tv Lockup MSNBC April 19, 2014 8:00pm-9:01pm PDT
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due to mature subject matter, viewer discretion is advised. shocking execution style murders of four women results in the arrests of two brothers. >> you trying to kill me for something i didn't do? >> now with pressure mounting, distrust comes between them. >> most definitely going to be brother against brother.
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>> this is soap. it actually comes out of the showers. >> an inmate with a long arrest record discovered an incredible talent and -- >> i cut her like this. and she had my hair. >> a fight breaks out between two female inmates. there's more behind it than meets the eye. >> i'm glad you're here. i love you. >> i love you, too. >> and one of these friends will suffer an unthinkable tragedy. with a population just under 400,000, tulsa, oklahoma maintains a small town feel. it is not immune to big city crime. there are 1800 men and women
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incarcerated at the tulsa county jail. most are only accused of crimes. >> i'll see y'all later. be good. >> because the inmates are innocent until proven guilty, officers try to afford them as many privileges as possible. but one man who has just booked into jail will require special handling. >> this guy here in holding cell nine, he is here on four counts of murder. we keep him in a cell by himself because of the high publicity of the case. we don't want him to be with general population in case someone here is a relative of the people murdered. for his safety and ours. just keep him locked up by himself. >> the new inmate is james pore. he is charged with first degree murder for the execution style
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slayings of four women a month earlier. they are found together in an apartment. all four had their hands bound behind their backs and each shot in the head. he lives in the same complex and says he was friends with two of the victims. he has yet to enter a plea, he says he's completely innocent. >> people say you supposed to have faith in the system, but it don't work like they say it's supposed to. these people are fixing to kill me for something i didn't do. i don't want to die for something i didn't do. the part that got me so emotional is that these are our friends and now i'm being -- they saying i'm being charged with their deaths. >> poore recently completed
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a 12-year prison sentence for the armed robbery of four stores. >> for the first time in my life, i'm innocent and everybody expect -- except me and god believe i'm guilty. >> tulsa homicide investigators believe poore is not only guilty, but he did not act alone. they say he was aided by another man booked into the jail a few days earlier on a parole violation. it's poore's older brother and he, too, is charged with four counts of first degree murder. >> my name is dewayne poore and i haven't killed no one at no time ever in my life. it's not my case, period. do i know what's going on?
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no. do i need help? yes. am i ready to cry? yes. am i pissed? yes. i don't have any feelings about the case. i don't want to sound cold-blooded or cold-hearted about this case, i don't. this is not my case. as for my brother, i can't speak for my brother, but i don't believe he had anything to do with it. i don't believe it. >> brothers turning against each other for little bitty stuff. that's like they wasn't brought up the right way or something. >> raised in a large family, both james and cedric say nothing can break the strong bond they share. >> my relationship with my brother is tight. all my brothers, i got five of them and all of them is tight. very close.
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very close. >> we always say one pardon after finished talking on the phone, one love. >> there's nothing i wouldn't do for my brothers. >> i don't believe nobody would love me more than they would. we have been through so much coming up. >> those bonds will be put to the test. they have both served sentences for armed robbery, they have never faced such serious consequences. if they are found guilty of the murders, they are eligible for the death penalty. >> i have done wrong in my past, but honestly, i don't think i'm going to get a fair shake on this one. >> why? >> because of my past. >> why are you so convinced you are going to be found guilty? >> because my last case, i didn't go into the store or shoot at the people and i got booked for it. now, i'm in the same position
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and i don't know who to tell. so, i'm fixing to get locked up again because i didn't snitch. this time, i don't have a parole date or nothing like that. there's going to be an execution date. >> james poore might have already spoken. the police report states he and cedric committed the murders and robbed the victims. it's been reported to the media as well. >> i don't want to say my brother got me involved in this. i don't want to say what the news media is trying to get me to say, that my broth has implicated me in this. do i love me brother? yes. would i kill for my brother, hell no. would i lie for him? [ bleep ] you're talking about
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the death penalty. coming up -- >> all right. good morning. >> when the poore brothers make their first appearance before the judge, one is left feeling betrayed. and -- >> she said no, what you should have did is move out of my way. i said, no, bitch what you should have said is excuse me me. we are volvo of sweden. to get your client's attention. from brochures to business cards to banners. everything... except your client's attention. thousands of products added every day to staples.com, even bullhorns. how much? [ male announcer ] staples. make more happen.
