintait a sin like that, so they'll go back to their behaviors, you know, which is like drinking or drug use. >> hi, daddy! >> hi, peat. what did you do today?
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>> my math quiz that i have. and i got 100% >> wow! proud of you. >> and picte day is tomorrow. >> yeah, i know, you gonna send me some pictures when they get >>velyeah. >> narrator: rob sullivan is undergoing a month-long program at this treatment facility. for many parolees, connecticut requires intensive drug and alcohol treatment as a condition of their release. >> daddy's discharge date moved to may 7 now. daddy won't be in the halfway house. he'll be home, home. >> yay! >> well, i'll call you at 8:00, and say goodnight. >> okay, i love you. >> love you, chewey. >> bye, daddy. >> bye, baby. >> daddy drew me this recently. and then, oops, he also drew me this one. >> he even put his teardrops in there, which he's going to get taken off. b that's what makes daddy daddy. >> yeah, no, daddy's daddy
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without e stupid teardrops on his face.o >> still makes daddy daddy. >> he's more handsome with the teardrops off of his face. she gets used to seeing him, talking to him, and then not... it's just, it's been, unfortunately it's been such a part of her life f her ten years that she's been here, that it's routine for her. ee but yet hehow old she's getting and he's tired of not being there and breaking her heart. so it'll be like may 6 when he'll be home. >> it means daddy's going to be home sooner than we expected. >> and for what? >> for my birthday. >> what a birthday present that's gonna be, huh? >> he wasn't there for my tenth, but my 11th is still important, so all my birthdays are important, so he'll actually be here for my 11th.
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and that's speal to me. >> it's hard, especially on a young kid, young girl that, you know, is going into her teenage life.u ow, a lot of children want both parents, you know? right now i'm trying to make it up to her, and that's by changing.f all this is stthat i brang from jail. my criminal record. it's a mess. i went in in '92. 1998, and then i didn'outil till 2001. i came back in in 2002, got out in 2003, came back in 2005. the list goes on and on and onve of how many times een in and out of jail. with all these convictions and charges, it's gog to make it almost impossible for me to find a job, you know? and pay chd support, which i haven't done in year i know i'm a scumbag in that aspect. $53,277.$2 $26,156 and 5,935 for a total
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of over $100,000. where the hell am i supposed to get $100,000? win the lotto? i have a real bad drug andt' alcohol problem, but cheaper for me to buy a beer some nights for two bucks and get drunk and forget about all my problems, and that's when i end up committing another crime. sometimes i do it just to go back to jail, because it'so easierve. >> i'm 25. and the first time i was arreed, i wanna say 16. first time i ever been to prison thoughwent the full extent, was 18. i grew up seeing people getting robbed, stealing, selling drugs, shootings, stabbings, fights. when you grow up a certain type of way, it's a way of life.ra >> nr: vaughn gresham is
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doing seven years on parole-- pa of his sentence for an armed robbery. >> that wasn't my first time-- doing the roery. it was quick, fast and easy. nobody ever really got hurt. but if it got a little rough, we had bats, you know? yeah, we had bats. >> narrator: he's being released to a halfway house, where he must complete a 90-day program. the rulee strict and the residents are closely supervised. >> halfway house's purpose is for guys to find employment, save money, and then return back to society-- hopefully in a successful manner. some make it and some t, but the reality of the situation is, if it's not what they really want to do, they're just not gonna succeed and they're gonnao ack through the cycle. >> narrator: since being put on parole a year ago, he's been sent back to prison three times. this is his fourth halfway house. >> you know, i don't want to go back. it sucks, it's boring, i'm fed up with it.an
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and my best s of getting past this stage is keeping on the right path. >> so you got seven years parole, huh? to >> nar connecticut is now trying to give parolees like vaughn more chances after relatively min violations. >> before, if you were a parole violator and got returned to prison, typically once you got back to prison you'd be rving sort of an arbitrary time sentence, like a year.am now thnt of time you're sent back to prison for is a relativelyhort period of time while we sort of reboot them and get them back out the door again. >> the default mode in the ast in the united states, is one of control and punishment. the big change in connecticut is that the leadership is trying make parole more about reintegration and less about punishment. >> narrator: fiona doherty runs a criminal justice clinic yale law school and has recommended additional changes p to the wole works in connecticut. >> the conditions that are put on people who are coming outf
