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Dec 28, 2013
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as a result, he spent his first 30 days at suffolk county in segregation. but now he's on his way to general population where he will have more privileges and time outside his cell. >> today i'm getting out of the hole. i'm going go play with the big kids in the big box now. i'm pretty excited. when you go to a new unit, you don't know who's on that unit or whatever. could be a lot of small time units. so i'll see what's going on. 30 days since i got to put a pair of sneakers on. my new unit. see what's going to happen. >> 2-4, open. >> daniel esdale has spent the last four months living and working in the jail's infirmary hoping good behavior would convince jail officials to overlook his history of fighting and grant him a transfer to general population. >> he actually got to a point where he had a detail in medical where he served food to the other inmates and cleaned the unit, so he came a lot farther than we ever anticipated him coming. >> esdale did finally get a transfer, but definitely not the one he wanted. he's back in the box. >> i'm in segregatio
as a result, he spent his first 30 days at suffolk county in segregation. but now he's on his way to general population where he will have more privileges and time outside his cell. >> today i'm getting out of the hole. i'm going go play with the big kids in the big box now. i'm pretty excited. when you go to a new unit, you don't know who's on that unit or whatever. could be a lot of small time units. so i'll see what's going on. 30 days since i got to put a pair of sneakers on. my new...
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Dec 26, 2013
12/13
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our units are segregated. they don't interact with each other.if we find a unit where you don't have enemies, where they don't know you, you can make it there. >> it's not the neighborhood that's so bad. it's the neighbors. that's what it is. >> here's what you need to know. listen to me. >> what? >> you're not going to manipulate the system here at limon. you've manipulated the system at every other system you've been at. that's not going to happen to limon. you'll go through the process just like every other inmate that comes in here does. if that means you go out in population, that's what you're going to go. if we verify custody issues and we move you, that's where you go. but you're going to do our process. we're not going to do yours. >> i'm going to do everything in my power to make, you know, the system work for me, in my favor. >> entering -- >> in regards to going to the hole. >> coming up -- >> [ bleep ] happens. >> george grahf faces the disciplinary board for flooding his cell block. >> you know what happens here. >> an unexpected de
our units are segregated. they don't interact with each other.if we find a unit where you don't have enemies, where they don't know you, you can make it there. >> it's not the neighborhood that's so bad. it's the neighbors. that's what it is. >> here's what you need to know. listen to me. >> what? >> you're not going to manipulate the system here at limon. you've manipulated the system at every other system you've been at. that's not going to happen to limon. you'll go...
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Dec 14, 2013
12/13
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tomorrow, segregation forever. he talked about nothing but race. fifty years ago in september this month, he flew to baltimore -- my home city -- and announced that he was going to run for president and never mentioned race. he never mentioned segregation again. he turned on a dime when the march on washington and those birmingham demonstrations made it obvious that in the future overt segregation was no longer going to be respectable. he switched his message adroitly. he said he was running only to restore local government against big government by pointy-headed bureaucrats, tyrannical judges and tax-spend legislators. and that he had never denigrated the race of any person or group of people if history. and people wanted to believe it. and that's the beginning of misremembering history. and that's the beginning of the vocabulary of modern politics x. if you don't believe that big government opposition today and that the notion that what makes me safe and makes me free is not all of the painstaking ties that we've
tomorrow, segregation forever. he talked about nothing but race. fifty years ago in september this month, he flew to baltimore -- my home city -- and announced that he was going to run for president and never mentioned race. he never mentioned segregation again. he turned on a dime when the march on washington and those birmingham demonstrations made it obvious that in the future overt segregation was no longer going to be respectable. he switched his message adroitly. he said he was running...
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Dec 28, 2013
12/13
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sanctions imposed is 20 days punitive segregation. i'm going to give you credit for the three days you served and probate the remaining 17 until march the 11th. okay? >> how do you feel about the results? >> i disagree. but i think that i've put down substantial grounds for an appeal so that i think i may possibly win with that. >>> coming up -- >> i'm just despondent. i'm just about to give up on everything. >> the crackdown at limon could be causing one inmate to crack up. >> i have one photograph of the young man that was taken from this man's segregation cell. >> i'd like to point out -- >> please be quiet at this moment. >>> jerry weir has been in and cure retirements and protect financial futures. to help communities recover and rebuild. for companies going from garage to global. on the ground, in the air, even into space. we repaid every dollar america lent us. and gave america back a profit. we're here to keep our promises. to help you realize a better tomorrow. from the families of aig happy holidays. ♪ i wanna spread a littl
sanctions imposed is 20 days punitive segregation. i'm going to give you credit for the three days you served and probate the remaining 17 until march the 11th. okay? >> how do you feel about the results? >> i disagree. but i think that i've put down substantial grounds for an appeal so that i think i may possibly win with that. >>> coming up -- >> i'm just despondent. i'm just about to give up on everything. >> the crackdown at limon could be causing one inmate...