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like most other jails, tulsa county has plenty of hard luck stories among the 1800 inmates. richard roberts is no exception. >> i had a cocaine addiction. it was brought on about '86. it's been on and off struggle. >> drugs that his prison stays over 25 years. he's pled guilty to 14 different charges ranging from driving
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with a suspended license to burglary and assault and battery on a police officer. he says he's drug free now but his current problems are rooted elsewhere. >> i have a thing about women. 56 years and i finally realized something. women are the downfall to all great men. we can go back to adam and eve. we can go to napoleon. we can even go to bill clinton. now richard roberts. >> and now richard roberts. i have always been a womanizer. that's what most people think. something about a nice man in his mid-50s with a nice smile, healthy body and a full head of hair. women have a tendency to attract themselves to it. they are like moths to light.
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they just flutter right on in. >> though roberts considers himself a ladies man, some of the women in his life might disagree. he is currently charged with assault and battery against a former girlfriend. he's pled not guilty and is awaiting trial. 16 months earlier, however, he pled guilty to three counts of violating a protective order. he served 60 days in the tulsa county jail. >> i was hooked on women for a long time. after my wife left me and everything, my attitude changed about women. that was probably where the switch started going in reverse toward cocaine. >> he has been caught in the jail's revolving door, robert says it was during a stay two years earlier that he had an epiphany. it had to do with soap in the shower stalls.
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>> i actually take the leftover refuge that's in the shower and i turn it into art. this is soap and it actually comes out of the showers. >> what do you mean? >> it's off of the floors in the shower. left over. it's not new soap, it's used soap. my name in the jailhouse is soap crafty. the soap sometimes has filaments of other people's parts. i started back two years ago. i was sitting in jail and had been here two months and it was boredom. i said, let me try something. i told my celly i was going to make a monkey. he said you can't do it. i made a monkey. i take all of the soap, little bits and pieces that's on the floor, i'll bring them in here, dry them out and then i grind them into a powder.
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since it's contraband and there's a window right behind me, i wear my cape while i'm working so officers can't see what i'm doing. grind it into powder and make clay with it. >> robert about makes his sculpting tools from discarded items. >> this is basically just a broken pencil, lead is still intact, put it back in the sharpener to sharpen it to get a little edge to it. >> a lot of work with the feathers and skin and detail. >> yeah. yeah, that's staple work. hours sitting with the stapler, etching. one little scratch at a time. >> his artistic skills are notable. technically the sculptures are contraband.
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the system has a belief that anything not in the matrix is contraband. to me, i'm utilizing the soap, maybe not to take a shower with, but i'm not losing any of the quantity of soap. all i'm doing is altering the shape. what i tell them is if you are upset with me for using soap you should be upset with everyone for showering. they alter the soap as well. >> if staff has turned a blind eye on the repurposing of soap, there are many other infractions that result in being sent to segregation. as trinity baker learned after fighting with an inmate. >> i have been here eight days. i bit my tongue. i go crazy in this little room. i'll never fight again, i promise. >> like all other segregation inmates, baker is confined to a
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single person cell 23 hours a day and lost most of her privileges. >> i spend my days trying to sleep. when i can't, i try to write, read. read a lot. >> this is baker's final day in segregation and her time at jail is coming to an end as well. she is awaiting transfer to prison to serve a five-year sentence for false declaration of ownership at the pawnshop. at the time of her arrest, she was on parole including auto theft and methamphetamine. a drug she's been addicted to for the past ten years. >> i was so bad, my mom passed away, i didn't even notice it. i still haven't dealt with it. all she wanted was a relationship with her daughter and i was so high i couldn't do that. now, she's gone. and i can't go back to that. >> the incident that led to her
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segregation began with another up mate. >> she walked past me and pushed me. i said you could said excuse me. >> i went to get on my bunk. i walked past her without saying excuse me. >> she said you should have moved out of my way. i said what you should have done is said excuse me. we started cussing each other out. >> i broke it up, had them come up to the desk, call an escort in to get them separated. >> after they broke up the argument, she decided it would be better to move her to another housing pod. >> she was severely agitated. she was the one that was being really verbal. >> she said y'all moving me because of this bitch? i'm going to get you bitch. i'm going to get you. >> i went like this. she had my hair. i was on top of her. >> i just yanked baker off there to break them up.
