Remind me not to do anything that could send me to prison . . . never mind.
Corruption and abuse of power by authority figures.
Prison guards and counselors who break the rules disgrace their uniform as well harm their charges.
Even a prisoner deserves to be treated with dignity and respect.
There is a line none of us should cross.
I keep hearing about midwest values. I guess these guys didn’t subscribe to that. They should be in prison! Oh wait!
http://fraudtalk.blogspot.com/2011/04/missouri-woman-pleads-guilty-to.html
.
Why in the holy hell are there men working at a woman’s prison?
Prisons should be sex-segregated to keep the sex down...
This just isn’t your day...
all liberals are rapists, molesters and abusers because of Harvey Weinstein,
Bill Clinton,
Charlie Rose,
Marshall Faulk,
Ike Taylor,
Al Franken,
Heath Evans,
Mario Batali,
Garrison Keillor,
Dustin Hoffman,
Matt Lauer,
Glenn Thrush,Russell Simmons, and Matt Zimme and millions more...
I just think bringing back old-time hangings would hit the mark square-on.
Anyone in prison who thinks they are safe there or that there is justice inside ...is living in their head and not reality.
We need all girl prisons where the lesbian guards can get the hot action..... Not a bunch of male chauvinist pigs. Put in lots of surveillance cams and put select footage on HBO.
A lot of prison guards (not all, I’m sure there are many fine ones) are police academy rejects.
I imagine that most (not all) of those therapists that treat prisoners are not the cream of the crap either.
...It’s quite possible that she was setting up a nice settlement nest egg for her life after prison.
There are prisoners to think about this morning ranging from Tommy Robinson in Hull, England who could end up being beaten and or murdered by his fellow inmates who happen to be Muslims to the Oregon ranchers, Dwight and Stephen Hammond, jailed as terrorists for lighting a backfire with five year mandatory sentences.
And some more I mention in this new blog post.
http://nextrushfree.blogspot.com/2018/05/mr.html
When I told my junior high school guidance counselor about molestation by an adult male “friend” she asked me to think about how I might have brought it on with the way I had acted or dressed. That hurt more than the actual molestation because I knew, even at the age of 12, this was not the normal response of a caring responsible adult in her position and my cry for help was falling on deaf ears.