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Dec 8, 2013
12/13
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it's a jail within a jail, segregation. this kind of stuff is what took my parole. you know, stupidity, stupid stuff. i'm guilty of it, i guess. >> i started meeting ms. culbertson in december. so, within that time, i met her maybe once a month since then. >> see this lady? fear her. >> and how you pleaded on your disrespect? >> not guilty. >> so, what are you saying, you didn't have your arm around her at all? >> no. >> okay. >> well, yes, i did. not at the time that all this -- in the beginning i did. then i moved over a seat so there was an empty chair on each side of me. so nothing could be said. >> the officer who witnessed the scene was called to testify. >> can you hear me? >> yes, ma'am. >> i'm here in culbertson's disciplinary concerning disrespect that was written up when they was in the chapel. >> yes, ma'am. >> can you give me some information on it? >> i was down in the chapel and i was sitting on the other side of the church. the lady was up preaching or whatever, talking or doing whatever she does, and she pointed them out, saying that she's not going
it's a jail within a jail, segregation. this kind of stuff is what took my parole. you know, stupidity, stupid stuff. i'm guilty of it, i guess. >> i started meeting ms. culbertson in december. so, within that time, i met her maybe once a month since then. >> see this lady? fear her. >> and how you pleaded on your disrespect? >> not guilty. >> so, what are you saying, you didn't have your arm around her at all? >> no. >> okay. >> well, yes, i did....
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Dec 29, 2013
12/13
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a sock full of batteries, hayes was moved to segregation to await his disciplinary hearing.he fight, hayes quickly gained the upper hand. surveillance video shows him ignoring commands to stop fighting while the deputy assigned to the unit waits for back up. it's up to the disciplinary officer to decide how long hayes must stay in segregation. >> did you fight back at all? what happened? swinging the sock at you. what did you do then? >> i blocked it and rushed him to defend myself. >> right. >> i ended up on top of him, and that was it. >> when you ended up on top of him, were you punching into him at that point in time? >> i really can't say, sir. >> okay. all right. because that's where the problem is. it's good and well to be defensive, right? but there's a point in time where if you get the upper hand and then continue going, that's fighting as well. that's how that's going to work. did you know the guy? like why did he come at you? >> no. actually i did not. i'm not even from here. i'm from georgia, sir. >> i understand that. you have no idea what his issue is. i'm sur
a sock full of batteries, hayes was moved to segregation to await his disciplinary hearing.he fight, hayes quickly gained the upper hand. surveillance video shows him ignoring commands to stop fighting while the deputy assigned to the unit waits for back up. it's up to the disciplinary officer to decide how long hayes must stay in segregation. >> did you fight back at all? what happened? swinging the sock at you. what did you do then? >> i blocked it and rushed him to defend myself....
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Dec 22, 2013
12/13
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and it was the most segregated big city in america. it was 1952, my parents were actually not married at this time. so they went to get registered to vote. and in those days you had protesters. and this person would ask questions and he passed if you pass the question come you could register. so my mother who is fair skinned and long hair, she said what job you have and she said that she was a schoolteacher. and she said then you probably know if the president of the united states was. she said oh, yes, george washington. and they said it's fine, you go register for it and they looked at my father, a big and imposing man, six 2'", and they said my father, how many beads are in that jar. and there were hundreds of beads mentor. and so my father said you failed the test and he was very unhappy, he ran back and was talking to frank hunter was an old man in his church and he said, oh, reverend thomas we had to get registered. there's a clerk down there, she's a republican issue trying to build the republican party. and she will register an
and it was the most segregated big city in america. it was 1952, my parents were actually not married at this time. so they went to get registered to vote. and in those days you had protesters. and this person would ask questions and he passed if you pass the question come you could register. so my mother who is fair skinned and long hair, she said what job you have and she said that she was a schoolteacher. and she said then you probably know if the president of the united states was. she said...
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Dec 28, 2013
12/13
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. >> i'm currently housed in deep segregation for investigation.here was new female staff that started over in unit 4, and my job over in unit 4 was the unit clerk. and they were saying that i was spending way too much time in the office with the new female staff, and i explained that i don't spend anymore time in there with her than i did with any other officer. >> but according to rookie office dawn mcdaniel, hansen did more than spend too much time in the office. >> it was kind of over a couple of day period. just, you know, nonchalant questions here and there and, you know, asking me if i had a man, he'd make me happy, and just out of the blue he offered me a ring and said it was mine if i wanted it. and i was pretty sure i didn't want it. so i had to write a report and turn it in to the shift commander. >> hansen was written up for solicitation of staff. a charge the prison takes very seriously. >> as a department and as a facility, we have zero tolerance for staff becoming involved with offenders in any type of personal relationship. some of
. >> i'm currently housed in deep segregation for investigation.here was new female staff that started over in unit 4, and my job over in unit 4 was the unit clerk. and they were saying that i was spending way too much time in the office with the new female staff, and i explained that i don't spend anymore time in there with her than i did with any other officer. >> but according to rookie office dawn mcdaniel, hansen did more than spend too much time in the office. >> it was...
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Dec 8, 2013
12/13
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we were in ad seg, administrative segregation, the prison within a prison. we started hearing inmates screaming out things and i started to hear them talking about cho-mos, which are sex offenders and then mayhem erupted. [ bleep ] >> i believe he threw a liquid substance under the door that smelled somewhat suspicious and we're going to report that. >> jonathan hall, serving 40 years for murder, was one of the first inmates to make it clear we weren't welcome in administrative segregation. >> unless he does calm down and follow our rules and orders, he'll be cell extracted. >> inmate hall won't calm down. so they call in the special response team. and they suit up in their gear. in these situations, when we want to film it, they always have us suit up as well. >> if he doesn't comply at that point, we'll introduce o.c. >> you got it? >> uh-huh. >> inmate hall, come to the door and cuff up. offender hall, if you do not cuff up, we will introduce chemical agents. are you going to comply? >> introduce o.c. >> hall has covered his food port and window with a ma
we were in ad seg, administrative segregation, the prison within a prison. we started hearing inmates screaming out things and i started to hear them talking about cho-mos, which are sex offenders and then mayhem erupted. [ bleep ] >> i believe he threw a liquid substance under the door that smelled somewhat suspicious and we're going to report that. >> jonathan hall, serving 40 years for murder, was one of the first inmates to make it clear we weren't welcome in administrative...
