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Aug 31, 2015
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inmates serve short sentences for specific rule violations and administrative segregation or long-termregation for inmates too trouble some. inmates in both areas wear jump suits instead of green. they are housed in single man cells and are only allowed out for one hour per day during which they must be handcuffed and shackled. rule violations that landed him in segregation were as minor as they get. >> i got in trouble for giving a guy some envelopes. i meant to go in there but i went to give it to him and that's against the rules so they locked me up and gave me 20 days in seg. >> they can't pass anything of any sort not knowing whether it's gang activity, you present that but not letting them pass messages they could be using to take care of business on the outside. >> you're not allowed to give anybody anything technically. >> it's just crazy. it's like juvenile. >> you didn't do anything? >> no. i do got a mouth on me. >> shepherd admits he did argue with the officer who wrote him up. >> what did you say? >> all kinds of stuff. i don't even remember. i know i cussed him out and it
inmates serve short sentences for specific rule violations and administrative segregation or long-termregation for inmates too trouble some. inmates in both areas wear jump suits instead of green. they are housed in single man cells and are only allowed out for one hour per day during which they must be handcuffed and shackled. rule violations that landed him in segregation were as minor as they get. >> i got in trouble for giving a guy some envelopes. i meant to go in there but i went to...
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Aug 23, 2015
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these inmates end up next door in the jail's administrative segregation unit which is considered extended segregation. though ad seg inmates have a few more privileges, most are considered too dangerous for general population. one of the jail's most infamous ad seg inmates is eric kelly. kelly has already spent more than 22 years in prison for convictions including armed robbery, aggravated assault, and making terroristic threats. he is currently charged with possession of cocape with intent to distribute, to which he has pled not guilty. >> i'm that guy your mama and daddy told you about. you need to stay out of trouble, don't go to jail. you go to jail you're going to meet that guy, like me. >> kelly has been outsided in ad seg for more than a year. but his stay in the jail began in general population. he was caught with a broken broom handle, which was considered a potential weapon, and was given 15 days in disciplinary lockdown. after his return to general population, he threw a food tray at an officer and then encouraged other inmates to follow suit. >> after that inmate kelly was pl
these inmates end up next door in the jail's administrative segregation unit which is considered extended segregation. though ad seg inmates have a few more privileges, most are considered too dangerous for general population. one of the jail's most infamous ad seg inmates is eric kelly. kelly has already spent more than 22 years in prison for convictions including armed robbery, aggravated assault, and making terroristic threats. he is currently charged with possession of cocape with intent to...
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Aug 23, 2015
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want to go to administrative segregation? >> not at this time. >> we'll note it on the lockup order. basically what happened was an inmate was assaulted in the gym, right? after we did a thorough search, pants located in your laundry bag contained suspected blood stains on the pants. so therefore, pending investigation, you're going to administrative segregation. because right now if we keep you in the gym, you jeopardize the integrity of the investigation. >> so i'm being written up for the fight? >> yeah. so that's what's going to happen. all righty? i'll get an officer to get you some clothes here in just a minute. >> with a white suspect and a southern hispanic victim, officers are wary of retaliation that could explode into a race riot. >> hey, step outside for me real quick. how many south siders? you've got two south siders over there? what's dude that came from level one? is that him? >> he's right here. actually, he's right here. out with these white boys right here. >> yeah. and then the dude to his right is a south
want to go to administrative segregation? >> not at this time. >> we'll note it on the lockup order. basically what happened was an inmate was assaulted in the gym, right? after we did a thorough search, pants located in your laundry bag contained suspected blood stains on the pants. so therefore, pending investigation, you're going to administrative segregation. because right now if we keep you in the gym, you jeopardize the integrity of the investigation. >> so i'm being...
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Aug 9, 2015
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that's why they've been placed in administrative segregation. assaulted inmates, they've assaulted staff. >> there are more than 900 correctional officers at san quentin state prison, nearly 200 of whom are women. officer mannix is one of them. >> hi, miss mannix. >> hey. >> i'll see what i can do and let them know that you're still here. >> okay. >> okay? >> all right. >> all right. >> being a correctional officer, i'm at work and that's full time when i'm there. when i'm home, i'm a full time mom. >> here, john, you want to help out? >> it's been 12, 13 years. and she's had a couple of minor incidents, but for the most part, you know, it's a job. >> i thought only guys were prison guards for the longest time. then i heard -- my mom said, yep, i'm working at san quentin. i'm like, really? i thought that was only a guy thing. >> i got to go upstairs and change. >> okay. >> all right. >> i'm proud of her. that's basically it. >> she does good at whatever she does. >> yeah. >> i respect what she does because it takes a strong woman to do that. >>
that's why they've been placed in administrative segregation. assaulted inmates, they've assaulted staff. >> there are more than 900 correctional officers at san quentin state prison, nearly 200 of whom are women. officer mannix is one of them. >> hi, miss mannix. >> hey. >> i'll see what i can do and let them know that you're still here. >> okay. >> okay? >> all right. >> all right. >> being a correctional officer, i'm at work and that's...
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Aug 2, 2015
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you can't be in the security housing unit or administrative segregation.reception center inmate. you can't be on noncontact status. you can't be a condemned inmate. you can't be life without parole. >> ron golden is serving a 22-year sentence for armed robbery and prison staff assaults. four years ago while at another prison, he married hope golden, a woman he'd known since he was a teenager. he's been at kern valley for just a few months. >> we were corresponding from '98 to 2001, and we became intimate with each other. she wanted to come see me. she knew me from the streets. it just blossomed into something beautiful. we fell in love with each other. >> good morning. >> do you have your i.d.? >> it's in there. >> this will be ron and hope's first family visit at kern valley and the first time they've seen each other in five months. >> the orange shirt can't go in because it's orange. >> okay. now i know, i won't do that. >> okay. and the rollers can't go in either. >> okay. >> i'll give you a bag to put all this stuff in. >> before we were married i was
you can't be in the security housing unit or administrative segregation.reception center inmate. you can't be on noncontact status. you can't be a condemned inmate. you can't be life without parole. >> ron golden is serving a 22-year sentence for armed robbery and prison staff assaults. four years ago while at another prison, he married hope golden, a woman he'd known since he was a teenager. he's been at kern valley for just a few months. >> we were corresponding from '98 to 2001,...
