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tv   Lockup  MSNBC  November 24, 2013 2:00am-3:01am PST

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due to mature subject matter, viewer discretion is advised. i can be your best friend, at the same time, if you cross me and doing me wrong, i can be your worst enemy. >> a record dating back to age 14, he comes to terms with his past and present. >> i'm not coming back. >> i'm sure i heard that last time. >> beat up bloody and beat up on grandville avenue, thrown down the stairs with my bra and
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underwear in the snow. >> she was once a school secretary and a mother before crack and prostitution turned her world upside down. >> every time i lay down and fall asleep, i dream about crack. >> another inmate is caught offguard and viciously assaulted. his assailant leaves him cut and bleeding. then he explains white. >> most cake is dry, you know, and not very moist like that at the bottom. i know something didn't go right with the cake. i said i have to do something about this. ♪ straddling the grand river in west michigan, grand rapids combined the amenities of a sophisticated city with small town charm.
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"forbes" magazine calls it the best city to raise a family. even the best families face problems. a few miles from downtown is the kent county jail. >> people ask me all the time out there in the world, who you got in jail? i always tell them, we have your family members, we have your neighbors, your co-workers. >> any given day, 1,000 men and women are incarcerated here. >> i want you on your bunks. time for head count. i need your id. >> some are convicted, most are only accused of crimes and awaiting trial and the resolution of their cases. >> we have the people standing behind you in the line at the grocery store, the people handing you food at the window at the drive-up. they are the people we have in jail. >> my life is in this sack. >> a few years earlier, it would have been a surprise to the
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residents to see brandee nyp in jail. she was a popular secretary at a nearby elementary school. >> many people that knew me from school, if they see me now, they would know something is seriously wrong. two years ago, i started smoking crack, and i resigned from my job and lost both of my daughters and started living on the streets using crack. >> nyp is charged with possession of narcotics, pled not guilty and is awaiting trial. she says her problems began with a pain pill addiction that escalated 6 when her youngest daughter chose to live with her father and girlfriend. >> i said, "you can go live with
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your dad." from that point on, it became empty. my older daughter was involved in high school sports and wasn't home. i would work and my little one was gone. it just didn't have any purpose and so i hit that pipe and i sat down, and i really never left it again. i never left that life. >> that life led nyp to a street in grand rapids with a reputation. >> division is the main street for prostitution. i did walk the streets prostitution-wise. there's a lot of money. it's basically what a lot of girls make their money. they make $1200 in a day. i spent everything i got on drugs. it was different than anything i imagined my life would be. >> nyp's crack addiction led to multiple arrested in grand rapids and one prior conviction for possession. >> somebody asked me the question one time, do you love your daughters or do you love crack more? i sat there and i had to think
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about it. i mean i didn't have to think about it, i know, but i said i would have to say i love crack more. as horrible as that is, i said i would be home and have a daughter on each side of me, and we'd have popcorn, watching a blockbuster movie. instead, i'm in a ratty hotel in a bathroom smoking crack in front of the mirror. there isn't anywhere else i would rather be. >> while brandee nyp might have once blended in in family friendly grand rapids, brian is the first to admit he doesn't. >> i can be your best friend at the same time, if you cross me or do me wrong, i could be your worst enemy. >> looking at the tattoos, you don't see many people with tattoos like that. >> he looks very eccentric. it's hard to tell what this person might be like. >> never in a million years if i saw brian walking down the street on the outside would i approach