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prison to avoid going back to prison are very broad. if we could all be sent to prisonor being late, or occasionally having a glass of wine, or the othernd expectations a standards that are laid on parolees, would all violate the conditions of parole. >> narrator: for vaughn, those conditions will be enforced by his parole officer, lisa brayfield. she's been on the job for a year, and her first assignment is supervising over a hundred men at two halfway houses in hartford. >> all rig, gresham? moi of the offenders say, " don't want to be here, i don'thy kn i'm here, this isn't right for me, i can't be here." maybe they see the structure and all the rules, and imay not be what they thought it was. the main priority is going toob be getting abecause you won't be able to complete the program unless you're working.gu the rules and tions that are given to parolees are straightforward and ey're all spelled out even before an prison.r is released from
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maybe it's challenging for different people. d.but i don't think it's h if they want to make it work, they can. >> you have any questions, concerns, issues? comments? >> no, no, no. >> nice meeting you. >> all right, ve a good one. >> and no drug use.. >> all right >> the key to reforming thepa le system in connecticut is changing the dynamics of the invisible meetings that happen all over the state between t parolees air parole officers. if the atmosphere in those rooms is reflective of theeform vision at the top, then change in concticut will happen. and if it's not, it will be very hard to make change stick. >> narrator: today, erroll has u been called in to ancheduled meeting with officer pawlich. >> this is my parole office--st 300 sheldon i always get nervous every time i go through this door, man. >> all right, so, brantley.
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why are we seeing each other today? >> i'm not sure. >> yeah, you are. i hold in my hand a lab reportwi your name on it. is that starting to drag you into remembrance? >> no, it's... yeah, absolutely. >> okay, so why didn't you just tell us, say that off the rip, how much did you use? >> um... three bags. >> yeah.one time? >> so you're going to piss clean today? >> no, i'm not.id no, i did it on fray. >> okay, then let's slow down here because the 14th, which was a week ago, you were dirty for opiates. so you've been using consistently again? >> no, i haven't. no, not yet. >> so, but you've used more than five total bags, though, in the eight days, correct? >> six bags, yea yeah. but not more than, not a bundle. >> it's hard, it's a harde. bala i mean, you know, a lot goes into determining the levels of supervision. you know, years ago, my god, if you had a dirty urine you'd go back to jail. even for a dirty heroin rightil now, i mean, they're not going back the first time.it treatment, treatment, treatment. if you don't let me know what's going on, then we're jusn
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going to be chour tail again. >> narrator: though he could send erroll to jail, he decidesn ead to enroll him in a drug counseling program.rc >> so reinate instead of treatment on a dirty urine, it's not gonna help that pers move forward. and with brantley, he's you know, i don't know howb, many times. and the unfortunate thing is you just keep tryiil one of them works. >> okay, so, iop is intensive outpatient treatment. three days a week. >> all right, thank you. >> you're welcome. >> appreciate it. i do need more structure. you know? it's just... and i need the help. i need... and they're willing to offer it to me, which is amazing. toave somebody on your side, it went better than i planned. b >> narrator: erroll doesn't end up going to the outpatienttm treat. he continues to use heroin and eventually checks himself into a detox center. >> so here i am, i'm at adrc, i'm waiting to get into the 30-day program. i wish i could have been the
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success story. i wi i could have shown you guys how amazing my life is, but it's going to take a lite while longer. >> narrator: he doesn't tellfi r pawlich, and misses his next appointment, another violation of pare. >> all right, so here's our update on mr. brantley. >> narrator: it takes pawlich almost a week to figure outwh e erroll is. >> on the 31st he was due in to report toe, and he didn't show up. unbeknownst to us, the day heca me in here he had rendered a ine dirty for cocaine an story out.o, he left part of the phone's going straight to voicemail. he checked himself inttox program. i give the guy credit for going to detox and going into a program, but the way he handled it was completely wrong. so basically his violations aree the dirty urines, norting to me that he's no longer living at his residence. he's really hanging by a thread right w. >> when we think about what we
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ask parole officers to do, we ask them to be social workerp who eintegrate people into society. they're also supposed to be thei officers, they're supposed to be the people who catch parolees in any rule violation and then reporting it out. the question is, should the person who's the parole officer bobe focused on helping so or should they be focused on catching them for any rule violation? >> gresham!fi staff . >> narrator: vaughn has been at the halfway house for ten weeks now. he's going to a meeting with his parole officer with the hope ofi mo into an apartment. >> they informed me, like, "hey, all u need is an apartment and a job." i got a job as soon as they told me that. and the apartment was already ready. she was just waiting on me to get out. >> narrator: officer brayfieldue has to approve his r. >> we submitted his address, right? >> yh, i mean, that's not going to go through. >> i have another address. >> i'm sorry? >> i have another address.
