Prison experiences

doublejj

Well-Known Member
On the other side.....I don't know times I've met inmates wives & children and had them tell me how much they appreciated everything I had done for their family....."My husband has told me so much about you"...."We're making plans for when he gets out" "You've been a positive influence Thank you"........the look on their face............you can't buy that.....yeah I got paid well, but not like this.... Edit: that came across sounding a little dramatic......but I hope you get what I mean. The job could be very rewarding in different ways. I knew I was helping inmates families also.........
 

dirtsurfr

Well-Known Member
I saw that the guys running the different crews in prison were pretty much good guys to work for.
But I think if you was an asshole you'd not last long.
My boss got in big trouble for just giving me a smoke!
Now the COs.... they can suck a big one, most got their milk money took from them as
kids and now they get to pay back all those meanies!
For the most part I wouldn't pee on them if they was on fire. LOL!

I'm done being that person for the most part........ I hope.
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
I saw that the guys running the different crews in prison were pretty much good guys to work for.
But I think if you was an asshole you'd not last long.
My boss got in big trouble for just giving me a smoke!
Now the COs.... they can suck a big one, most got their milk money took from them as
kids and now they get to pay back all those meanies!
For the most part I wouldn't pee on them if they was on fire. LOL!

I'm done being that person for the most part........ I hope.
dirtsurfer, your done bro.....you ain't going back.......I was investigated numerous times by S&I for 'over familiarization'......my job straddled a lot of lines.....CO's & I had different jobs to do.....
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
dirtsurfer, your done bro.....you ain't going back.......I was investigated numerous times by S&I for 'over familiarization'......my job straddled a lot of lines.....CO's & I had different jobs to do.....
......I found out they tapped my phone lines, during invistigations... because I signed a waver when I got my ID card.......they didn't need a warrant......
 

YukCrumbs

New Member
I was put into a cell with a homless man already passed out, only to have him wake up later on all pissed off that he had to share a cell with me. The guy started scooping shit out of the toilet and tossing it around every where SCREAMING "The only reason i got arrested was to fuckin sleep alone tonight fuckin get this dude outta here!!!" Those thin ass sheets they gave us dont block for shit...literally. was only in county for a weekend, but it was the best weekend for the pure fact of this story....gotta love FL
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
Just to keep things in proper perspective, woody was correct....this was no kindergarten class. Most of these guys were well past dirtsurfr caliber.....I have a question for the group. What would you do if you found out one of your inmate workers, had committed some of the most heinous & vicious crimes imaginable?....let's say they have been assigned to your work crew, what would you do?...............there's an inmate at Folsom, that carjacked a young couple & their infant baby, for their car. He drove them to some rural property and shot & killed the husband as soon as he got out of the car, right in front of the wife. Then he put the baby into a microwave oven & video'ed her reaction as he turned it on and cooked her baby....He then raped & tortured her to death over the several days it took her to succumb...the detectives that investigated the case (and watched the videos) needed counseling...he cut a deal to avoid the death penalty. Because he was abused as a child & because they believe there may be more victims, they agreed.....he's doing life at Folsom........this is no kindergarten class, is right.....what would you do?.....
 

Ballsonrawls

Well-Known Member
fuck that shit. pay an inmate to handle it or something. the courts have decided, bahahah. youre right, but the court system is just as corrupt as the guy in there.
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
I had an inmate on my crew that buried a schoolbus full of children for the ransom...They only lived because they dug themselves out!
 

Ballsonrawls

Well-Known Member
bahahah, saying thats life is like shrugging your shoulders. not really working towards changing the wrongs in the world
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
Ng was born in Hong Kong, the son of a wealthy executive. As a child, he was harshly disciplined and abused by his father. As a teenager, Ng was described as a troubled loner and was expelled from several schools. When he was arrested for shoplifting at age 15, his father sent him to Bentham Grammar boarding school in Lancashire, England.Not long after arriving, he was expelled for stealing from other students and returned to Hong Kong.
Ng finally moved to the United States, where he entered Notre Dame de Namur University in Belmont, California. He dropped out after only one semester.
In early 1980, although not a United States citizen, Ng enlisted in the United States Marine Corps. Ng later revealed that with the help of a recruiting sergeant, he provided fake papers stating he was born in Bloomington, Indiana. After serving less than a year, he was dishonorably discharged for the theft of heavy weaponry and machine guns from MCAS Kaneohe Bay. He was further charged with escape from confinement and attempted desertion, though the desertion charge was dropped. Ng was convicted on the remaining charges and was sentenced to 14 years in a military prison. He was released in late 1982, when his sentence was commuted.


Ng met Leonard Lake in 1983. The two are believed to have murdered between 11 and 25 victims at Lake's ranch in Calaveras County, California. They filmed themselves raping and torturing their victims.
The crimes became known in 1985 when Lake committed suicide after being arrested and Ng was caught shoplifting at a hardware store. Police searched Lake's ranch and found human remains. Ng was identified as Lake's partner in crime.
Ng fled to Calgary, Alberta, where he was arrested by the Calgary Police Service on June 6, 1985, after resisting arrest for shoplifting at The Bay department store. Ng pointed a pistol at two security guards and, after a brief struggle, shot one of them in the hand. The guards managed to overpower him and held him in custody. Ng was charged and subsequently convicted of shoplifting, felonious assault and possession of a concealed firearm. He was sentenced to four and half years in a Canadian prison.
After a lengthy extradition battle with Canadian courts, Ng was handed over to U.S. authorities. He stood trial in 1998 on twelve counts of murder and was convicted on February 24, 1999, of eleven: six men, three women and two male infants. Ng's trial was lengthy and cost California approximately $20 million. At the time, it was the most expensive trial in the state's history.
Since entering prison, Ng has taken up a correspondence course in art at the University of the Fraser Valley (UFV).
 
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