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him for any reason under the sun. >> usually when people meet me, they look and are like there's something wrong with that guy. really, i'm just, i love tattoos. i just love tattoos. i think they're awesome. >> he wasn't smiling when he got his most prominent tattoo, a crown that encircles his head and turns into a bandana on the back of his head. >> it was the worst pain of my life. it hit over here, and my leg started twitching because of all the nerves. it was horrible. >> he says his criminal career began at age 14 selling crack, got the crown and many other toots during -- tattoos during
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his six-year prison term for felonious assault and battery. he was on the street four months before he was arrested again as part of a crime ring. he says he's innocent but pled guilty to larceny from a vehicle. >> if i go to trial with my tattoos and past crimes being on parole, if i lose, then i'm going back to prison. >> instead, he was sentenced to one year at the kent county jail. he says now, he's finally motivated to go straight. >> it's nice to see your wife first thing in the morning, even if it is a picture. it helps with the day. >> prior to the latest arrest, he married a friend from childhood. >> no one makes me feel like elena does. i want to do more with myself. she makes me want to be better. she makes me want to be a man and take care of her, and her parents were kind of iffy about me. they know of me and my friends when i was younger. one of my friends stole her parents' car and sold it for
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crack. >> he says things got better when they saw how he cared for elena's 2-year-old daughter. >> i took care of her, changed here, feed her, get her dressed, i'd give her the bath at nighttime, play with her. they were shocked. they were like your whole persona changes when you are with her. a lot of people are amazed. they look at me and expect me to be a complete [ bleep ]. i'm not. >> he writes regularly to elena who lives two hours away in detroit. >> i do little things like that. she likes to get pictures from me. anything makes her happy. >> it's love. >> it is, right? >> coming up, elena pays a visit and delivers a message. >> i don't want to deal with this all the time. it's not the life i want for me or my daughter. >> a piece of cake leads to a bloody assault. brandee nyp's life on the streets hits home for the family
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she left behind. >> if i saw her, i could wind one up and pop her. [ male announcer ] 'tis the season of more.
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♪ inside grand rapids' kent county jail, technology is just one tool deputies use to maintain the peace. like neighborhood beat cops, they employ old fashioned leg work called block checks. >> we are looking to see if anybody is up to no good, basically, see if there's contraband being messed with, that kind of thing. we are looking at everything, make sure inmates aren't bunching up into a certain area. you don't know if something's going on in that area. >> guys, step back. >> normally, an area is really loud and it's really quiet all of a sudden, something is going on.
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they are sending signals. >> sometimes there is no warning. surveillance cameras captured an inmate-on-inmate attack. a deputy takes control of the situation and separates the men. >> should be all locked down. yep. that inmate is a little bit bloody there. it kicked off during the meal time. >> the injured is zachary harvey. the attacker is antoine gill. >> we responded to a fight. he was punched numerous times with a cut inside his lip. >> they are going to clean him up and evaluate his injuries. if he cut up his mouth real bad and it requires internal stitching, they can't do it here. he will have to be taken to the hospital. the other was taken to the desegregation unit. >> they'll evaluate to see if it was a fight or assault.
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the deputy up there talked to other inmates, reviewed the camera to see what all happened. >> one of the witnesses was a trustee, an inmate maintenance worker. >> the dude was grabbing water. he walked up behind him, don't touch my food. don't touch my food. [ bleep ] [ bleep ] dude never hit him back, though. he just stood there. kept turning. blood there. blood there. i have to get bleach and clean this up and scrub. definitely another day of being a trustee. every day you get something like this. it's entertaining. but then i have to deal with the aftermath. >> after their initial treatment, jail medical staff decide to send harvey to the hospital. >> he's going to get checked out by a doctor and probably get a couple stitches in his lip. >> as for the fight, harvey says he doesn't know what prompted it. >> came out of my cell, sat down, made a cup of coffee. came back and he started hitting me.