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Aug 24, 2015
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the attacker was identified and put in administrative segregation for questioning, but now the entire cell block is about to be searched for weapons. >> keep your eyes open. keep your ears open. do your normal cell searches, handle your business and be safe. >> a large team of correctional officers will search every square inch of their cells. first, all the inmates are removed. first for weapons, then taken out to the yard. >> step over here. >> all right. all right. >> these surprise raids are usually successful in finding weapons. but present a unique challenge for "lockup" crews. >> it is action. it's real action. and the only thing that you have to be careful of you don't want to piss off the cell block. you kind of run the risk of alienating the very guys you're trying to extract stories and cooperation from. we always hope, if there is going to be a raid, that it's toward the end of our tour at the prison. >> but tv crew concerns are the last thing on the minds of these officers. what they uncover can be the difference between life and death. >> it's an old joint. you can hide
the attacker was identified and put in administrative segregation for questioning, but now the entire cell block is about to be searched for weapons. >> keep your eyes open. keep your ears open. do your normal cell searches, handle your business and be safe. >> a large team of correctional officers will search every square inch of their cells. first, all the inmates are removed. first for weapons, then taken out to the yard. >> step over here. >> all right. all right....
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Aug 29, 2015
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smart spends 23 hours a day in administrative segregation known as the bubble. jail officials say they are keeping smart on lockdown because of the high-profile nature of his case and his reputation as a trained fighter. >> he's a licensed fighter. he does have a record. so they feel for the safety of the facility, it's best if he's kept in the bubble here. >> the jail allowed our crew to give smart a handheld camera so he could record his thoughts and experiences in the bubble. >> they come in here and shake us down, make you put your hands through that slot there and they put handcuffs on you and make you stand up against that wall. each time make scratches from the handcuffs. when i first got in there, i didn't know what that was. i actually thought it was people trying to scratch and claw their way out of here. that's how terrible it is in here, to be in here like this 24/7. there's a bunch of little ants just kind of cruising around, you know. that's crazy. there they've got some food. that one has some food. if you were at home, i would immediately grab so
smart spends 23 hours a day in administrative segregation known as the bubble. jail officials say they are keeping smart on lockdown because of the high-profile nature of his case and his reputation as a trained fighter. >> he's a licensed fighter. he does have a record. so they feel for the safety of the facility, it's best if he's kept in the bubble here. >> the jail allowed our crew to give smart a handheld camera so he could record his thoughts and experiences in the bubble....
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Aug 2, 2015
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. >> a person ends up in administrative segregation, usually are problem childs, are security threat members, the people that want to make money in the institution by trafficking. they're troublemakers. >> but bailey seemed more interested in creature comforts than violence. >> this is my la-z-boy, my chair. sitting in this sell for years and years and years will mess your back up because these steel beds. through the years people jump up and down on them so that makes them uneven and they give you back problems for the rest of your life. that's it. this is my home. this is my -- this is where i live. >> bailey is also allowed out of his cell once a day for an hour of recreation in an enclosed yard. >> you know, why is it important to keep someone like this segregated? it seems to be a sociable kind of guy. >> a lot of sociopaths are. a lot of jocco's problems are substance abuse related. that leads to other problems, such as violence in the institution. that's why he is where he is. he hasn't been successful in open population. >> i've stabbed offenders for snitching. i've ha
. >> a person ends up in administrative segregation, usually are problem childs, are security threat members, the people that want to make money in the institution by trafficking. they're troublemakers. >> but bailey seemed more interested in creature comforts than violence. >> this is my la-z-boy, my chair. sitting in this sell for years and years and years will mess your back up because these steel beds. through the years people jump up and down on them so that makes them...
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Aug 29, 2015
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. >> administrative segregation inmates are locked down 23 hours a day and are cuffed and shackled any time they are out of their cells. they are allowed only an hour a day for rec time or phone calls, which can be taken away if they fail their daily inspection. >> they can lose their hour if they don't follow the rules, don't make up their beds, if they're not ready for inspection, they lose their hour. >> one area of unit 2-c is even more isolated. >> behind me is what's called the bubble. that's for your highest of all profile cases. >> more regular ad seg inmates are allowed to interact with others during rec time. bubble inmates must spend the one hour out of their cell in the rec yard alone. one of the inmates housed in the bubble is norman smart. >> mr. smart was placed in there due to the fact that his case was all over the news. mr. smart was also well-trained in the martial arts. so we wanted to not only just protect mr. smart from the other detainees, but also protect the other detainees from mr. smart if there was a confrontation. >> i'm in the bubble, they cal
. >> administrative segregation inmates are locked down 23 hours a day and are cuffed and shackled any time they are out of their cells. they are allowed only an hour a day for rec time or phone calls, which can be taken away if they fail their daily inspection. >> they can lose their hour if they don't follow the rules, don't make up their beds, if they're not ready for inspection, they lose their hour. >> one area of unit 2-c is even more isolated. >> behind me is...