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Dec 27, 2013
12/13
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hey, can you go down and pick up inmate holloman for me out of segregation? bring him to my office. we're probably unique in how we deal with the gangs out here. we've accepted the fact that there are going to be gangs and there's nothing we can do about it, so we try to control, you know, what they do. and we use the leaders a lot to control that. most of our leaders here have done a lot of time in our maximum security facility. they don't want to go back. and we hold that over their head. we tell them to keep their people in line or they're the first ones that are going to go down, because we know how gangs work. we know this gang member isn't going to do anything unless he's got it cleared to the top. come on in, have a seat. so you want to give me your story? >> well, i mean, to be honest, i don't really have one. i mean, i feel like this dude is just trying to get out of trouble. he knows who i am and i go under the bus every time. >> who was the other guy? >> wright. >> the other one that got him -- >> yeah. >> was he doing something to him? >> no, i mean, maybe. i mean, every
hey, can you go down and pick up inmate holloman for me out of segregation? bring him to my office. we're probably unique in how we deal with the gangs out here. we've accepted the fact that there are going to be gangs and there's nothing we can do about it, so we try to control, you know, what they do. and we use the leaders a lot to control that. most of our leaders here have done a lot of time in our maximum security facility. they don't want to go back. and we hold that over their head. we...
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Dec 25, 2013
12/13
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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. 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 investigations. >> so i'm being written up for the fight? >> yep. so that's what's going to happen. >> all right. >> i'll get you 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. >> you've got two south siders over there. what's the dude that came from level one? is that him? >> he's right here. white boys right here. >> yeah. and then the dude to his right is a south sider as well. >> what's his name? >> that's -- tha
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. 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 investigations. >> so i'm being...
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Dec 14, 2013
12/13
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it was his time when it came to segregation and racism. a conversation with new york times best-selling author a. scott berg coming up right now. >> and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. tavis: this year is the 100th anniversary of president would will rowson, a so programmed -- woodrow wilson, a self- proclaimed progressive. he went home as a southerner of a certain generation and pursued segregation through information -- infamous jim crow laws. the pulitzer prize winning writer has taken on the task of unraveling this contradictory man. mr. berg, led to have you on this program. ladd to have you here. to have you here. wilson is a racist, wilson is a sexist. tell me why he deserves this. i don't think he is a sexist. i think he is a racist. at the end of the day, he still stands as the most influential figure of that century. i think he brought about more change than any other person. most of it for the good. if you are an african american, it wasn't. tell me why you acknowledge or accept the racist
it was his time when it came to segregation and racism. a conversation with new york times best-selling author a. scott berg coming up right now. >> and by contributions to your pbs station from viewers like you. thank you. tavis: this year is the 100th anniversary of president would will rowson, a so programmed -- woodrow wilson, a self- proclaimed progressive. he went home as a southerner of a certain generation and pursued segregation through information -- infamous jim crow laws. the...
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Dec 14, 2013
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. >> he was recently confined to segregation unit where he's locked in a single man cell 23 hours per day. jail surveillance footage shows why. >> he is down here and his accomplice is kind of walking around in the day room there. there was some form of disrespect the night before, and they were kind of waiting for this inmate to come out of his cell. and as soon as he comes out, the two of them begin an assault on him. one inmate throws a couple punches, he is definitely the aggressor. an officer doing a block check at the time uses his oc spray to get them to separate and orders them to get on the ground. >> he is an admitted gang member and has proven violent on the streets. originally charged with first degree murder, pled guilty to second degree murder. he is eligible for 75 years in prison. >> shot a man six times in the face. no matter how much of a gangster i am, what i think i am, i struggle with that say when i first got here. like i struggled with that for real. i could go back, change some things, still would have shot him. but i wouldn't have hit him in the face and i wou
. >> he was recently confined to segregation unit where he's locked in a single man cell 23 hours per day. jail surveillance footage shows why. >> he is down here and his accomplice is kind of walking around in the day room there. there was some form of disrespect the night before, and they were kind of waiting for this inmate to come out of his cell. and as soon as he comes out, the two of them begin an assault on him. one inmate throws a couple punches, he is definitely the...