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they were on the floor. told her to quit resisting. she said the only way she was leaving was going to seg. it's where she went. >> the girl is crazy. she needs medication. >> it seems as though baker wanted to go to segregation. turns out she did because her best friend was also in segregation. >> i'm like if i'm moving, i might as well fight here and go to seg. i knew michelle was down there. she encourages me to do well. and it works because i listen to her. i don't listen to nobody but her. >> the one hour she was outside her cell, she could visit with wise but wise returned to general population. >> ready to go, baker? >> yes, sir. >> now it's time for baker to return to general population as well. she's going to housing unit f-22, not f-20, where michelle
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wise was assigned. >> why the sour face when i told you you were going to 22? coming up -- back in general population, trenty baker works the system to get the housing assignment she wants. >> i guess she did what she had to do to get where she needed to. >> my best lawyer is me right now. >> the poore brothers face the judge and each other.
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the tulsa county jail is a few miles from the courthouses where many inmates will eventually be taken to resolve their cases. to save time and resources, routine matters such as arraignments, the proceedings where inmates are read their charges, take place in the jail through a video link to the courts. >> see you back here on the 4th. good luck. >> three days after being charged with the murders of four
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women, james and cedric poore will have their arraignments today. it is the first time they will have seen each other since they were charged. >> cedric poore. good morning, mr. poore. >> cedric was out of prison for 11 months prior to being charged to the homicide. he had served 17 years for armed robbery. >> i wanted to work like the jeffersons, but live like donald trump. it wasn't worth it. nevertheless, i did it. i suffered the consequences of doing it. >> probable cause has been found for your detention on four charges of murder in the first degree. and three charges of robbery with a firearm. on the murder charges being held without bond. >> now facing charges that could result in the death penalty, cedric cannot afford an
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attorney. >> my best attorney right now is me right now. i can read. i can write. it don't take much for me to learn. >> appointing a public defender to represent you on the case. good luck. james poore. good morning mr. poore. i believe you are represented by cathy frye, is that correct? >> yes, sir. >> unlike cedric whose public defender is carrying a heavy case load, james poore hired a private defense attorney. >> miss frye has been in this morning. not guilty plea entered on your behalf. good luck. >> thank you. >> after the arraignment, the two brothers try to talk. an officer notices the exchange and separates them. >> did that go the way you thought? >> i didn't know nothing about no attorney. the court process is moving quicker than mine.
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>> you tried to talk after you were arraigned. what were you trying to say to him. >> how did you get an attorney? how were you able to afford an attorney. i'm scrambling to get an attorney myself. >> you gonna be cool? never hurts to shed a tear especially when you are a man of deep feelings. >> on the advice of his new attorney, james declined to discuss the case any further. as he is led to a single person segregation cell, cedric has much to say. for a while, i was standing by the code, believing that as long as i don't talk, as long as i don't snitch, i'll be all right. there's no way in hell my brother would throw me under the bus, so to speak.