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i don't know what i did. >> do you know him? >> i traded him a piece of cake. i don't even talk to him. >> inmates often trade food. the small dessert is one of the more popular items. harvey chose the wrong person to trade with. >> i believe there was urine at the bottom. most cake is dry, not very moist like that at the bottom. so i believe there was urine. i know something wasn't right with the cake. i said, you know, i think i have to do something about this. >> i think mr. gill is possibly a little paranoid. i just feel that it was his paranoia that caused him to react the way he did. >> gill, who was recently convicted of manufacturing and delivering narcotics, has had similar issues in the past. >> every day at every meal, i was told by the inmates and the trustee that are in that pod
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that as soon as he receives his carton of his drink, he throws it in the trash. >> see how hard it is to open that? i'm going to tell you what's in here right now. i'm going to tell you. spit. juice. >> whether the fight was a result of gill's belief that his cake was tampered with or something else will be up to staff to determine. lieutenant neumann and sergeant thorn begin by reviewing the tape. >> okay. the suspect's walking across the d room, and the victim is walking toward him. and unexpectedly, the suspect begins to punch the victim repeatedly -- oh. >> didn't look like that guy threw any punches at all. >> looks like an assault. >> absolutely. like gill throws every strike. so gill catches him offguard and just -- >> i don't see harvey throw any
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punches at all. he might have put his hands up to defend himself. but he was clearly looking down. coming up -- >> i can be wrong, but i'm pretty much right. >> antoine gill pleads his case to authorities. and brandee calls home. >> are you sad? you sound like you're crying. just like yours. huh. [ male announcer ] and roasted white meat chicken. just like yours. [ male announcer ] you'll think it's homemade. i love this show. [ male announcer ] try campbell's homestyle soup.
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grand rapids, michigan, has been described as america's most family-friendly city. brandee nyp, a school secretary, lost custody of her two daughters after falling into a life of crack addiction and prostitution on the city's division street. >> my daughters haven't come and seen me yet. i actually haven't seen my youngest daughter in a year and a half. >> nyp's 12-year-old lives with her father. her 17-year-old lives with nyp's mother and father. nyp is in jail awaiting drug possession charges. >> i'm happy where i'm at just being sober each day. it's a great stride for me.
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smoking crack every single day for 2.5 years all day and all night is totally different than being awake and having normal energy. >> nyp has decided to apply for the jail's sober living unit. a 90-day treatment program she hopes will respect her remain sober when she's out of jail. >> it's important for me to get in a sober living program for the coping issues. i have a lot of dreams. every time that lay down and fall asleep, i dream about crack. to whom it may concern, i am a 36-year-old young woman who has spent the last two years battling with a crack addiction. i was writing to ask if you could consider me for sober living. i am having some issues coping -- this education, how to get over the guilt and the shame, how to work through those feelings with your family. thank you for your attention in this matter. sincerely, brandee nyp. it's just important on how to start out the structure probably
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of just a normal daily life. >> nyp's next step is to contact the people who most desperately want to see her off drugs -- her parents. >> hi, mom. it's still very hard for me that, you know, what i put my family through. and how i hurt them with my drug addiction. what's the matter? nothing. did -- huh? nothing. how about you? she said, "i heard you choking up, crying, everything all right?" i said, "yes, you knew i was in here." she said yes. are you sad? you sound like you're crying. you just got up? oh.
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yeah. oh, okay. did dad talk to an attorney or anything? my only plan this time, you know, is having my parents pick me up and maybe going home with them right off the get-go. and seeing which programs or having them bring me straight to a program. >> nyp's parents' homes is 40 miles and a world apart from the kent county jail. while it might seem an ideal place in which to recover, nyp's mother, jamie, who's raising nyp's teenage daughter says that's no longer an option. >> i want her to go somewhere, but i don't know what i'd do with her because, you know, we have her children to think about. and you can't have -- you can't have that going on. >> any time that i've gotten out of here, i've been using crack within an hour of leaving here, so i have no positive past of even making it whatsoever.
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>> during one of nyp's earlier stays at the house, jamie experienced a painful insight into her daughter's life on the streets. >> she had a towel on, and she had gotten out of the shower. and i saw a circle on the top of her buttocks, you know, on her backside. i go, "honey, what is that on your backside there?" she said, "oh, it's okay, mom. i got stabbed by a screwdriver one time." and i said, "oh. you hurt -- you hurt my heart bad." i just can't imagine. i can't imagine. she always seemed to be a very happy and amazing kid. she always was on top of things. very independent. very motivated. very adventurous. that's how i would describe her.