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Dec 1, 2013
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he's been placed in segregation for his own protection.the inmates that ate the sandwiches were informed it's unlikely they would have contracted hiv in this manner, even if he did contaminate them, but that hasn't lessened their anxieties. >> if was a bluff or it was -- i don't know. you have to wait to find out whether there's a possibility or there's not. >> mentally, i'm lost. i am so uptight right now that i can't eat. i've been throwing up my food. i've been so sick to the point where it's just -- i don't know if my life is changed yet or not. >> and come in to here for driving with suspended license, and now, somebody gave me a bologna sandwiches which maybe got aids. >> i mean, either way, to even think that somebody would do something so gruesome to people. >> as the controversy spreads throughout the jail, other inmates have plenty to say as well. >> my thing is, the dude, if you knew the guy had hiv, what the [ bleep ] you doing eating sandwiches from him, for? you know what i'm saying? like, i don't even want to shake somebody'
he's been placed in segregation for his own protection.the inmates that ate the sandwiches were informed it's unlikely they would have contracted hiv in this manner, even if he did contaminate them, but that hasn't lessened their anxieties. >> if was a bluff or it was -- i don't know. you have to wait to find out whether there's a possibility or there's not. >> mentally, i'm lost. i am so uptight right now that i can't eat. i've been throwing up my food. i've been so sick to the...
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Dec 7, 2013
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instead they've kept him locked up in segregation. >> my beard represents how long i've been here.ow long my hair is, that's how long i've been down here. >> but lately paul has ceased his escape attempts and given himself a new look. because of his good behavior, jail officials have moved him to a less restrictive housing unit. >> everybody thought that there's no way we're going to change his behavior. and to see him today, he's a totally different person. even to speak and communicate with. he's not the same person that we initially had when he first came in. i think actually one of the real breaking points was getting him to communicate with staff and his family members. for a long time he wasn't communicating with anybody, and we ended up when he was in administrative seg, getting it to where he was able to have visits with his family, and that really seemed to be the turning point. things started changing. he was no longer attempting some of those negative behaviors we were seeing earlier. >> i'm getting ready to do a visit. that's the highlight of the week. so to speak. >> 2
instead they've kept him locked up in segregation. >> my beard represents how long i've been here.ow long my hair is, that's how long i've been down here. >> but lately paul has ceased his escape attempts and given himself a new look. because of his good behavior, jail officials have moved him to a less restrictive housing unit. >> everybody thought that there's no way we're going to change his behavior. and to see him today, he's a totally different person. even to speak and...
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Dec 26, 2013
12/13
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the inmates segregate themselves out here. and the reason being that the gangs want it that way. so a man has no choice but to go with his own type of people. >> it's all run by gangs or at least the gangs think they run the prisons, and then the correctional officers think they run the prison. but everybody gangs up by race and you have to know where you're going. you don't want to go walking in the wrong area of the prison yard because you're on somebody else's turf. >> while inmates can segregate themselves in prison, it's not always that way in county jail. the first stop on the often long road of incarceration for gang members. >> every gang in los angeles county ends up coming here. and we just don't have enough places to segregate everybody and keep them from assaulting each other. and if you get one group that has superior numbers over the other and something sparks off a fight, it's going to be on. >> officials at the los angeles county jail told us racially segregated gangs are responsible for most of the violence including riots, like this one captured on surveillance
the inmates segregate themselves out here. and the reason being that the gangs want it that way. so a man has no choice but to go with his own type of people. >> it's all run by gangs or at least the gangs think they run the prisons, and then the correctional officers think they run the prison. but everybody gangs up by race and you have to know where you're going. you don't want to go walking in the wrong area of the prison yard because you're on somebody else's turf. >> while...
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Dec 6, 2013
12/13
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that means integration for the new rich in areas like this one segregation of the majority who was still cool. i know some of those dream of unknown racial south africa is ever to come too. then it sets no blame schools like this one and her husband that will have to take roots hopeless be that a small but families move into areas once populated exclusively by whites. integrated schools will become the norm. it's emotional it's beyond the genes of the millions of south africans who still live in the township's. would i would electricity without water without such points and plagued by crawling. it's a bit like ecm in the washington based none and that the tv is nothing nothing. which is suffering here. but to have leukemia be based on what is going to give us something in town maybe houses and att wartime the top off the bus i kidding it in that's to die that day the tv right now. we thought outside the will of the people he doesn't know we should be close to the mid nineties that the sample file week two of them. it's been eating the whole of government and schools have just seen. with
that means integration for the new rich in areas like this one segregation of the majority who was still cool. i know some of those dream of unknown racial south africa is ever to come too. then it sets no blame schools like this one and her husband that will have to take roots hopeless be that a small but families move into areas once populated exclusively by whites. integrated schools will become the norm. it's emotional it's beyond the genes of the millions of south africans who still live...
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Dec 22, 2013
12/13
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they are mostly poor and segregated. now a community in centra greece is trying to break down barriers that separate it: >> he wants his children to grow up middle class. he wants to be a policemen. marina, a teacher. authority figures in a world where the roma are usually on the wrong side of authority. >> here, in the central greek town of sopha, they live segregated and that segregation begins in this elementary school built to keep them out of sight. more than 500 are enrolled, but only half that many fit inside. in may, the european court of human rights ruled the greek government discriminates against the roma by running this elementary school exclusively for them. through that lawsuit, 23 roma children won the right to transfer to mixed schools. so far, om three have done so. >> because they have been deliberately held back with bycratic formalities. the authorities' latest offense against their assimilation. >> if you go to the mixed elementaries, you will see the roma at their desks. no one is complaining about
they are mostly poor and segregated. now a community in centra greece is trying to break down barriers that separate it: >> he wants his children to grow up middle class. he wants to be a policemen. marina, a teacher. authority figures in a world where the roma are usually on the wrong side of authority. >> here, in the central greek town of sopha, they live segregated and that segregation begins in this elementary school built to keep them out of sight. more than 500 are enrolled,...