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>> okay, well, we're not going to submit it yet. >> no? >> no. >> why? >> 'cause i just wrote you a misconduct-- y're not in compliance with the program. you need to be in compliance with the program and working in order to be eligible to leave. >> and how long's that going to take? >> i don't give a time frame. >> narrator: days earlier, vaughn was late coming back from a job training program. d >> so what did ywhen you left school? >> i went to the house. >> what house? >> my house. >> okay, and were you authorized to do that? >> no. >> so public safety is our number-one priority. because if they're... have a history of using drugs and going out and burglarizing people orol being t, we need to make sure that we don't allow that to happen again. so i have a misconduct for you. you are going to have limited community access for two wee and you'll have to complete ten hours of extra duty in the house. you seem really irritated right now. >> i am. >> all right, so you're stillg, workight? >> mm-hmm. >> any drug or alcohol use?
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>> no. >> all right, so any other issues, questions, concerns? >> lot of issu, no questions, a lot of concerns. >> okay, do you want to elabate? >> no. >> okay, so two weeks starting i'm all set if you are. >> swear to (bleep) god, yo. (bleep) this (bleep) look like, man? the (bep) what? man, i got a life to mother-(bleep) live too, i'm not about stay in this mother-(bleep) every (bleep) all day, what? go back to work, come back here. man, what the (bleep) is that? that's not even real life. (bleep) is going on, man? >> he was disrespectful. it seemed like he had a little biof an anger problem when was meeting with him. all right, let me see your phone.
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...which is initially the reason really why i took the phone. >> is there anything in here? >> not really. >> what do you mean, not really? >> just textin >> texting? >> yeah. >> okay, i'm going to look through this, i'll give it to you in a little while. >> hmm? >> i'll give it to youn a little while-- do you have any other passwords on here? >> yeah.t >> i can't see whayou're doing here. >> taking it off right now. >> all right, i'll see you in a minute. phones are a big tool for us. it's actually pretty common that the ofnders will like to show off their drinking or their drug d they post these things to social media.
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>> so once i took the phone, it was kind of the final straw where i saw pictures of him drinking in the house. that's an automatic remand because they're creating a scene in the hse, they're making it a lot harder for the other offenders. all right. why are you so upset right now? >> i was told i was gonna leave after i got a job. i got a job. >> yup, if you wercompliant with the program. >> yeah, i didn't think that was going to be a problem. >> you know, there are so many different ways one can violate a paroleondition, if someone's just looking hard enough, >> widen your stance. something. widen your stance! >>e know predictably from the evidence that the closer t oversight, the more violations you're going to find. >> it can get a lot worse. >> get in the car. >> there's going to be failures, there's people are going to make mistakes, and for some people it's going to be impossible, right? no matter what you say or do,
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they're not going to get their act together and they're notcr gonna stop committines. our number one goal is to reduce crime, not just topl hold paccountable but to... you know, to do something to prevent crime. after all, you know, they call it the department of correctionh for a reason, t? >> narrator: >> narrator: rob has now finished his treatment program. he's living in a halfway house and gotten a job an hour's walk away. but he'srustrated because the money he earns is controlled by the halfway house. >> if i work 40 hours i'm allowed to have $40. you get a dollar per hour of what you work to hold on you. i've g to go back and fill out a budget sheet and show them my check, they copy it. you know, most oit goes into savings. but i can't touch none of it. sometimes i feel it's almost not worth it to work.my like daughter sent me a picture.a she wants pair of sneakers for basketball. and i can't buy them.