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very adventurous, very outgoing, very social. >> you get so angry sometimes. you literally say, "i hate this person." if i saw her, i could just wind one up, and i'd just pop her. and then i think, what good does that do, you know? to heck with it. let it go. keep living your life because all it's doing is aging us, you know. it's not really how we had things kind of -- you don't have a baby, and you don't raise your children to become drug addicts. you just -- you just don't do that. >> then i'll say, have you had enough of this roller coaster ride? you ready to get off this merry-go-round? yes, mom, i'm ready.
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then i think we're right on track, and then everything caves in again. >> i've been wanting to get off the streets. and i have every opportunity in the world. i have a big support system. i have a wonderful family. it's never the right time to go. but i keep looking for the perfect ending, and there's not going to be a perfect ending. i'll be dead before there's a perfect ending. coming up -- >> when i first entered the car, i thought he was a jerk. he's an older white man. most of the men on division are older, white men. and they have money. >> brandee gets a visit from a deputy she met on the streets. and looking for answers in the cake controversy. >> mr. gill said the bottom of the cake was moist.
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a senior israeli official is calling a plan announced by president obama a bad deal. the plan calls for iran to curb
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its nuclear program in exchange for an easing some sanctions. a powerful storm system is marching eastward after bringing snow, freezing temperatures, and gusty winds to several states. california, arizona, new mexico, and texas are all reported deaths. i'm veronica de la cruz. let's get you back to the program. due to mature subject matter, viewer discretion is advised. with new inmates arriving every day of the week, deputies must quickly assess the threat potential of each one. >> first impressions are important for us working in this environment, you know, looking at how someone looks at you, how they present themselves. >> first impressions have not always been brian's strong suit. but despite a criminal record dating back to age 14 and a
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current one-year sentence for larceny, so far he's been a model inmate. >> i have seen no issues with him since he's been here. really is a pretty decent guy. >> his good demeanor helped him earn one of the trusted jobs. >> i'm the police bitch pretty much. i clean. i pass food. i do anything the police ask me to do. >> trufts don't get paid but -- trustees don't get paid but spend more time out of their cells and often get an extra meal or two. >> i've been working out, lost weight. lost probably 15 pounds. i've been doing this, gained back seven or eight already. all i do is get cakes. i'm [ bleep ], i take the cakes, whatnot. throughout the day, i'm eating cakes. every morning, i'm like, "i can't eat this." we get coffee cakes. some of the best cake we get. of course i'm going to eat it. you put it in front of me, i'm going to eat it. i'm a natural fat kid.