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Aug 8, 2015
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. >> ad seg is just short for administrative segregation. like i said, in essence, it's a prison within a prison. >> yes! >> inmates housed in ad seg are not allowed contact visits and must remain in their cells 23 hours a day. when they are allowed out, they are handcuffed and escorted by an officer. >> they are in trouble. most of the time they're in gangs and violence, so for our safety as well as everybody else's safety, we just have them handcuffed behind their back and escorted everywhere they go. >> if you guys would have came yesterday, i just sent her a portrait i did of her, all in red with hearts on it like a valentine. she touched my heart. that's why i get weak. plus my son. i can't be with them for ten years. you know, that's hard. >> angel rodriguez has spent two months in administrative segregation. he's automatically placed there because he's labeled a validated gang member. >> that means that administration has labeled you as being a participant or an associate of those who are known as gang members. so if you're an associa
. >> ad seg is just short for administrative segregation. like i said, in essence, it's a prison within a prison. >> yes! >> inmates housed in ad seg are not allowed contact visits and must remain in their cells 23 hours a day. when they are allowed out, they are handcuffed and escorted by an officer. >> they are in trouble. most of the time they're in gangs and violence, so for our safety as well as everybody else's safety, we just have them handcuffed behind their back...
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Aug 9, 2015
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it's administrative segregation. we know it came from downstairs, you fished it up here.n. that's a weapon. right here's a fish line, so if he's using this to -- they use this as a weight and they'll send this off the tier to the lower tiers, most likely, where they're allowed to have razor blades, stuff like that, and the inmate will attach a razor blade to this and they'll fish it in. as you can see, they've got a lot of line right here. they'll go all the way up the tier. they'll go up, they'll go down, they'll go side to side, and this is how they pass contraband right here, so, we'll definitely take this. they know exactly how some of us do our jobs, so if they're going to sit there and they're going to be loud or disrespectful while i walk down the tier, i may pay a visit to their cell and do a cell inspection and maybe find some contraband. they know when i go in, i'm not leaving until i find something. a lot of times, they tear up the side of their mattress, try to hide stuff, think we won't get dirty and go in there. >> these cell searches yield both contraband a
it's administrative segregation. we know it came from downstairs, you fished it up here.n. that's a weapon. right here's a fish line, so if he's using this to -- they use this as a weight and they'll send this off the tier to the lower tiers, most likely, where they're allowed to have razor blades, stuff like that, and the inmate will attach a razor blade to this and they'll fish it in. as you can see, they've got a lot of line right here. they'll go all the way up the tier. they'll go up,...
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Aug 9, 2015
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this is for administrative segregation inmates and this is a due process issue where we bring them inpect from here. >> name and cdc number, sir. >> matthew national, 245854. >> today's classification committee is warden ayres. >> you were at corcoran state prison, referred to our csr for transfer, csr approved and you were retained. you have done your shoe related time. therefore, the recommendation is to release you to the rcgp. okay. do you have any problems with being released? >> yes, i got a problem to gp because i'm not a gp. i dropped out. >> you in a gang? >> yes, i am affiliated with a gang, yes. >> you're a dropout of what? >> out of the woods. but right now, i'm just concerned about my housing, where i'm going to be housed. that's all i'm worried about right now. >> by releasing him today we can make him a1 status and that will give him the opportunity to parole today. so it doesn't matter where you're going to be housed. we can go ahead and release you and keep you here pending your parole. >> understand that, nasholm? >> yes. >> okay. so if we grant you a one-time for th
this is for administrative segregation inmates and this is a due process issue where we bring them inpect from here. >> name and cdc number, sir. >> matthew national, 245854. >> today's classification committee is warden ayres. >> you were at corcoran state prison, referred to our csr for transfer, csr approved and you were retained. you have done your shoe related time. therefore, the recommendation is to release you to the rcgp. okay. do you have any problems with...
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Aug 16, 2015
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his assailants were sentenced to six months in folsom's administration segregation unit. some of the most violent gang attacks have taken place here at california state prison corcoran's security housing unit, or shu. we visited the shu's now-vacant exercise yard, which has been the scene of some of the prison's most brutal violence. ♪ >> i could see why fights went on in that exercise yard. because it was literally like a cage. there was nowhere for you to go. and if you really wanted to take someone out, that was the place to do it. it's literally -- like the most extreme ultimate fighting thing you would see. >> correctional officers showed our cameras how they quell the violence with an arsenal of their own. one that includes nonlethal and lethal weaponry. >> get down! get down! >> the first rounds we fire are wood blocks. hopefully the hurt will make them stop. if we really have to escalate with our nonlethal options, we use what we call a scat round. which is really irritating. see, those ar little bit louder. the smoke you see there, that's cn gas. it's no fun. it
his assailants were sentenced to six months in folsom's administration segregation unit. some of the most violent gang attacks have taken place here at california state prison corcoran's security housing unit, or shu. we visited the shu's now-vacant exercise yard, which has been the scene of some of the prison's most brutal violence. ♪ >> i could see why fights went on in that exercise yard. because it was literally like a cage. there was nowhere for you to go. and if you really wanted...
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Aug 2, 2015
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and what we did, we came up with administrative segregation unit and isolated the ones doing it. and after we did that, we pretty much stopped the assaults and everything else. we still have assaults over on these units up here in our disciplinary segregation unit but it's down about 85% in population. >> the men housed in ad seg are allowed one hour of recreation per day in an enclosed yard. the rest of the time they're confined to their cell. >> this is my la-z-boy, my chair, sitting in the cell for years and years and years. it will mess your back up. because of the steel beds. through the years people jump up and down on them so that makes them uneven and give you back problems for the rest of your life. >> convicted of murder and attempted murder as a teenager, jocco bailey was given a 40-year sentence. he has spent more than 11 years in ad seg. >> it's challenging being locked up. here in the a.s. unit because you have the opportunity to be still and decide what you want the rest of your life to look like. it's boring and it's cold and it's lonely. it's not a fun place to be
and what we did, we came up with administrative segregation unit and isolated the ones doing it. and after we did that, we pretty much stopped the assaults and everything else. we still have assaults over on these units up here in our disciplinary segregation unit but it's down about 85% in population. >> the men housed in ad seg are allowed one hour of recreation per day in an enclosed yard. the rest of the time they're confined to their cell. >> this is my la-z-boy, my chair,...