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Dec 9, 2013
12/13
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jail settings do not. >> we don't segregate by gangs, either.o you could have two bloods and a crip in the same cell. >> for the most part, they've got to get along. they're in a jail system, they're waiting to go to court and be deemed either innocent or guilty. until then, they're going to function in our system the way the sheriff wants it run. >> big bro. i want you to take bam bam. >> sergeant erby leads one of maricopa's special response teams. a s.w.a.t.-like unit of highly trained sheriff's deputies. >> you all want them cuffed and brought out of there? for right now we're going to put them in the holding tank until after we search. >> are we searching first? >> yeah. all right? you've got a green light. all right? let's go. >> now with suspected gang activity on the rise, the team has been called in to clean house. >> how are you doing, man? >> we have identified several individuals that we deem to be heads of certain races. we've got chicano race, we've got the pisa race. and we've got the white race. so when there's issues, we end up
jail settings do not. >> we don't segregate by gangs, either.o you could have two bloods and a crip in the same cell. >> for the most part, they've got to get along. they're in a jail system, they're waiting to go to court and be deemed either innocent or guilty. until then, they're going to function in our system the way the sheriff wants it run. >> big bro. i want you to take bam bam. >> sergeant erby leads one of maricopa's special response teams. a s.w.a.t.-like unit...
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Dec 27, 2013
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. >> assault to avoid a issue or me getting cuffed up and taken to segregation or causing a securitynd everybody getting caught down and catching a write-up over it, i choose to stay in my cell. take one whole sausage, slice it up like he has, long ways and you make quarters out of them and you cut that completely in half. sometimes i'll put honey on the sausage and put the cheese over the top of it and then cook it in a microwave for a minute so it melts it down and it makes a pretty good meal. it's better than the food they serve you in the chow hall. >> cooking in his cell is just one way he combats the pain of prison life. others seek ways to express their individuality. but david took things to a level unlike anything ever witnessed by "lockup" producers. >> i tattooed red the whites of my eyes. >> why? >> i don't know. the question is why not? everybody's got tattoos. everybody's got stretched ears. everybody's got this and that. you never seen anybody with the whites of their eyes tattooed. >> except for his cellmate, paul inman. >> it's like the final frontier. nobody has it
. >> assault to avoid a issue or me getting cuffed up and taken to segregation or causing a securitynd everybody getting caught down and catching a write-up over it, i choose to stay in my cell. take one whole sausage, slice it up like he has, long ways and you make quarters out of them and you cut that completely in half. sometimes i'll put honey on the sausage and put the cheese over the top of it and then cook it in a microwave for a minute so it melts it down and it makes a pretty...
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Dec 25, 2013
12/13
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. >> lieutenant gary burke supervises the segregation unit at pendleton. when an enmate acts out in the general population, he's moved to seg for the safety of offenders and staff. most kids who come here are still a long way from rehabilitation and their defiance can cause added pressure for officers. >> the challenge is bring your "a" game when you come to work. bring your "a" game. >> brown, come on up. >> they look -- in lashing out and they suffer the consequences later but they never think about that until afterwards, of course. i have to tell them all of the time, this is fast. just sit on your hands, keep your mouth quiet, keep your mouth shut and let it pass. and sometimes it gets to them, sometimes it doesn't. >> [ bleep ]. >> i don't want the whole situation to escalate. it doesn't have to. no it does not. >> there ain't no the choice. >> after three years behind bars, this troubled teen has landed in seg more than once. his appetite for mayhem and attention is a continuous struggle but now the situation is much more serious. >> he was you know
. >> lieutenant gary burke supervises the segregation unit at pendleton. when an enmate acts out in the general population, he's moved to seg for the safety of offenders and staff. most kids who come here are still a long way from rehabilitation and their defiance can cause added pressure for officers. >> the challenge is bring your "a" game when you come to work. bring your "a" game. >> brown, come on up. >> they look -- in lashing out and they...
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Dec 1, 2013
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, you have to segregate an offender in the best interests of everybody else, to keep people safe and keep people from getting hurt. you have to find a balance between keeping people safe, yet also finding a way to offer treatment programs that will make a difference to turn that particular kid around. what are the options out there? what new ideas and creative programming can we come up with? you have to think outside the box and take risks, unfortunately. >> coming up, abel villegas struggles to come to grips with more time behind bars. >> it makes you miss your family a lot. you don't have that much freedom in here. you have people telling when you to eat, when to go to the restroom, when to sleep. it is not right. it is not nice. daily game of '. what if my abdominal pain and cramps end our night before it even starts? what if i eat the wrong thing? what if? what if i suddenly have to go? what if? but what if the most important question is the one you're not asking? what if the underlying cause of your symptoms is damaging inflammation? for help getting the answers you need, talk
, you have to segregate an offender in the best interests of everybody else, to keep people safe and keep people from getting hurt. you have to find a balance between keeping people safe, yet also finding a way to offer treatment programs that will make a difference to turn that particular kid around. what are the options out there? what new ideas and creative programming can we come up with? you have to think outside the box and take risks, unfortunately. >> coming up, abel villegas...