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i like cake. >> the popularity of the jail's cake recently led to problems between zachary harvey and antoine gill. >> okay, we're going down the stairs. >> after speaking with several inmates in the pod, we learned that inmate gill and harvey had exchange where gill had given harvey coffee in exchange for cake. that led to the altercation. we'll interview him. >> focus, man. >> though the surveillance footage left no questions about what started the fight, gill will have a hearing to explain himself. and if he's convincing, he might talk his way out of segregation. >> i'd like to ask you a couple of questions. some of the guys that sit at the table with harvey said that harvey was going to trade a piece of cake to you for another item? >> actually, i gave him like some -- a bag of coffee. he told me that he would give me two cakes, and we turned. i thought that to be pretty cool. >> did he just pick it up and hand it to you? >> no, he handed it -- i grabbed
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it myself. >> so you reached over and picked it up -- >> he was like, you know, your cake right there. as i picked it up -- most cakes are dry. you know, this cake was like really soggy at the bottom of it. you know, and you know -- i believe, you know, by me being so immune to it, i can't smell it no more. it might have been urine up under it. you know, like i say, man, i could be wrong. but i'm pretty much right. >> going to give you a possible explanation. you know, when they stack those trays up, put the food on, some of the food's hot and some of it's cold. and when there's -- those trays are stacked up on each other, they're insulated so that heat and cold, that's going to create condensation in there. so it's possible that there was a little bit of condensation on the bottom where that piece of cake was. that's possible how it could have become soggy. it's just -- just a theory. >> some staff has described gill
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as paranoid, he's been deemed competent by the courts and also has been examined by the jail's mental health staff. >> as far as we're concerned, he has some behavioral problems, institutional problems that we've noticed that have been a distraction to the jail. >> the deputy must present gill's allegations about the cake to harvey, who is serving six months for assault with a dangerous weapon. >> i was just messing around. i ended up hitting the kid in the face with a b.b. gun, shot him in the face with a b.b. gun. it was an accident. i'm a horrible shot with any kind of weapon. >> he said that there was a piece of corner missing -- >> that's how i got the cake. it was crumb crumbled. >> we all know when the cake is on the tray with other food, things get broke. he also said the bottom of the cake was moist. and he thought that it was tampered with and possibly urine on it. >> i did not -- tell him i didn't touch the cake at all. i didn't do. it i'm like -- i'm like -- >> i believe you.
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>> i turned to give it to him. i was polite to him. i was the only one in the pod. i was talking to him, polite to him. >> okay. well, i appreciate your cooperation. >> no problem. >> i'm sorry that you were assaulted the way you were. and some people just are not nice people. >> yeah. >> following the hearings, harvey was cleared of any wrongdoing, and gill received 15 days in disciplinary segregation. brandee nyp has steered clear of problems with other inmates as she awaits trial on drug possession charges. she's grateful that the jail has kept her off crack, but she admits the drug that cost her so much still tugs at her. >> the whole thing for me is seeing it come through the glass, through the pipe. like breaking off the rock and putting it on top of the glass and then melting it down all the way and -- if it's good crack, it will melt all the way until
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you can't see it anymore. you know, the whole ritual. and then holding the glass up to your mouth and just breathing it in and watching it go through the glass is like what i've been more addicted to than the drug, than the high. >> nyp need go no further than her bunk for another reminder of her life on the outside. a friend lives just across the street. >> i put my name up here, i'm not supposed to put my name up here. but i put my name up here, and i was talking about -- the townhouse i was talking about is in front of the building. i banged like that. he saw me, looked up and saw my name. then we were waving back and forth. >> tomahawki -- tom hawkins occasionally puts money on nyp's sill so she can buy things at the commissary. he makes regular visits. >> my relationship with tom is a friendship. i met him walking down the road
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actually. >> the road was division street. and nyp was walking as a prostitute on it when hawkins picked her up. >> when i first entered the car, i thought he was a trick. most of the men are older white men and have money. it was not that -- we know that. that's okay. i'm sure the perception is of that. >> i'm what you call an empty nester. so i'm by myself. my family's always been ones that were willing to take somebody in that needed some help. i would like to see her straighten out her life. and if i could be part of the thing that helps her do this, great. how you been? >> i've been good. how are you? >> you tried getting hold of me the other day, and you never called back. >> you know if i don't call or something, that means that i'm locked in my cell. >> yeah. yeah. you know -- >> i know. you can write me, though. >> i can what? >> you can write me a letter.