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Aug 23, 2015
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for their disruptive behavior, the inmates involved receive time in administrative segregation. once their treatment in the infirmary was completed. >>> next on "lockup: raw: ever present danger." >> my crime is a serial rapist. >> they accused me of killing a little girl back in 1994. >> sex offenders. the pariahs of the prison yard. >> far as i am concerned they can die. >>> it's probably the most common of all emotions inside prison. and fear comes in many forms. as a group of inmates at kentucky state penitentiary explain to us. >> i don't fear none of these guys out here. the one i fear the worst is probably my clique. it's not a clique. my friends that i hang with, these 10, 15 people. i probably fear them most. because i know who they are. the rest of these guys i don't fear none of them. i hope they watch this. so they all know, the ones that don't. they all know they probably do anyway. >> only thing i fear is the end, i believe that's what's going to get me in life. kicking the bucket. >> just because i don't fear them don't mean they can't take me out of it. you don't
for their disruptive behavior, the inmates involved receive time in administrative segregation. once their treatment in the infirmary was completed. >>> next on "lockup: raw: ever present danger." >> my crime is a serial rapist. >> they accused me of killing a little girl back in 1994. >> sex offenders. the pariahs of the prison yard. >> far as i am concerned they can die. >>> it's probably the most common of all emotions inside prison. and...
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Aug 2, 2015
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. >> house one is also known as administrative segregation, where inmates are locked in their cells 23 hours a day. >> all the worst management problems in the entire state system, they end up here. this is the end of the road for them. >> i was originally charged with contract murder and drug trafficking and gun charges. i joke about it sometimes and say the only thing they didn't get me for was sex offenses. >> even though spring creek houses the worst and most disturbed offenders in the state, outbreaks of violence in the prison are surprisingly rare. >> we have assaults but they're not as many as like the lower 48. you know, we have the same mindset and same type of criminals. here they'll work up and talk to you and we'll deal with issues and problems and we help them out as much as we can. >> prescott. >> yeah. >> do you have any more questions about transferring out tomorrow? >> no. >> i'm way outnumbered but i have a radio and, you know, i have good people working with me. you know, everybody here looks out for everybody else. >> for officer ed massey who came to spring creek f
. >> house one is also known as administrative segregation, where inmates are locked in their cells 23 hours a day. >> all the worst management problems in the entire state system, they end up here. this is the end of the road for them. >> i was originally charged with contract murder and drug trafficking and gun charges. i joke about it sometimes and say the only thing they didn't get me for was sex offenses. >> even though spring creek houses the worst and most...
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Aug 10, 2015
08/15
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. >>> administrative segregation is home to roughly 200 inmates. confined to their cells 23 hours a day. these men often become defiant and desperate. when an inmate acts up in general population, he's moved to ad-seg. but when he acts up in ad-seg, the officers' only option is to periodically move the inmate from cell to cell. >> jamie bell, we're going to move him out. be a little particular with him because he's already hostile, you know. let's just use caution with him, okay? >> put your hands behind you. cuff up. >> stick your hands out. >> shower stall right now. >> jamie bell is temporarily housed in the shower stall until his new cell is cleaned and inspected. >> all i'm asking is that somebody stop harassing me! >> our crew first met jammy bell a month earlier when he was outraged over unsanitary conditions in his cell. >> i can't breathe in here. my toilet is full up with feces. >> today, he's moving to a new cell after an inmate threw urine and feces through his ventilation. >> you're going to have the same problem, man. [ bleep ]. >> yo
. >>> administrative segregation is home to roughly 200 inmates. confined to their cells 23 hours a day. these men often become defiant and desperate. when an inmate acts up in general population, he's moved to ad-seg. but when he acts up in ad-seg, the officers' only option is to periodically move the inmate from cell to cell. >> jamie bell, we're going to move him out. be a little particular with him because he's already hostile, you know. let's just use caution with him, okay?...
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>> at holman, 630 beds are dedicated to general population. 200 accommodate inmates in administrative segregation172 are set aside for death row inmates. >> you have anything from a property offender here all the way to self-proclaimed serial killers. >> because of a lot of difficult inmates or inmates that other camps can't contain, they will send them to us, and we take them, and we deal with them. >> you'll be out in 30 damn seconds. >> people can get tied up. people can get shot up, you know. people can get stabbed up. >> wrong place, wrong time. you might get hurt. >> so it's up to you to maintain and weave. you know what i'm saying? if you can't weave, then you're gonna be another statistic. either you're gonna get messed up or locked up. >> when i was growing up in this area, we used to be literally scared to pass by the road because we would hear all these horror stories of, like, people getting killed. >> i've seen a guy, you know, get opened up. i've seen stabbings. i've pretty much seen it all. >> over the years, holman's reputation for violence has earned the facility a number of nick
>> at holman, 630 beds are dedicated to general population. 200 accommodate inmates in administrative segregation172 are set aside for death row inmates. >> you have anything from a property offender here all the way to self-proclaimed serial killers. >> because of a lot of difficult inmates or inmates that other camps can't contain, they will send them to us, and we take them, and we deal with them. >> you'll be out in 30 damn seconds. >> people can get tied up....