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Dec 8, 2013
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there's no self housing area that segregates them. >> we set limits and say you're going to live with not going to torment him or make life difficult. if you do, we will deal with you, and this guy will stay and you're the one that will end up in segregation. >> there has been an incident involving sutherland and another inmate, in this case sutherland is not the victim. coming up, steven sutherland is accused of harassing another inmate in the shower. >> i didn't know what to do. he was like it is not gay, it is jailing. >> and vicki's mother on life with a self proclaimed cleptomaniac. >> last year i bought an air conditioner for $300 and she turned around and stole that. @ñ >>> here's what's happening. the mid-atlantic states are bracing for a ice storm. an autopsy will determine what killed a 16-year-old boy who died on a delta airlines plane. he stopped breathing 30 minneapolis into the flight. staff administered cpr but could not resuscitate him. let's get you back to "lockup." >> announcer: due to mature subject matter, viewer discretion is advised. ♪ oh say can you see by the
there's no self housing area that segregates them. >> we set limits and say you're going to live with not going to torment him or make life difficult. if you do, we will deal with you, and this guy will stay and you're the one that will end up in segregation. >> there has been an incident involving sutherland and another inmate, in this case sutherland is not the victim. coming up, steven sutherland is accused of harassing another inmate in the shower. >> i didn't know what to...
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Dec 28, 2013
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it's pretty dull. >> peppe's time in segregation might be even more stressful.ther of his 16-month-old twins are having problems. >> me and my girlfriend, the babies mother, are not getting along right now. whatever she decides, she decides and i'll walk away from her. i would like to grow them up and everything, but if it's not meant to be with her, it's not meant to be with her. >> but peppe still has some hope for the future. >> i have had quite a life. really quite a life. i want to enjoy whatever life i have left, and i hope to return back to society, never do any more crime and just be at peace with the world. >> ace, hearts. >> now you re-enter society coming straight out of jail, you found ways that didn't work, it doesn't mean that you fail. you made a living the best way you knew how, but it was just a little bit more than the judge and the law could allow. coming out of jail, i can't put that on my resume. i understand your despair, tell them i was in prison, i was being rebuilt. i was in a state of repair. >> peppe's friend william allen, has another
it's pretty dull. >> peppe's time in segregation might be even more stressful.ther of his 16-month-old twins are having problems. >> me and my girlfriend, the babies mother, are not getting along right now. whatever she decides, she decides and i'll walk away from her. i would like to grow them up and everything, but if it's not meant to be with her, it's not meant to be with her. >> but peppe still has some hope for the future. >> i have had quite a life. really quite a...
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Dec 26, 2013
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we don't have to segregate. we don't have problems.en we have instances where whites have had problems with blacks and blacks have problems with whites, we can usually work it out and get it talked out so it doesn't escalate into something where we end up having to take a whole cell house and turn it into all whites and then all blacks. we just don't have that problem. >> there's another form of integration at indiana state that goes beyond race. in the residential treatment unit, selected inmates with a history of good behavior live with and serve as mentors to inmates with mental health issues. >> you like working the job? >> yeah, i like it. >> mentors like this man form a very different sort of brotherhood with inmates like frank street. >> they're like everybody else. some of them just like for you to listen. >> we live in the country. right next door to that is my grandma and grandpa. >> a lot of times i feel their pain. these guys have had just terrible histories. it can get frustrating as far as how other people look at them. m
we don't have to segregate. we don't have problems.en we have instances where whites have had problems with blacks and blacks have problems with whites, we can usually work it out and get it talked out so it doesn't escalate into something where we end up having to take a whole cell house and turn it into all whites and then all blacks. we just don't have that problem. >> there's another form of integration at indiana state that goes beyond race. in the residential treatment unit,...
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Dec 6, 2013
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but there is segregation for the majority who are still poor. a nelson mandela posturing of nonracial south africa is ever to come true, it is colorblind isool life this one in -- it colorblind schools like this one in johannesburg that have to take root. integrated schools will become the norm. but that is a notion that is beyond the dreams of the millions of south africans who still live in townships. without electricity, without water, without sewage pipes, plagued by crime. , like you say. i am doing the washing. there is nothing. we are just suffering here. you are looking for something better, maybe houses, electricity, water. >> they killed him right in our yard. we go outside and we do not know who it is. go too far away during the night. it is better to say here. >> our government is corrupt just now, you see. they promise people a lot of things but they do not deliver. we have been waiting but we do not get nothing. mandela'sson successes, time and patience may be running out. south africa is changing fast. for the millions who have no
but there is segregation for the majority who are still poor. a nelson mandela posturing of nonracial south africa is ever to come true, it is colorblind isool life this one in -- it colorblind schools like this one in johannesburg that have to take root. integrated schools will become the norm. but that is a notion that is beyond the dreams of the millions of south africans who still live in townships. without electricity, without water, without sewage pipes, plagued by crime. , like you say....