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i told her can't buy them, i'm not allowed to touch my money. whenev raeann has needed something, if i had the money, she always got it, no matter whatt was, you know? and it made me feel good. at that point in time being on parole they were dictating to me what could do with my money that i earned. g.it was totally embarrassr: >> nar rob also needs approval from the halfway house to go anywhere other >> like right now, even going in this store i could end up back to jail, just for going into a store to get something.i' m only getting a coffee. you can't do anything without permission. i would have to fill out a pass. if i got caught in the building that's a stipulation, it's an violat parole. i could have went back to jail for that. you know, last week i got to the point where i told the director, "you know what? i'm better off sometimesin ail. i don't gotta deal with l this bull(bleep)." you know, when i was at the halfway house i codn't see
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raeann, at all, you know, my daughter, and it hurt, you know, it was hard. i went to work and kellyo actually brang her job to see me, you know, for my birthday and to surprise me. >> hi, baby. >> don't cry. >> it's like you have to be b secretive, you have sneaky. you know, even though you don't want to be, it's like you have to be. i love you. et all right, drive down the street, okay? >> narrator: as the weeks go by, rob is increasingly angry. >> you guys wanna know how i feel sometimes? well, right now i'm pissed the (bleep) off. i gotta please the halfway house so i can (bleep) go home. i had to go to 7/11 and get me a coffee.ug even ti'm not supposed to. 'cause i really don't give a (bleep) right now.ft >> narrator: a two months
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on parole, robas had enough. he flees his halfway house and declared a fugitive. y >> friday, in the halfwause,ey i went to work, told meid theyt need me anymore. i got kind of fed up, and i wasn't gonna give them my last heck and not be able to b christmas gifts or nothing so i said, "(bleep) it," and i ran. so tonight, decided to come get her some sneakers and take her out to dinner. because ursday i plan on turning myself in. and i told her, "daddy messed up." you know, when you do wrong you've got to pay up, right? right? >> yeah. >> you know it doesn't mean i don't love you! >> i know. >> ce on, baby. all right, ready? >> yeah. >> ...and won't be around for christmas again. all right, let's find them.
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>> i want the silver ones. >> do you have 'em? >> we got 'em. >> i kind of got fed up with the rules and having freedom dangled in front of me and then being can't do. i can do and what i i actually went out and bought a couple bundles of dope, thinking i'd... thinking i'd die. but it didn't happen. i love you. >> love you, too. >> don't cry! come here. why are you crying? you know you can tell me anything, right? hey. you can always tell me anything. >> i know. >> i will see you soon >> i know.
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>> no matter where i go. >> i know. >> you can come see me. >> i know. >> i love you. >> i love you too. >> narrator: a week later, rob turned himself in. his parole was reved. >> the business of living is very hard, and so when treatment ends and then it's time for them to start to try to get a job and do what they need to do, we often sesometimes they get in trouble then because they just... they don't know anything else.t, >> [bleep] chrhat's in here? >> all the books for school. >> narrator: jessica hasas been taking s to become a nursing assistant and working on her relationship with her son. but she's just tested positive for marijuana, and officer
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montoya could send her to jail. >> so you understand what you've done? seriously, like, i'm here trying to save your ass. bui don't know if you understand what you've done. >> no, i do, i understood right i don't know, i think justed. stressed out and going through it. >> this could be a small (bleep) up or it could be your descent into madness, and i need to understand iyou're just gonna give this chance a try or you're just going to, like, kp (bleep) up? >> no, i'm not going to keep (bleep) up. >> okay. i don't want you to quit school, but if you find e school to be too stressful for you, if you need to take a break from school to kind of regroupdo that. i am the one that holds the power to send her back. and i haveo believe in her. i have to believe that she is going to do good, because i make a living on second chances. that's what parole is. they have to start over again. it's hard for them. if i w to lock up everyone that's run into jessica's situation, i wouldn't have a caload. >> i'm going through the same thing with my son. >>kay, with your son. it's a whole different animal.
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>> my whole incarceration, he's bn a second honors student. and now he's messing up. >> you have to understand, okay, you are the mother, but for the past ten years, you have not been his mother. so for you to come into the picture and start lling the shots might be hard. >> i know. >> sorry, jessica. concentrate on the now, concentrate on the future. what is happening with her is t pretty common of womt come out. they really put a lot of pressure on themselves. there's always this, like, pressure to trto make up for lost time. she'll do good. i'm thinking she's gonna do good. >> on onfor the first down. >> six to 18, jesus. well, when i went to my son's game, i was excited, i was emotional.