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Aug 16, 2015
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officers are looking for contraband ranging from drugs and weapons to items not allowed in administrative segregationobacco. if an inmate violates rules in segregation, he winds up in disciplinary ad seg where even most reading material is considered contraband. >> that's evidence about the -- i'm telling you i got the files in my file. that's evidence, man. you know you violating the law. you ain't got no business [ bleep ] with my legal [ bleep ]. you know it's against the law to do what you're doing, bitch. see your [ bleep ] ass in court. >> i've been there. i'm still here. 25 years. >> we'll see if you gonna still be here. [ bleep ]. [ bleep ]. i don't care nothing about you, cracker. you ain't [ bleep ] me, bitch. >> every day we're going to take care of you. he's not happy. he had a copy of a quarterly newsletter that our department puts out. it's put out for the employees. it's not even put out for the inmates. i don't know where he got it from and it's not something he's allowed to have in his cell. he started claiming it was evidence in a legal trial that he was in and that's why he got mad
officers are looking for contraband ranging from drugs and weapons to items not allowed in administrative segregationobacco. if an inmate violates rules in segregation, he winds up in disciplinary ad seg where even most reading material is considered contraband. >> that's evidence about the -- i'm telling you i got the files in my file. that's evidence, man. you know you violating the law. you ain't got no business [ bleep ] with my legal [ bleep ]. you know it's against the law to do...
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Aug 29, 2015
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his assailants were sentenced to six months in folsom's administrative segregation unit. some of the most violent gang attacks have taken place here, at california state prison corcoran's security housing unit or shu. we visited the shu's now vacant exercise yard which has been the scene of some of the prison's most brutal violence. ♪ correctional officers showed our cameras how they quell the violence with an arsenal of their own. one that includes nonlethal and lethal weaponry. >> first rounds we fire are wood blocks. hopefully it will make them stop. we really have to escalate with our nonlethal options. we use what we call a scat round, which is really irritating. those are louder. the smoke you see there, that's cn gas. it's no fun. it messes up your sight. makes you, you know, makes your snot roll. and of course we have a lethal option. we have a mini-14 here the 223 round. we only use that as a last resort. >> today, california state prison corcoran no longer has to resort to such drastic measures to control violence in the shu yard. they close the yards down, and
his assailants were sentenced to six months in folsom's administrative segregation unit. some of the most violent gang attacks have taken place here, at california state prison corcoran's security housing unit or shu. we visited the shu's now vacant exercise yard which has been the scene of some of the prison's most brutal violence. ♪ correctional officers showed our cameras how they quell the violence with an arsenal of their own. one that includes nonlethal and lethal weaponry. >>...
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Aug 8, 2015
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one improvement was the administrative segregation unit. >> back in the early '90s we had problems throughout the whole institution where we had violence every place. we had assault, fights stabbings, all the different stuff that goes along with that and what we did is we found with administrative segregation unit and we isolated the ones that was doing this and after we did that we pretty much stopped our assaults and everything else. we still have assaults on these units up here in our disciplinary segregation unit but it's down about 85% in population. >> the men housed are allowed one hour for recreation in an enclosed yard. the rest of the time they're con filed to their cells. >> this is my la-z-boy my chair. sitting in this cell for years and years and years will mess your back up because these steel beds, and through the years people jump up and down on them so that makes them uneven and it gives you a back problem for the rest of your life. >> convicted of murder and attempted murder as a teenager jocko bailey was give an 40-year sentence. he has spent more than 11 years in ab-sag. >
one improvement was the administrative segregation unit. >> back in the early '90s we had problems throughout the whole institution where we had violence every place. we had assault, fights stabbings, all the different stuff that goes along with that and what we did is we found with administrative segregation unit and we isolated the ones that was doing this and after we did that we pretty much stopped our assaults and everything else. we still have assaults on these units up here in our...
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Aug 29, 2015
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for their disruptive behavior, the inmates involved receive time in administrative segregation.r treatment in the infirmary was completed. >>> next on "lockup: raw: ever present danger." >> my crime is a serial rapist. >> they accused me of killing a little girl back in 1994. >> sex offenders. the pariahs of the prison yard. >> far as i am concerned they can die. kellogg's® frosted ...8 layers of wheat... ...and one that's sweet. to satisfy the adult.... ...and kid - in all of us. ♪ nutritious wheat for the adult you've grown into. and delicious sweet for the kid you'll never outgrow... feed your inner kidult... ...with frosted mini-wheats® and now you could win up to a hundred dollars when you buy any specially marked kellogg's cereal. 96% of them are doing rain-fed agriculture. . they're all competing with each other; they're all making very low margins, making enough to survive, but not enough to get out of poverty. so kickstart designs low cost irrigation pumps enabling them to grow high value crops throughout the year so you can make a lot of money. it's all very well to ha
for their disruptive behavior, the inmates involved receive time in administrative segregation.r treatment in the infirmary was completed. >>> next on "lockup: raw: ever present danger." >> my crime is a serial rapist. >> they accused me of killing a little girl back in 1994. >> sex offenders. the pariahs of the prison yard. >> far as i am concerned they can die. kellogg's® frosted ...8 layers of wheat... ...and one that's sweet. to satisfy the...