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Dec 26, 2013
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. >> guilty of the charge of refusal, attempt to alter a drug screen, recommend five days penal segregation, assess a fee of $25, $4 fine. recommend a job drop. you want to appeal this? >> yes, sir. >> yes, sir, i don't think the $25 is appropriate. >> i can suspend that. i will suspend the $25. >> okay. >> and richie would like a little time to get his affairs in order before he has to go away for five days. >> no. everything i heard and saw, he attempted to alter the results of a drug test. >> i was given five days in solitary confinement, and he recommended a job drop, which means i'll probably go to pots and pans in the kitchen. >> but ziggy's first stop is the segregation unit, better known as the hole, where he will be locked up 23 hours a day. though for ziggy, it's not all that bad. >> i won't be granted parole in april, and that's mission accomplished, so i have to accept the consequences of what he said. please direct all my mail over to me. >> what mail? >> oh, yeah, true. all i can say is if you don't want to meet the parole board, come up with some other way than tampering with
. >> guilty of the charge of refusal, attempt to alter a drug screen, recommend five days penal segregation, assess a fee of $25, $4 fine. recommend a job drop. you want to appeal this? >> yes, sir. >> yes, sir, i don't think the $25 is appropriate. >> i can suspend that. i will suspend the $25. >> okay. >> and richie would like a little time to get his affairs in order before he has to go away for five days. >> no. everything i heard and saw, he...
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Dec 2, 2013
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can't be segregated any more. i got my g.e.d. that's a big deal.ught i was going to get my g.e.d. >> today, after a year behind bars, jones is set to be a free man. despite his split from the aryan nation, he will return home to an environment that still sees black and white. >> they've got to get over it, i guess. nothing they can do about it. it's not a subject. they don't like it, they don't have to associate with me. it's on them. i'm completely different. i was hateful. i was just -- i was pretty much a bad person when i first got in the department of corrections. changed it now. i'm done. >> he grew up down south and around white people and that kind of environment and stuff, so i mean i can't blame him for choosing what he did. he's changed a lot. from what he said he's done with all the white supremacist stuff and all that. so i don't know if he's serious or not, but that's what he says. so it's going to be a little more boring around here. but he's going home. that's a good thing. >> while jones works through the mental issues of going hom
can't be segregated any more. i got my g.e.d. that's a big deal.ught i was going to get my g.e.d. >> today, after a year behind bars, jones is set to be a free man. despite his split from the aryan nation, he will return home to an environment that still sees black and white. >> they've got to get over it, i guess. nothing they can do about it. it's not a subject. they don't like it, they don't have to associate with me. it's on them. i'm completely different. i was hateful. i was...
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Dec 5, 2013
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it would further segregate the city. baton rouge is majority black. st george is the mainlyingority white. >> we we have white kids going to school on this end of the parish and at the other end and in the middle just of the black kids. >> members in baton rouge make an average of $58,000, in the st george area they make $90,000. >> i think we need to look at does that take us backwards where we are segregating ourselves. it's not a win. >> it's not a trend. the white and black middle class have pled baton rouge to look for better schools for decades. >> this is nothing to do with skin colour. if you have the means to leave baton rouge and the school system, you have left. >> for those that may not be able to leave, it means more division. >> it will all change, i guess. one side will be better than the other side. i guess the lower class, i guess you say. unless you move to a different state, a better class. >> the breakaway effort continues to maintain momentum and could be decided on by voters. >> baton rouge is not the only city making attempts at
it would further segregate the city. baton rouge is majority black. st george is the mainlyingority white. >> we we have white kids going to school on this end of the parish and at the other end and in the middle just of the black kids. >> members in baton rouge make an average of $58,000, in the st george area they make $90,000. >> i think we need to look at does that take us backwards where we are segregating ourselves. it's not a win. >> it's not a trend. the white...
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Dec 4, 2013
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. >> some question whether segregated schools can get students ready for life in the adulls world. >> for most of us we don't live in a segregated adult world, you have to interact with individuals who don't have disabilities. >> richard says the vicard. >> school prepared him plenty, he's now in college, the only one of a set of triplets living away from home. >> it would be difficult to adapt. >> chris sees viscardi as a path to college. >> i want to study biology. >> he has the power, he says, like everyone else to reach for his dreams. >> the u.n. marked the 21st international day of persons with disabilities on thursday. >>> new numbers that show j.c. penneys' efforts to bounce back are working. >>> safety you can't see - new device offered to direct bicyclists in accidents. >>> looks can be deceiving, a picture of davonte freman, that isn't a photograph. welcome back. taking a look at business. aggressive discounts paying off for american automakers in november. sales climing to their highest levels in six years. chrysler raised by 6% because of the jeroke. ford up 7%. the fusio
. >> some question whether segregated schools can get students ready for life in the adulls world. >> for most of us we don't live in a segregated adult world, you have to interact with individuals who don't have disabilities. >> richard says the vicard. >> school prepared him plenty, he's now in college, the only one of a set of triplets living away from home. >> it would be difficult to adapt. >> chris sees viscardi as a path to college. >> i want to...
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Dec 28, 2013
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. >> several weeks earlier, melton was placed in disciplinary segregation for fighting. he's now eligible to return to general population, but has requested to remain in segregation. >> classification comes, you do 30 days and they ask you if you want to move. i say no because i'm going to trial. i'd rather have the concentration down here, you know, so i don't move. >> besides working on his case, melton has one other way to pass time. >> usually, like growing up, i was always at the park playing basketball, so i just feel ksh that's why i made me a rim, so i can always play basketball. it's my strength and power, slap a wall. that's when i score a shot, a point. when you put your mind to it, you got to keep slapping the wall. you're not thinking about nothing but slapping that wall, you know, so i'm using my strength to slap the wall over and over and over again. >> boom, i'm going to show you how to do this [ bleep ]. >> one of melton's co-defendants jones pled guilty to all his charges but must wait for melton's trial to end before he can be sentenced. he practices h
. >> several weeks earlier, melton was placed in disciplinary segregation for fighting. he's now eligible to return to general population, but has requested to remain in segregation. >> classification comes, you do 30 days and they ask you if you want to move. i say no because i'm going to trial. i'd rather have the concentration down here, you know, so i don't move. >> besides working on his case, melton has one other way to pass time. >> usually, like growing up, i was...