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now, i don't say it with great pride, trust me, i don't say it with great pride at all that i have to do what's best for me and mine. so, i got to start talking, you know, to save my own ass. >> when you say you have to talk, what does that mean? >> tell them everything i know. >> that indicates to me you have awareness of this crime? >> yes, i do. i have awareness of the crime, yes, i do. >> how did you come about this awareness? >> it was handed to me. by both, two of the three perpetrators that did the crime. >> who were the two of the three? >> i'd rather not say. right now. do i got anything to do with the crime? no, i do not. did i kill anyone? no, i did not. only one person that's
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implicated my name in this crime. unfortunately, that's my brother. you know, you have an attorney when you could have gave me indication of something about it. i mean, makes it seem as though you are trying to push everything into my direction. no. it's not going to happen that way. this is my brother putting me at the scene of a quadruple murder. armed robbery now, it's going to turn out to be brother against brother. coming up -- >> cedric poore. >> he gets a visit from the woman who might help prove his innocence and -- >> was one of those situations where i didn't want to take him but i knew i had to. >> the sculptures wind up in the hands of authorities. my guests are always asking me, "nathan, which dish is better?". now i say you can have it all with our new seafood trios! red lobster's new seafood trios is three times delicious! choose one option from the wood-fire grill,
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divers are pulled more bodies from the ferry that sank off the coast of south korea. >> on the eve of easter, pope francis addressed some ten thousand people saturday night. he urged people to rediscover direction in their lives. more news later here on msnbc. residents of tulsa, oklahoma, often describe it as the city where people know their neighbors and are close to their families. it can be like that inside the tulsa county jail as well. >> i had to. >> trenty baker admits to fighting another inmate to be
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sent to the segregation unit because her best friend was there for fighting as well. now both women are back in general population units but not in the same one. baker might have discovered family in heather martin. >> who am i? >> she's my cousin. >> she thinks she's my cousin, so i let her think i'm her cousin. she wants to be my cousin, i let her think it. but no, she's not my cousin. >> my mom and your mom. remember bakers? or your daddy is a baker. we discovered this. anyway, we found out we were cousins. >> why is she pretending to be your cousin? >> i don't know. >> glad to see ya, cousin. come back to see me. my mom and trenty baker have the same last name. we kind of hit some people
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related to her were related to me. it's the reason we thought we were cousins. yeah, but, that's my cousin. but i know her regardless if we are cousins or not cousins. really, i think we're cousins. >> we're cousins. >> don't we look alike? >> later that day, baker filed a keep away request. >> that means they keep you away from each other. it's a form inmates fill out to let them know they have a problem with another person. >> i like her, she's cool. i just had to put a keep away on her. i had to do it. >> we don't want to see anyone get hurt. if someone says they are being or have been threatened by an individual, we need to move them for safety. >> does heather know? no, but you can tell her if you want. i don't care. she knows how it goes. >> oh trenty baker. trenty, she did what she had to
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do to get where she needed to. you know, that's trenty, i mean -- >> i'm happy to see you. >> i'm happy to see you, too, but you need to calm down. >> with a limited number of housing units, trenty has been moved to another housing unit. the coincidence is not lost on staff. >> so the keep away game only has one real outcome if you keep playing it. you'll eventually run out of place to go and have to go to amendment segregation. usually around the time it's time to go to administrative segregation, the truth starts to come out. >> what is the connection with her? >> i love her. >> i'm so glad you are here.
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i love you. >> i love you, too. her brother connected us, now we love each other. >> baker is dating her brother, but they share other things as well. they are both mothers and meth addicts. they both have prior drug related convictions and are awaiting transfer to prison. they each have five year sentences that were fueled by their addictions. >> i used a friend's id to not have to use my own name because i had warrants. i have been on the run for two years. it caught up with me. it always does. i have been here three or four times since i was 18. i have been to prison twice. this will be my third trip. >> wise, who holds a jail job serving meals, says this time around, she's grateful for what the tulsa county jail has done for her.
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>> i came her pregnant and strung out. i had a healthy nine pound baby. i wouldn't have had that had i not been here. >> six weeks earlier, she was transported to a hospital to give birth. she was with him three days before returning him to her brother and returning to jail. >> my brother is all the family i have. he came and picked my son, david, i named him after my brother, he picked him up from the hospital. i snuck contraband back, his shirt and hat and i kept it wrapped up in plastic so i could smell him. she hopes her prison term will keep her off drugs for good to be a better mother. she says a children's book borrowed from the jail's library has already helped her bond with her son.
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>> i read this book every night to myself during my pregnancy. every time i called home, my brother put me on speakerphone. my son is making noises with the phone. i know he knows my voice. it helps me, you know, be close to my 6-week-old. coming up. >> hey. >> cedric poore gets a visit from his wife. later, two best friends await transfer to prison. before they leave, one receives devastated news from home. cars are driven by people. they're why we innovate. they're who we protect. they're why we make life less complicated. it's about people. we are volvo of sweden. sunny or bubbly? cozy or cool? "meow" or "woof"?
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they all appreciate it. >> richard roberts says it was an earlier stay at tulsa county that led him to discover the incredible things he could do with the discarded shards of soap. now, other inmates contribute to the raw material. >> i get deliveries in my window sill or under my door. a guy brought me a bag of broken-up soap. everybody contributes. >> his soap sculptures were confiscated. >> my opinion is that is a very tall lened man. he is extremely talented. it was one of those situations where i didn't want to take them. i knew for the betterment of the facility i had to. >> because i took soap out of the shower off the floor that was garbage and made something beautiful, i was penalized for it. >> i explained what the problem was, of it being an unsanitary situation.