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Aug 10, 2015
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administrative segregation, or ad seg, is where holman's most volatile inmates are kept in 23 hour a day solitary confinement. for 19 of his 43 years, bobby ray gilbert has known no other home. >> it affects a person, it does. i would be lying to say it didn't. your thought patterns change, of what you think about changes. back then, i daydream about the whole getting out, having a family, picket fence. you know, the daydreams to get out and do it right this time, you know? and now you daydream about how you can blow this whole prison up and kill everybody in it. just feel like, man, if i could just do society a favor. >> bobby gilbert, whose friends call him snake, was locked up for murder when he was 18. he's racked up a lot more time for his violent behavior behind bars. >> i've got life without parole, two life sentences, two 99-year sentences, a 40-year sentence, a 20-year sentence and a 10-year sentence. yeah, i have anger issues. >> we first met bobby gilbert during the shooting of the original "lockup: holman" episode. >> you want us to exhibit some sort of model behavior but
administrative segregation, or ad seg, is where holman's most volatile inmates are kept in 23 hour a day solitary confinement. for 19 of his 43 years, bobby ray gilbert has known no other home. >> it affects a person, it does. i would be lying to say it didn't. your thought patterns change, of what you think about changes. back then, i daydream about the whole getting out, having a family, picket fence. you know, the daydreams to get out and do it right this time, you know? and now you...
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Aug 12, 2015
08/15
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the use of gang classification against people are political activists to put them into administrative segregation he is also representing most of the plaintiffs in cases against u's.use of cm amy: i want to switch gears, mariam ghani, to talk about gulf labor coalition. there are official posters here, part of the biennale, and i want to show this for our tv viewing audience and for our radio listeners, you can go online and see. gulf labor, who is building the guggenheim abu dhabi? it says guggenheim ,louvre, collective bargaining. talk about what is happening in the activism you are involved with as an artist. a well, gulf labor is coalition of artists, writers, scholars, curators, architects and other cultural workers who are organizing to ensure that workers rights are respected in the construction of the cultural institutions in the gulf and we are particularly concentrated on abu dobby and the island where a new cultural zone is being constructed basically from scratch and it is also part of a larger real estate developer project in which the arts are basically being used as one of the luxu
the use of gang classification against people are political activists to put them into administrative segregation he is also representing most of the plaintiffs in cases against u's.use of cm amy: i want to switch gears, mariam ghani, to talk about gulf labor coalition. there are official posters here, part of the biennale, and i want to show this for our tv viewing audience and for our radio listeners, you can go online and see. gulf labor, who is building the guggenheim abu dhabi? it says...
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Aug 5, 2015
08/15
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the bureau of prisons and other prisons commonly call solitary administrative segregation. it sounds harmless but it is solitary. people are sent there for really minor reasons. some reasons are for protective custody. the lgbt community faces harassment from other inmates. they will be sent to involuntary protective custody to protect them from inmate violence, yet they are being punished. we see this happening all the time. the bureau of prisons, according to -- you asked if it actually works. there was an independent review that was released to the public in february of this year by cna that looked at solitary practices in our federal prisons and look at this question -- does inmate behavior change following solitary? their response was absolutely no. senator booker: can we have that report in the record? i want to say that not only lesbian and gay, but transgender -- oder: the report, it looked at the disciplinary record 12 months before being sent to solitary and 12 months after coming out of solitary. we found virtually no change whatsoever. senator booker: let's get
the bureau of prisons and other prisons commonly call solitary administrative segregation. it sounds harmless but it is solitary. people are sent there for really minor reasons. some reasons are for protective custody. the lgbt community faces harassment from other inmates. they will be sent to involuntary protective custody to protect them from inmate violence, yet they are being punished. we see this happening all the time. the bureau of prisons, according to -- you asked if it actually...
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Aug 23, 2015
08/15
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. >> these inmates will be held in administrative segregation until isu's investigation has been completed. although the incident at tehachapi forced corcoran to alter its day-to-day routine, the arrival of new inmates never ceases. and for these new inmates, survival depends on knowing the rules and knowing your place. >> everything comes down to how you conduct yourself. and the overall code of how you conduct yourself is pathetic. but it's by race. you know, you're no longer considered -- you no longer become human. you become a color. >> in the four months we spent inside corcoran, our producers learned that for most inmates the safest place is with their own race. >> would you not hang out with an asian guy? >> yeah, i hang out with the asian guys. if people get into it with my people, it becomes a conflict between cellies. you have to either kill your cellie or he'll kill you. it's not worth it. >> what i might do is my personal feelings, but what my people or who i hang with might have a problem with it, you know. so i have to do what the community says because i'm just one man. and
. >> these inmates will be held in administrative segregation until isu's investigation has been completed. although the incident at tehachapi forced corcoran to alter its day-to-day routine, the arrival of new inmates never ceases. and for these new inmates, survival depends on knowing the rules and knowing your place. >> everything comes down to how you conduct yourself. and the overall code of how you conduct yourself is pathetic. but it's by race. you know, you're no longer...
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Aug 2, 2015
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they are going to seven cell house, one of ksp's administrative segregation units.n here, they will be confined to a stark 8 x 10 foot cell.♪ >>> next on "lockup" -- >> a lot of these guys are not mentally stable. they need some type of psychiatric treatment, you know what i'm saying? >> serving time in the hole. >>> and later -- >> i took a knife and stabbed him with it three or four times until he was dead, and then i butchered him with it. >> a man who took drastic measures to get sent to ksp. which saves money. they settle claims quickly, which saves money. they drive an all-hybrid claims fleet, which saves money. they were born online, and built to save money, which means when they save, you save. click or call. and eat like i skipped lunch. nobody's watching why? because red lobster's crabfest is back. and i'm diving into so much crab, so many ways. like crab lover's dream with luscious snow and king crab legs, and rich crab alfredo or this snow crab bake. who knew crab goes with everything? whoever put crab on this salmon, that's who. with flavors like these,
they are going to seven cell house, one of ksp's administrative segregation units.n here, they will be confined to a stark 8 x 10 foot cell.♪ >>> next on "lockup" -- >> a lot of these guys are not mentally stable. they need some type of psychiatric treatment, you know what i'm saying? >> serving time in the hole. >>> and later -- >> i took a knife and stabbed him with it three or four times until he was dead, and then i butchered him with it....