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>> yeah. >> right from across the street. >> yeah. >> i -- ate all my commissary already so i have to wait until friday. i'm so hungry. >> i think there's a lot of hope for her if she chooses to do something about it. she's only been out there a couple years now. so she remembers a very good life. is there anything quick you need done or -- >> no, i'm good. you said you that were going to put $20 in. i appreciate that. thank you. a certain person i think would try to manipulate him or take advantage of him. and i haven't done so. i think that's why our friendship has continued to be so good. i love you. >> okay. i love you, too. i'll set up an appointment for next monday. personally, i think she's right where she needs to be. and get into a program here instead of getting out of here and i'm sure she'll just go right back to what she was doing. >> nyp recently applied for the
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jail's 90-day sober living director. the program's director, bob steel, has bad news. >> we have limited resources. we can't take everybody that wants it. and so we target the sentenced people who we know are being released directly back in our community at the end of that period. we want to make sure that you're going to have enough time to complete the program, and we want to catch you at your tail end of your sentence. >> okay. >> so that you walk out of here in that recovery mode and -- >> right -- >> hopefully continue that. i don't know your whole history. i know your criminal history. and i did notice that your arrests have all taken place in the last couple of years. so seemingly, you were a normal person with a normal life until this addiction hit. >> right. >> it's obviously powerful, and it's taken over. >> yes. >> you have a pretty good support system in. >> very good support system. yeah. >> a key element. so if people behind you are there to help support you and you're focused, i think you can do it.
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people do it. it really comes down to -- >> me. >> you. coming up -- >> they've reduced my -- >> brandee nyp has a chance to leave jail but has a questionable history with the man who might bail her out. >> tell me the truth, why did he stomp you and break your ribs? >> he stabbed me and broke my ribs because he was upset with me. and -- >> really? >> brian's wife pays a visit. mom? come in here. come in where? welcome to my mom cave. wow. sit down. you need some campbell's chunky soup before today's big game, new chunky cheeseburger. mmm. i love cheeseburgers. i know you do. when did you get this place? when i negotiated your new contract, it was part of the deal. cool. [ male announcer ] campbell's chunky soup. it fills you up right.
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inside grand rapids' kent county jail, inmate trustees handle a variety of food service and maintenance jobs. kalelu blackman has a more specialized role. >> got a client for you. >> he's the inmate barber. and today a fellow trustee has requested a cut.
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brian wants to look his best. his wife of six months, elena, is about to make the long drive from detroit to visit him. >> i'm excited to see her. i miss her. it's been hard because me being locked up. but in the end, she's -- she's always the one i've ever wanted. she's all i think of. i promised her i wouldn't get in trouble. so i've been doing my best to stay out of trouble. >> it's easy to get in trouble. hard to get out of it. >> ain't that the truth, though? my wife just likes it buzzed. i'm already married, i ain't got nobody to impress. happy wife, happy life. took me a while to learn that one. >> pradzik looks forward to seeing his wife. brandee nyp has even bigger news. she returned from court where her judge lowered her bond by $5,000. nyp hopes her friend, tom hawkins, might be able it bail her out. >> they got me for court. they said, "nyp, get up.
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you're going to court." i didn't know it. i went to kentwood today. >> oh. what happened? >> so they reduced my bond. it's -- it's -- 15 -- the one is still the $5,000, 10%, $500. they reduced the other one down to $1,000. >> oh. yeah. i don't have money right now. i told you that. >> you don't? >> no. i got a tax thing going on right now. >> i know that. like, okay. so you can't help bond me out today or if somebody brings you the money, can you help get me out? >> if somebody brought me money, yeah. >> okay, so you can't -- do you think that you could help get me out today and i could give you the money back so we don't have to deal with all that? >> of i don't the money. >> okay. >> i'm really tight. >> okay. >> okay. >> so i'm -- remember the gentleman who stopped at your house before? >> yeah. >> i'm probably going to call him and ask him if he can come
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over and bring you the money. so can you call him right now for me and let him know? >> yeah. >> okay. >> bye -- >> then i'm going to call you back. >> okay. >> okay, love you. >> love you, too. thanks. >> tom's broke right now. tom won't have money for about a month. >> nyp's plan is to have another friend from the streets bring the money to hawkins. >> babe, bring $1,500 to tom so he can come bail me out. reason being is he won't come down here and put his i.d. and go through all that. and he's also responsible then since i'm out on bond if something happens. and tom's willing to make himself responsible. >> coincidentally, one of nyp's new friends in jail, lisa rush, knows the man nyp has asked to put up her bond. >> you're not going to have to pay him no money back? >> no, no. no -- >> are you sure? >>'s been like that, but no. nothing like that.