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he really didn't quite get it. >> the confiscation of contraband is ru teen at the jail. roberts' case is brought to the attention of the women who runs the facility. >> he an elephant sculpture with the big ears, tusks, was phenomenal. phenomenal. i wish they could use those talents for something other than soap sculptures in jail. >> the staff followed policy and confiscated the sculptures. all is not lost. the chief put them on display. >> i moved them down to the library where my programs manager is. we are gearing towards an art program. we have so many programs right now that talk about life skills and getting your g.e.d. and all the bible studies and the church programs, but we don't yet have something geared toward the creativity of the individual
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inmate. so she's putting together an art program because that shows everybody that they can do something positive while they are in jail. if we can have one person leave this jail better than what they came and give them a skill or a tool to use when they leave so they can get a job that may affect their coming back, that one is a success. >> in robert's hopes, he might be the jail's next success. >> is that it? >> that's it. >> he entered a guilty plea on his charges. the judge gave him a suspended sentence of 18 months plus time served. today, roberts will be released and have a chance to make it on the outside. >> one moment you are tied, you are locked, shackled, then one moment all of a sudden the
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chains are gone and now you just ready to fly away. >> cedric poore looks forward to a release date as well. that's not likely to occur anytime soon. he and his brother are charged with the execution style murder of four white women. before he stopped speaking to us, he thought race would affect the trial. >> truthfully i didn't expect to get no fair shake at this any way. we're in the state of oklahoma and i was four white women that got killed. me and my brother were two black gentlemen with prison records. you do the math. >> cedric says, if nothing else, he can prove he's not a racist. his wife of five months just arrived for a visit. >> you here to see -- >> cedric poore. >> what pod is he in? >> j-11.
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>> cedric poore for a noncontact, please. >> i'm waiting for her to come through. >> what do these visits do for you? >> keep me motivated open keep me going. keep my spirits up. get me to think about everything besides these four walls. >> hey handsome. >> hey sweaty. how are you doing? >> good, how are you? >> cedric is very family oriented. he's quiet, if you don't know him. not racist. yeah. the media is portraying him to be racist. obviously, i'm white, his best friends are white. he's not racist. >> i miss you. >> i miss you, too. >> i don't know if they know he's married to a white lady. surprise. >> i want to touch. >> i know. anxious. >> this glass is killing me. >> frustrated. >> that will work, too. that will work, too. that's the closest we can get baby, for now. >> i know. >> when i learned he had been
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arrested and charged, i actually had to pull over and vomit on the side of the highway. my world has changed in every aspect. i have received threatening texts on my phone telling me to do the world a favor, put a gun to my mouth and pull the trigger. i love you. >> i love you, too, baby. >> i love you more. >> can't, it's not possible. >> yeah, it is. >> it's not. >> we'll just say we are even. he was very close to both my kids. he taught my 15-year-old to drive. he's not going to be here when she gets her driver's license. i'm going to get upset, sorry. >> what have you told your children? >> not to believe what they see on the news. and that i wouldn't be with
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someone that could do something like that. >> how you doing out there, emotionally? >> i'm okay. >> no more roller coasters. >> always going to be a roller coaster when you're in here. i'm handling the roller coaster better. >> you at the controls now? >> yeah. >> that's what i'm talking about. all gas and no brake. taking me up the hill, baby. all gas, no brake. >> sorry. i wish i could fix it. >> i wish we both could fix it. it will be all right. you fixing it right now, you here. you fixing it. it will be just fine. >> i believe my loyalty and commitment to him has been shown and he realizes that he chose the right person to marry because i am willing to be with him through thick and thin, good and bad, till death do us part. >> kiss. >> i love you. >> love you too.
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>> one more. see you. >> love you. >> love you, too. bye. get a sense of calm when you know you have somebody there for you all the time. now, this is like the ultimate test. she's like front and center. she don't care. she's right here. i'm a little bit lighter because anything that's going through my mind or the doubts i have running through my heart at times, all that gets taken away. coming up -- >> let's get ahold of chaplain. >> a phone call brings tragic news for a tulsa county inmate. e people like to pretend a flood could never happen to them. and that their homeowners insurance protects them. [ thunder crashes ] it doesn't. stop pretending. only flood insurance covers floods. ♪ visit floodsmart.gov/pretend to learn your risk.