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i was there for the first time and i should have been there hil life. so that was what wasothering me. >> number 24, can't believew g he is. oh, come on, what is y'all doing? >> i think that's the driving force in jessica. she really wants to be a good mother. >> don, donte, donte, you good? >> she wants to fix thmistakes of the past.se and i feel bad beche went in so young. and she was denied the opportunity to raise her son. >> i love you. call me later, okay? he is not happy. he's not happy about this game. i'll just give him hispace because he's just like me, so,
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you know... when we angry we don't like to talk, we don't like to be bothered, we just need to be f left aloneor a little while. >> narrator: katherine has just treatment center he'd checkedg himself into, and theye heading to the parole offi for the first time in over a month. >> want me to come in with you?d >> yeah,on't know if you can come in but we'll try. come on. >> we didn't know what was going to happen becae he just got sanctioned by his parolenot officer. and i'm there for support. >> eaton? >> yes. >> thank you. >> brantley, so i'm clear, ishe
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that terson you're trying to get your residence with?es >> y. >> okay, understand that contact with previous.... >> i have to take is apart. >> don't start this (bleep) again with me. .>> i have to take this o >> i don't care about that thing right now, when i'm telling you at, go have a seat.. you know >> no, i'm ready man.m i'sorry. >> no, you're not ready now! don't friggin' tell me when you're ready.en he's g me every reason to lock him up ani'm still working with him. he's not taking any of his supervision seriously.e he thinks it's all ljoke and he gets to control and manipulate what he does and how he does it, and so, he's goinget to rude awakening in about five minutes. lobby raises my level he concern. >> what did i do? >> no contact with previous crime victims. everybody from your first crime to your current crime is a previous crime victim. you can't see, stay, email.he >>tate... the state has broken us up. she's my support network, officer pawlich. >> i got guys that can't see their kids because the kids live with their crime victims. ey sure as hell have nev
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walked them up in my lobby. so today you're going to a halfway house. you're due back in the house at a certain time everyingle night. >> i just don't understand that it doesn't bother you that i don't have people in my lifeth i love. >> i'm going to warn you one more time-- don't tell me how i think or how i feel. understood? it's got nothing to do with this. what i doing right now is managing somebody with about four or five misconducts right now that would land them in jail, and then to put thicing on the cake, walk their victim into my office lobby. all right? and put it right out there in front of everybody like, "i get to get supervised differently."l you don't get to get supervised differently. >> i really didn't know it was it's extremely serious. nothing you've done so far, you've taken seriously. you're also going on gps today. if you charge it ery day like i instructed you to for two hours, you'll be fine. so you're going to walk upo and down the streewe're trying tget a read on the gps unit. >> he put me on the bracelet p and he'sting me in
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a halfway house. and i can't see you because you' a victim. i'm sorry. this is not our fault. >> i got, you know, 65 cases and one flaming ass-(bleep). it's just aggravating. she's a crime victim. n there contact with previous crime victims. so some guys go straight to jail for that, right off the rip. never mind all the other nonsense that he's had. >> why would you do this to somebody? i got one thing left in the (bleep) world that i'm close to and thdude (bleep) won't let me be there because he (eep) he's got something to prove. i seriously, i wish he would jued violate me, i just want to keep talking and go back to il. so my life is pretty much ruined for the next (bleep) three years. >> in the past, parole officers felt ttheir mainke responsibility was tep on top of the offender and if and when they violate the rules of parole or commit new crimes return them to prison, and that is changing.