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Aug 2, 2015
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they are going to seven cell house, one of ksp's administrative segregation units.n here, they will be confined to a stark 8 x 10 foot cell. ♪ >>> next on "lockup" -- >> a lot of these guys are not mentally stable. they need some type of psychiatric treatment, you know what i'm saying? >> serving time in the hole. >>> and later -- >> i took a knife and stabbed him with it three or four times until he was dead, and then i butchered him with it. >> a man who took drastic measures to get sent to ksp. ffe. this summer, challenge your preconceptions and experience a cadillac for yourself. ♪ take advantage of our summer offers. lease select cts models in stock the longest, for around 399 per month. creeping up on you... fight back with relief so smooth... ...it's fast. tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue ...and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. ♪ tum, tum tum tum... smoothies! only from tums. you stay up. you listen. you laugh. you worry. you do whatever it takes to take care of your family. and when it's time to plan for your family'
they are going to seven cell house, one of ksp's administrative segregation units.n here, they will be confined to a stark 8 x 10 foot cell. ♪ >>> next on "lockup" -- >> a lot of these guys are not mentally stable. they need some type of psychiatric treatment, you know what i'm saying? >> serving time in the hole. >>> and later -- >> i took a knife and stabbed him with it three or four times until he was dead, and then i butchered him with it....
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Aug 23, 2015
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when an inmate commits any crime inside corcoran, he is sent to the administrative segregation unit, or asu, until his case is heard. >> this is a pretty secure unit, everything is controlled as far as any kind of movement, incoming, outgoing, whatever. so canteen, walking to see a visitor. here everything is controlled. for meals, we bring them. there is a set program that we go by. >> how are you guys doing? all right? good, good. >> today our producers are granted access to a case being heard by the institutional classification committee. >> morning, morning. i am here today to review your asu placement, to determine if your housing is appropriate, and to ensure that due process has been available to them. >> inmate ed duane smith and his cellmate are charged with prison murder. >> i've been trying for the past month to get my 115 heard. >> did you not postpone to the d.a.? >> yes, but it says, according to -- >> do you have your request with you? >> no, but i did submit it. >> who did you submit it to? >> i sent it to captain fields, one to grimsley. >> this is what we can do, sm
when an inmate commits any crime inside corcoran, he is sent to the administrative segregation unit, or asu, until his case is heard. >> this is a pretty secure unit, everything is controlled as far as any kind of movement, incoming, outgoing, whatever. so canteen, walking to see a visitor. here everything is controlled. for meals, we bring them. there is a set program that we go by. >> how are you guys doing? all right? good, good. >> today our producers are granted access to...
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Aug 31, 2015
08/15
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he is being transferred to the level five facility, which acts as an administrative segregation withinenitentiary. >>> coming up, felix attempts to clear his name. >> it's still red, like i told them. >> plus, peaches' plan to transfer to a lower level may have hit a snag. and shiverdecker flexes his mcgyver muscles in the construction of a shank. >> this has been building and building and building. when things just come together? build a beautiful website with squarespace. i'm sorta marge... you're not marge? we both drive a stick, we both like saving money on car insurance, and we both feel integrity, such as, that of healthcare in the america of the us and therefore. yes. thank you. no. no. please, stop! sorta you, isn't you. start with a quote from esurance and get a set of discounts personalized to you, not someone sorta like you. esurance. backed by allstate. click or call. nbut your dell 2-in-1 laptoped gives you the spunk for an unsanctioned selfie. that's that new gear feeling. all laptops on sale, save $230 on this dell 2-in-1. office depot officemax. gear up for school. gear
he is being transferred to the level five facility, which acts as an administrative segregation withinenitentiary. >>> coming up, felix attempts to clear his name. >> it's still red, like i told them. >> plus, peaches' plan to transfer to a lower level may have hit a snag. and shiverdecker flexes his mcgyver muscles in the construction of a shank. >> this has been building and building and building. when things just come together? build a beautiful website with...
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Aug 17, 2015
08/15
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. >> when we met him, he was serving his time in administrative segregation because his desire for anotherattoo nearly turned deadly. >> about six months ago, i cut a dude's throat down in population. he was supposed to do some tattoos. i was going to get some swastikas tattooed on the side of my neck. he didn't want to run them. i paid for them. he didn't want to run them. i said, well, you just need to give me my money back. he didn't want to do it. i pulled out a box cutter and i cut the side of his throat. he went running away and tried to run behind an officer. like an officer is going to stop me or some [ bleep ]. >> what happened to him? >> they put him on a helicopter, flew him to the hospital, did some kind of surgery, put his jugular vein back together. >> our producer learned that the total debt owed to parker was $60, payable in snacks and toiletries purchased at the prison canteen since inmates are not allowed to carry cash. but behind bars, the true value of a tattoo can only be determined by the person who wears it. >> why did you want to get a swastika on your neck? >> beca
. >> when we met him, he was serving his time in administrative segregation because his desire for anotherattoo nearly turned deadly. >> about six months ago, i cut a dude's throat down in population. he was supposed to do some tattoos. i was going to get some swastikas tattooed on the side of my neck. he didn't want to run them. i paid for them. he didn't want to run them. i said, well, you just need to give me my money back. he didn't want to do it. i pulled out a box cutter and i...