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including the two moment old son she gave birth to in prison. her son has been in the care of her brother. >> is one of my officers up there? we have an issue. >> now sergeant collette received tragic news. last name wise, w-i-s-e. first name michelle. maybe she does know or maybe she doesn't know, her child died. the baby was barely 2 months old. let's get ahold of chaplain to see if he's aware of that and rehouse her in medical, if we can. thank you. all right. bye-bye. >> so, sergeant, what is that about? >> if she doesn't know the child has died, i want to make sure the chaplain's office knows. i sent an officer to go there and make sure they are aware her child did die.
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then i have her going to mental health department. we have a person on staff right now, make contact with them so they are available to her and talk to her. at the very least, i want her to move to medical where they can keep a closer eye on her. the jail chaplain delivered the devastating news. it was almost one month later before wise was willing to discuss her son with us. >> my son stopped breathing. my brother found him unresponsive in his crib. and, i don't know. >> his death was attributed to s.i.d.s., sudden infant death syndrome. >> i didn't believe it at first, i thought it was a sick joke. i just, i didn't believe it. i don't know.
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i mean, you know, i got three days with him in the hospital. my life has been so messed up because of my drug addiction and because of my choices and my mistakes since i turned 18. i have two other children that i lost due to my drug addiction. this was going to be a chance that i was going to have to change. to be different, to have my son, to be a mother to my child. that's why this is so much harder because all of me, every bit of me wanted to change. that last day was the hardest when i had to say good-bye because i didn't know how long i was going to, you know, i didn't know how long it would be before i could see him again or hold him or smell him.
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now i can't hold him or smell him or see him. >> jail officials permitted wise to attend her son's funeral. >> i remember him being warm and soft and holdable. not in that casket and being cold and stiff. but, i don't regret, i'm glad i went. i probably would have regretted not going. >> wise, who no longer has a relationship with her son's father last saw her brother at the funeral. she's not been able to reach him since then. he got two full months with him and i got three days and now my brother is nowhere. my baby is dead and he's gone. i don't have my baby and i don't have my brother. it's -- i don't understand how he can't. i know he's grieving. my son is gone and my brother is gone. it's like [ bleep ] i'm here by myself and i need my brother or
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my baby, one of the two. >> is there someone here you can talk to? >> i don't want to talk to people. i just want people to leave me alone. i go to all my classes at nighttime. i lay in bed and i have all kind of bad thoughts. >> normally, wise would have had her best friend and her brother's girlfriend, trenty baker to speak to, but baker was transferred to prison two weeks earlier. >> it was so sad watching her go. a crying battle. she was a really good support for me, you know. i would like to think i was for her, too. it was sad watching her walk out. >> let's go to the chapel. >> today, wise will have someone to speak to, her brother. chaplain farnam arranged for them to have a contact visit. >> he agreed to come at 10:00.
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he may be running late. >> is it past 10:00? >> yeah. >> a short time later, it's apparent her brother had not made it to the visit. >> i just want to see him. >> i know. we are going to work on you seeing him, even if you don't see it today. the problem is, he's running through the same processes as you. you know the other day on the phone you told him it isn't his fault. you telling him that and him coming to the belief of that is two different things, you realize that, don't you? >> yeah. >> remember you questioned the other day, was it something you did prior to your child being born? you questioned all that. david is going through the same things. he's questioning, is it something i did? could i have done it different or better? until he settles those questions in his mind, as much as he knows you love him, it's hard for him to come see you.
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there's two reasons he might not have made it. he might not know what to say yet. i know that doesn't help your feelings any because you want to see him. >> it makes me angry. >> it's fine to be angry. all we can do is try. we can't make him come. >> i know that. >> she really wants to see her brother, michelle does. she has no answers yet. she's hoping by seeing her brother, she can get answers. most of all, she feels for her brother and wants him to know she cares for him, loves him, doesn't blame him and that's what she wants him to know. ♪
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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. >> he comes to terms with his past and present. >> 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 underwear in the snow.
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