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no. huh-uh. >> are you sure? >> i swear. >> if he do, don't do it. >> bonded me out for -- no, for $1,200. >> run away from him. >> i have never done that for him. ever. i've never worked for him like that. huh-uh. i don't even -- i never even -- nothing. >> i heard you say that earlier. you was like, "i'm going to have to work the whole day." >> i said -- i said i'd work the whole -- you know what i mean? i'd give him my -- i don't have to. it doesn't matter either way. >> but brandee, i think that you're not being truthful right now because he's going to make you pay him that money back. >> i didn't pay him any money -- i didn't pay any money to him last -- >> let me ask you this, tell you the truth, why did he stabb you and break your ribs? >> he was upset with me. >> about what? >> his sister was in the hospital. and i was on a binge for a while. he's done a lot for me.
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like -- he's not like my dope boy or some pimp that i work for. he's a lot more than that. that's why i hold him in such high regards. yes, we did have an altercation that one time, but he has saved me on the streets. i will ask that man to carry my casket for real. he's a hero to me. he is a hero. and i admire him. he saved me from being raped. he saved me -- i got beat up, bloody and beat up on grandville avenue, thrown dow the stairs in my bra and underwear out in the snow. and i looked over, and his car happened to be at the stoplight. he picked me up and brought me to the hospital. >> that's how y'all met? >> no. i knew him before i ever smoked crack. he did every single thing he could to not ever have me get out of the car and go walk division or do something with my body for drugs. everything he could. contacted my parents. contacted my kids. sent them pictures. he did everything he could.
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>> that was good. >> everything. >> that's good. >> the things -- the series of events that happened later was after a couple-year relationship, and i'm going stupid. drugged out, running the streets, walking division, making poor choices, killing myself. >> yeah. >> using myself, and he knew -- he knows i'm better than that. so it got -- got him frustrated. he doesn't know how to deal with his anger so well. that's when he put his hands on me. >> a few days later, the bond was paid. who paid it is a matter of confidentiality. but brandee nyp, though still facing her charges, was released from the kent county jail and back on the streets. coming up -- >> we were married about two months, and then he got locked up. and he's been here ever since. >> we spent more time me being in jail than we did me being at home.
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that's pathetic. >> brian sees his wife. and we learn what became of brandee nyp. woman 2 ] to carry on traditions. [ woman 3 ] to come together even when we're apart. [ male announcer ] in stuffing, mashed potatoes, gravy and more, swanson makes holiday dishes delicious. progressive direct and other car insurance companies? yes. but you're progressive, and they're them. yes. but they're here. yes. are you...? there? yes. no. are you them? i'm me. but those rates are for... them. so them are here. yes! you want to run through it again? no, i'm good. you got it? yes. rates for us and them -- now that's progressive. call or click today.
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brian says he's seen worst places than the kent county jail. >> got cockroaches like this [ bleep ] big. oh, boy, they be walking, look like they walking on 20 rims or something. leaning back and run. >> but today is a better day than most. >> i miss my wife. i love seeing my wife any time i can. i mean, it helps the days go by. >> pradzik's wife elena has just made the 150-mile from detroit for a 40-minute visit. >> married about two months, and then he got locked up. and he's been here ever since. >> i mean, she's had to go through it all. she's a strong woman. she breaks me down sometimes. she's the only person that can.