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Dec 29, 2013
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he has voluntarily spent the past seven months in a sparse segregation cell preparing for trial. there has been a major development and melton is headed back to general population. after nearly a year of proclaiming his innocence, melton has changed his plea. >> now that i've already pled guilty i'm going to go to prison. so i don't want to be over there until i ride it out. i just came over here. >> when did you decide to plead guilty? >> more evidence was, at the last minute, was brought up against me. so -- i decided that to swallow my pride on some of the charges i didn't do for sure and take the plea, you know. pled no contest. >> what did you plead to exactly? i pled guilty to all charges except csc. i pled no contest to that, those tree charges. >> are you saying you were actually there that night? >> i'm saying, yes, i actually there. i'm not just accountable to everything that happened. >> the worst of the worst, i could get, like, 38 years. best case, 11 years. 11 years, that would be great. that would be great. you know? that's why i pled no context. that's not saying
he has voluntarily spent the past seven months in a sparse segregation cell preparing for trial. there has been a major development and melton is headed back to general population. after nearly a year of proclaiming his innocence, melton has changed his plea. >> now that i've already pled guilty i'm going to go to prison. so i don't want to be over there until i ride it out. i just came over here. >> when did you decide to plead guilty? >> more evidence was, at the last...
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Dec 5, 2013
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and it would futher segregate the city. baton rouge is already majority black, st.eorge would be a majority white by a 3 to 1 ratio. >> so now we would have white kids going to school over here on this end of the parish, white kids going to school over there on the other end of the parish, and in the middle, we'd have just the black kids going to school. >> there's also a major income disparity. residents in baton rouge make an average of 58 thousand dollars a year. in the much more affluent st. george area, the average income is 90 thousand. >> i think we have to look at does that take us backwards where we're segregating ourselves again? and i don't see it as a win. >> but it's not a new trend. both the white and black middle class have been fleeing baton rouge in search of better schools for decades. so those looking to break away say it's not about race, but education. . so this has nothing to do with skin color, this has to do with middle class flight. if you've got the means to leave baton rouge and to leave this school system, you've left. but for those who m
and it would futher segregate the city. baton rouge is already majority black, st.eorge would be a majority white by a 3 to 1 ratio. >> so now we would have white kids going to school over here on this end of the parish, white kids going to school over there on the other end of the parish, and in the middle, we'd have just the black kids going to school. >> there's also a major income disparity. residents in baton rouge make an average of 58 thousand dollars a year. in the much more...
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. >> we know that, like south africa, the united states had to overcome centuries of racial segregation. as was true here, it took sacrifice, the sacrifice of countless people known and unknown to see the dawn of the new day. >> reporter: the cheers for the u.s. president stood? sharp contrast to the reaction to the south african president. (boos) jacob zuma's government is mired in allegations of corruption and cronyism and he stood to speak the crowd syriaed him. but in the mandela spirit of reconciliation, the leaders of nations who barely speak today shared the same stage. president obama shook hands with cuban president raul castro. the two countries haven't had diplomatic relations for 50 years.óñ since 12980. >> whether it's quality, whether it's great products, whether it's financial results. if you're going to do it, you need to do it well. >> pelley: as head of global product development, barra helped develop award-winning vehicles like the cadillac c.p.s. and the chevy corvette. jean jennings is editor of automobile magazine. >> she's smart as a whip. she's been added in ever
. >> we know that, like south africa, the united states had to overcome centuries of racial segregation. as was true here, it took sacrifice, the sacrifice of countless people known and unknown to see the dawn of the new day. >> reporter: the cheers for the u.s. president stood? sharp contrast to the reaction to the south african president. (boos) jacob zuma's government is mired in allegations of corruption and cronyism and he stood to speak the crowd syriaed him. but in the...
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nelson mandela fought to end inequality and racial segregation.ouples today doan have to hide their relationships. being a mixed race couple still have challenges. >> people have accepted that we have merged, but not this close. so it's okay to work work someone and, you know, have cove with them. when it gets personal it's a bit weird. so that's what i think, people have not really tried the closeness, lived with you, touched you, eat with you. that's what i find is uncomfortable tore some. >> they say racism is a problem. some blacks don't like blacks, and some whites don't like blacks. they hope it will change. >> one of our friends at our wedding was watching the table in front of him. there was whites, blacks, coloured and he was like, "man, i wish all of south africa would be like this." my response was, "that's my south africa." for some it's not like it. >> the ban on mixed marriage was scrapped. it signalled the end of white rule and nelson mandela's release from prison. nelson mandela died on thursday, people are living cards and flowers
nelson mandela fought to end inequality and racial segregation.ouples today doan have to hide their relationships. being a mixed race couple still have challenges. >> people have accepted that we have merged, but not this close. so it's okay to work work someone and, you know, have cove with them. when it gets personal it's a bit weird. so that's what i think, people have not really tried the closeness, lived with you, touched you, eat with you. that's what i find is uncomfortable tore...