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the goal is to figure out whatee is person begins moving in the right diction. >> this is my new room. it's very small. home sweet home. the cheyney house was mya first time ilfway house ever. i was crestfallen, needless to say. i was very, very hurt when i saw the neighborhood that the halfway house was in. because it was the neighborhood that i bought heroin in. so this is the neighborhood they put a recovering heroin addict in. here are some heroin baggies that litter the streets here. this is one of many heroin locations in this end of town. and it's not that i'm tempted, but it would ma it a lot easier for me to p
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violate arole and get this whole thing over wit because right now, going back to jail and finishing my time seems prospect of jumping thh hoops for people that don't want me to be happy. >> putting him in the halfway suse, he is going to alwaee as punitive. i don't care if he was happy or not, or thought it was punitive or not. it's aopportunity. structure, supervision, money management, you know, they needever, is kind of all right there. having that structure andis supervision right in. kind of in his face every day. so... someuys respond to it. they're never gonna admit it but some respond to it, so at least it's not jail. >> narrator: seven weeks into his stay, another parolee overdoses on heroin inside the halfway house. >> i just got home from work, and parole is hereand this isme
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what i come hoo. becausof the overdose and the death here today, role came here and trashed my stuff. >> narrato the day after vaughn was sent back to jail, officer brayfield arrives to serve him his papers. so i have your notice o parole violation, so we'll go over it together? first part is going to be the charges that we have against you, so the condition that you violated is your releasere ion. on 9-7-16 your phone was searched, which produced aur number of pi of you consuming alcohol in the watkinson house program. based on your actions you were in violation of your parole condition and your continued supervision in the community isp no longer ible with welfare of society, okay? unfortunately, vaughn is not a unique ce to me, supervising offenders in halfway houses. you know, remanding him,
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he comes back out to a halfway house, remand again, he comes back out to a halfway house. that's common. >> i love the way you're sobo nonchalant it. >> like i said... >> i love it. >> like i said, if you diduphat you weresed... it's... this has nothing to do with me whatsoever. >> no, just your attitude. >> absolutely. my hands are tied. >> it's just like it's nothing for you to send people to jail or anying like, (bleep) 'em, you know? >> well, when guys are drinking in the house, right. ee>> people drink on the s >> i don't... >> people smoke on the street. >> okay, let me say this.re i don't hat other people are doing on the street. >> so you have family members that don't smoke on the street? >> i only care. it doesn't matter. >> it don't matter about your family members? >> i only care about you.ab >> you don't cart me. >> i'm in charge of your supervision. >> then say that, don't say that you care about me. >> okay, so i'm only concerned'r about what ydoing in a halfway house. >> okay. >> so when i see pictures of you drinking witother offenders in a halfway house, it's blatantly clear that you're drinking, i need to do something about it. >> mm-hmm. >> okay, any oer questions? concerns?
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comments? n concerns. no comments. >> okay, this is youcopy. >> so after this, i everotta deal with you again? >> i don't know, it's not up to me. you may be released to another halfway house. i'm not sure. okay? >> you know, i'm fairlygo eag. i do what's asked of me. and one little... you know, i drink. that doesn't even cause any harm to anybody. but basically brings hell upon me., liat... i don't understand that. i don't understand that. >> narrator: after six months on parole, jessica is close to finishing hernu ing assistant program. >> i wanted to go to school because i knew that if i came home, i didn't have no joby. hist when i was younger i wanted to
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be a doctor, so the best thing for me to do right now is to do cna. i came home with a plan andly i actualtuck to it. i didn't let little minor setbacks throw me all the way off. they docked me off a little bit and i got right back up andm keing. >> jessica walked to school or took the bus almost every day. it's not like she had people r giving hes or, you know, backing for everything. jessica did everything on her own. >> okay, guys, it's the last night. i'm going to sit with you one at a time. i'm going to give you your grades and your packet that has your résumé and your physicals and all that information. jess, i'll take you. okay. here we go. these are your test grades. your test average was an 88%. >> wow. >> that is b+. very nice. that's your grade before. clinic >> 94. >> congratulations. >> thank you. >> that's a super job.
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your résumé copies on résumé paper. >> thank you. >> all about being a nursing assistant. and your physicals. you are ready to go get job. okay? do you have any questions for me? >> you are good. that's a good grade. okay? >> the whole point is for the offender to learn to do thegh t thing on their own. when they first come out, you're like this. you have the and as the offender starts doing good, and then you just let go. it's hard work, but i think it can be accomplished. (unamplified electric bass being slapped) >> narrator: erroll spent three months at the halfway house. >> i love this bass, dude. >> narrator: he stayed sober, found a new job, and got an apartment of his o. >> this became my place from my friend tammy. and she said she had a basement for rent. she only wanted 100 bucks a week, she would do me a favor.
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d e sponsored me and helpe to get out of cheyney house. but it's got plenty of space, you know? like i said, i have the biggest room ithe entire house, which is nice. and it's private. you iow, i can come and go as want through the back door. i am headed to my first day ofs work at ruby tuesd a manager/kitchen... i'm not even sure. they want me to become a manager. >> he's got a skill set. he's a smart guy. so there's hope. you just could never say, "whoa, look at this case, this guy's got no hope-- put him in your no-hope pile." it would be very hard to do this job 40 hours a week, you know, month to month, year to st really had, like, a no-hope pile. i don't have a no-pe pile. au
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>> narrator: b of his turnaround, erroll was finally given permission to have contact wi katherine, though they were still not allowed to live together. that was our first summ together. we decided we were definitely going to g married. just more recently we decided that we'd like to have a family. so it's all i look forward to. (crowd cheering)ar >>tor: after nearly a year on parole, jessica proctor is graduating and spending more time with her son. >> some kids, they'll get to see their mom come out and do so well, finish school, and walk across the stage to get their diploma. i pretty much love her, i love her to death. i'll do anything for her. >> he was proud to see me come at i was actually making a difference in my life and going somewhere. so that meant a lot me. >> narrator: rob sullivann finished his printence.