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she has a lot of power over me, and nobody else does. and she knows it. >> you're in number one. >> thank you. i am frustrated with brian about him getting locked up all the time. you know, this last time when he got out of prison he said he was done, he was not going back. he wasn't going to do anything, and he is here. so -- >> how fast did you drive? >> fast. otherwise i was going to miss it. >> too fast? >> yeah. >> what is that you're wearing? necklace? i ain't never seen that one. >> because you've been gone since january. so i've acquired quite a few new things since january. >> 138 more days. >> that's a long time. >> i know. do i get out -- on your birthday, don't i? >> the day before. >> yours is the 19th? >> really? you're lucky you're through a tv screen. let me tell you -- >> i'm still scared to come
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home. you want me to get this removed still? >> please. >> please? final -- >> i don't want to ever see that again in my life. >> there's places that will remove it for free since it's gang -- gang [ bleep ]. you have to go on line, google, free gang tattoo removal. >> i have no problem looking that up for you. >> look it up, write me. let me know. i miss you. i'm ready to come home. this jail [ bleep ] sucks. >> maybe you should stop coming. >> i'm not coming back. >> i'm pretty sure i heard that last time. >> what last time? >> last time this happened. and then the time before that and the time before that. kind of hard to believe him when i've heard it before and it wasn't true. kind of frustrating because we're getting to that age where i don't want to be dealing with this all the time. you know, this is kid stuff to me. if he would like to make a life of it, it's not a life i want for me or my daughter. >> we spent more time me being
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in jail than we did me being at home. that's pathetic. i don't -- i don't blame her. that's not life anybody would want. i love you. >> love you. >> kiss the baby for you. >> i will. >> shake her a little bit. >> really? >> shake the baby. >> you always got to be sarcastic? >> i always got to be sarcastic. you know. >> that's brian. yeah. you know, love him or leave him. so i love him. >> all right. love you, baby. >> all right. love you. >> bye-bye. >> all right. bye. >> getting in trouble, there's no if, ands, or buts. i can't. if i do, i lose my family. got to man up. change. stay home, take care of the family. >> prior to her release two months earlier, brandee ynp said she would like to return to her family, as well, and put her
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crack addiction behind her. those plans are on hold. >> brandee has been brought back on a bond violation. so the bondi ining agent's with. she's in handcuffs. we're waiting for a female officer to do a pat down. then we'll process her back in jail. >> hi, susie. how are you? >> you're not going to run on us, right? >> no. come on. let's get these cuffs off. >> nyp was apprehended by her bondman after missing a court date. >> were you using last night, though? >> no. >> no? >> four days clean. >> four days clean? >> yep. >> okay. come here. look at me. let me see your tongue. okay. >> nyp is fingerprinted and soon has another mug shot added to her file. >> brandee, i need you to look straight at the camera.
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that's good, brandee. >> are you high? >> no. no, i've been clean four days. >> really? >> yep. yep. >> how do you feel about being back? >> fine. i was going to turn myself in. so i was kind of prepared for it anyway. so -- it's all right. >> four days later, nyp has settled back in her old housing unit and seemingly more insightful about the choices she has made. >> i never realized it before when i got out of here last time, i realized that you don't have any friends out there. and i always, you know, out of all those people and all of those people that help and all of those people you've hung out with and done all of these things for, you don't have any friends at all. not one. and i also realized that for the
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first time in three years, i realized that those people don't see me really for who i am. you know, when i look in the mirror, like i see myself as who i am, who i was raised and how my parents raised me and what they taught me when i look at myself. but those people see you as somebody totally different. you know, those people see you as a prostitute, you know, crack addict. who can use your weakness to their advantage. and that you're really that stupid. and really i'm not. i'm much more than that. and i never, ever thought that those people looked at me like that. and i never knew that before. so i just don't want that in my life anymore.
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are you going to move out? >> do you want to get along tonight or do you want to start a war? >> cece doesn't have a right to say you're out, i'm staying. say get out. >> it's her home but my home, too. >> good night. >> good night. >> do you still think i'm your wife? >> i don't want drama here. >> this is not your house. you said you would not come back unless i wanted you to come back. >> he's like a squatter in your house but you put mints on the pillow. >> she could leave, take her reon

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