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Aug 8, 2015
08/15
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reasons and that is a loaded term because the bureau of prisons commonly call solitary administrative segregation and it sowns harmless but in effect it is solitary. and people are sent there for really minor reasons. and some reasons are for protective custody like i mentioned in my testimony. so for example with the lgbt community who faced hassarment from other prisons a lot of time they'll be sent to involuntary protective custody to protect them from inmate violence yet they are being punished. we see this happening all of the time. and the bureau of prisons, for example, according to -- you asked what was -- does it actually work. so recently there was an independent review released pot public in february of this year by cna that looked at solitary practices in the federal prisons and looked at inmate behavior changing following solitary and their response was absolutely no. >> i would like to pause there. can we have that report put into the record for this hearing. >> without objection, and not only lesbian and gay, but also trans gender. >> yes. but let me tell what you the report found
reasons and that is a loaded term because the bureau of prisons commonly call solitary administrative segregation and it sowns harmless but in effect it is solitary. and people are sent there for really minor reasons. and some reasons are for protective custody like i mentioned in my testimony. so for example with the lgbt community who faced hassarment from other prisons a lot of time they'll be sent to involuntary protective custody to protect them from inmate violence yet they are being...
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Aug 5, 2015
08/15
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because the bureau of prisons, and other prisons commonly call solitary administrative segregation. and it sounds harmless, but in effect it is solitary. and people are sent there for really minor reasons and some reasons are for protective custody, like i mentioned in my testimony. with the lgbt community which faces this harassment from other inmates in prisons, a lot of times they will be sent to involuntary protective custody to protect them from inmate violence, yet they are being punished. we see this happening all the time. in the bureau of prisons for example, according to you asked what was does it actually work? recently there was an independent review that was released to the public in february of this year by cna, that looked at a solitary practices in our federal prisons, and looked to this question, does inmate behavior change following solitary? and their response was absolutely no. >> i would just pause there can we have that report into the record for this hearing? >> without objection. >> and i want to also say that not only lgbt lesbian and gay prisoners, but obvi
because the bureau of prisons, and other prisons commonly call solitary administrative segregation. and it sounds harmless, but in effect it is solitary. and people are sent there for really minor reasons and some reasons are for protective custody, like i mentioned in my testimony. with the lgbt community which faces this harassment from other inmates in prisons, a lot of times they will be sent to involuntary protective custody to protect them from inmate violence, yet they are being...
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Aug 10, 2015
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segregated. she became a school administrator. she was interim chief superintendent. my dad was a minister.ad, my granddad, and my dad were all ministers. host: why did you not go that route? started getting into some law, as they young black kid, the county was divided by race and class and two railroad tracks. the white folks who were rich lived on the beach. the working white folks lived by the railroad and then there was the section with a black folks lived. i would visit my friends on the beach. it got to the point when the cops would follow me. it was low-grade hassling. senior ine i was a high school, i said, i want to be in attorney -- an attorney. would not go into the seminary, i wanted to practice law. history.is host: detail the jobs that you have had. kevyn: i started with the florida firm, went into the fdic, the savings-and-loan crisis hit in 1991. i went to rtc. brian: what is that? kevyn: that was the rates and loans. i always wanted to serve my country. aspirations.al i decided to go for two years. i told my mentor i would go for two years. he told me if i want to washingt
segregated. she became a school administrator. she was interim chief superintendent. my dad was a minister.ad, my granddad, and my dad were all ministers. host: why did you not go that route? started getting into some law, as they young black kid, the county was divided by race and class and two railroad tracks. the white folks who were rich lived on the beach. the working white folks lived by the railroad and then there was the section with a black folks lived. i would visit my friends on the...
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Aug 29, 2015
08/15
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the different groups were segregated from each other through this administration buildsing. ellis island is enforcing laws in europe. it is in new york. most of them are coming across the atlantic. it is primarily enforcing laws that are targeting asian americans. the laws are very different. while it is mostly a processing center, angel island is a place of interrogation, health examinations, and detention. this history is not as well-known. but it is important. it helps shape our modern immigration system. so let's take a look at who the asian immigrants were. when we think about this great era of immigration, there are two great eras of immigration. one is the one we're living in today. the other is the turn of the century from 1830 to 1930. there are 35 million immigrants who come in this century of migration. the vast majority, $32 million, are from europe. this is about a million immigrants from asia and another million from latin america. in the big picture, this is a drop in the bucket. 1 million out of 35 million who are coming. and it's pretty diverse. 450,000 chin
the different groups were segregated from each other through this administration buildsing. ellis island is enforcing laws in europe. it is in new york. most of them are coming across the atlantic. it is primarily enforcing laws that are targeting asian americans. the laws are very different. while it is mostly a processing center, angel island is a place of interrogation, health examinations, and detention. this history is not as well-known. but it is important. it helps shape our modern...
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Aug 26, 2015
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a more obstructionist line emphasizing the difference of segregation in response to lower court interpretations of swan. but the administration's litigation strategy hardly matched the president's rhetoric. put simply, while he hoped to convince the court that he did not -- that it did not need to order as he put it instant integration, he was not willing to stand if front of a schoolhouse door. what us did it all mean for evaluating nixon's strategy? i reach two main conclusions and then offer more global conclusion with regard to presidents in general. the first conclusion deals with president nixon and the development of constitutional doctrine. here i'm really focusing on politically salient decisions. given his specific focus on law and order and school desegregation was he ail your? consider the 1974 bussing decision, the 1976 death penalty decision in greg versus georgia. in those two politically charged cases, the court with all four of the nixon appointed justices and the majority essentially delivered the results that were consistent with the views of the nixon and the ford administrations. my second conclusion deals
a more obstructionist line emphasizing the difference of segregation in response to lower court interpretations of swan. but the administration's litigation strategy hardly matched the president's rhetoric. put simply, while he hoped to convince the court that he did not -- that it did not need to order as he put it instant integration, he was not willing to stand if front of a schoolhouse door. what us did it all mean for evaluating nixon's strategy? i reach two main conclusions and then offer...