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>> today i'm free. i didn't have parole to look after me anymore only i look after myself. it's like a sense of relief. >> here she comes. >> i love you too and i missed. you too. >> narrator: he's coming home just in time for his daughter's 11th birthday. >> high. >> i don't wt to go that high. >> narrator: vaughn gresham is being released to his fifth halfway house, after seven months in jail.ol >> pis a noose that you tighten yourself. you want tplay? that noose is always gonna be there. but as you go farther away fromg the path, itng to tighten up. which you've signed a few times already. >> you stick to the path and you do what you gotta do, you will u're not going to kill yourself. >> and these ones also? yep. >> narrator: he has a new parole officer. >> c'mon, gresham, you shouldow his. >> narrator: and five years of parole still ahead of him.
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a little over a year after erroll and katherine were given erroll started using hher, again. they got into a fight about. going to reh and she called the police. >> i feel ashamed for you to have to come and see me here because, you know, was doing so well. and it's just... it's an absolute and total regression. i don't know if it's apropos, if it's bittersweet, if it's going to help to tell the story, you know, i don't know. (sniffling) >> narrator: he's been charged with violating the conditns of his release. and now connecticut must decide whether to keep erroll behind bars...
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or give him another chance at life on parole. t >> is the hostile takeover of the republican party. >> narrator: the fight betweenen the presidand his own party. >> in one fell swoop the republicans sent a message you're not a king, you are a president. >> trump's response is classic trump. who am i going to blame?it >> don't messdonald trump. donald trump doesn't forget. >> somebody needs to stand up and say"this is not our party, this is not normal." >> go to pbs.org/frontline for an update on the characters in the film. >> he was proud to see me come home and not go back. >> see aitional reporting from our partners at tnew york times.vi >> read an int with connecticut governor, dannel malloy, about the push to reform
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parole. >> the reality is, you give somebody a chance that'been incarcerated, they really appreciate it. criminal justice in america.ing then connect to the frontline community on facebook, twitter and pbs.org/frontline. i >> "frontline"made possible by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. c and by tporation for public broadcasting. major support is provided by thn john dcatherine t. macarthur foundation, committed to building a more just, verdant and peaceful world. more information is available at macfou.org. additional support is provided committed to excellence in journalism. the park foundation, dedicated to heightening public awareness of critical issues. the john and helen glessner family trust, supportingrustworthy journalism that informs and inspires. isd by the frontline journ fund, with major support from
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jon and jo ann hagler. additional support for "life on parole" was provided by the w.k. kellogg foundation a the john d. and catherine t. macarthur foundation. captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org >> for more this and other frontline programs, visit our website at pbs.org/frontline. ♪ "frontline's" "life on parole" available on dvd. to order, visit shop.pbs.org or call 1-800-play-pbs. "frontline" is also available for doload on itunes. ♪
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vo: ancient civilizations man 1: these buildings are all fromcelestially aligned.ica. vo: with unique systems of science, art, and writing. ma 2: this knowledge has br thousands of years. vo: connected by shared knowledge and beliefs. man 3: the past is also part of the present. a vo: discover remarkable new view of native america. this fall. only on pbs. ♪ you're watching pbs.
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just 20 days ago, we were lookinat huge skyscrapers >>yeah >>totally different enviornment >>i'm not only getting to go accrous the country, i'm getting the chance to like find my self in the process >>talking to the people who have gone through hardships and obsticales >>the advice that i've gotten, the stories that i've ard arwith me forever now, and i'm prepared for whatever obsticales may come roadtrip nation: beating the odds is made possible by thitact's center for equin learning at act we have a simple mission: helping people achieve education and workplace success. e work to close gaps in equity, op.rtunity, and achievement we believe everyone, regardless of their circumstances, deserves a fair chance to learn and grow for more information, visit equityinlearning.a.org.
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