America's elderly prisoner boom

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  • Опубликовано: 17 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 2,9 тыс.

  • @MsMOLLYKINS
    @MsMOLLYKINS 7 лет назад +2372

    Mr Baxter is absolutely doing a great job. Regardless of his crime at least he is working to help people not just looking out for himself. Good job

    • @didntknoicouldchangethis
      @didntknoicouldchangethis 7 лет назад +12

      Molly Mayor I agree!

    • @fatgalapeno3384
      @fatgalapeno3384 7 лет назад +28

      Molly Mayor dont tell me you feel bad and think he deserves to be free because of his age...remember hes not in there for no reason

    • @MsMOLLYKINS
      @MsMOLLYKINS 7 лет назад +25

      1Fom thank you, I wasn't suggesting he didn't deserve to be there I am saying I would prefer prisoners use their time to better them selves and if that is helping elderly or disabled prisoners then that's what I would hope prison reforms are about. There is not point in locking people up and leave them with nothing to do. Prison is not designed to teach the prisoner about why he chose this life but perhaps prisoners learn to help others instead of being self obsessed . Anyway I meant it as a comment not a debate but maybe we should debate what prison reform is about . Xox

    • @francisco4benites
      @francisco4benites 7 лет назад +11

      Molly Mayor the best is that it's by choice it's not like a job he gets paid for it's some thing he volunteered for

    • @MsMOLLYKINS
      @MsMOLLYKINS 7 лет назад +12

      francisco4ben absolutely. I can only imagine the hours of boredom stretch with fear violence and endless tedium ... Humanity is taken from them and this just shows that no matter what human kindness really is very powerful . In a world full of self absorbed bitterness there is kindness ...

  • @christopherbradley5575
    @christopherbradley5575 7 лет назад +1356

    The problem isnt that the prisoners are getting old.....thats just common sense. The problem is that Americas prison system is totally ineffective. Other developed countries have prisons that actually rehabilitate offenders and turn them into productive members of society but the US just cant seem to handle that kind of responsibility. As a result, we are paying billions per year for something that doesnt work. Americans should be furious about this.

    • @davidanderson2263
      @davidanderson2263 7 лет назад +116

      americans arent too smart we elected trump as president..

    • @demanischaffer
      @demanischaffer 6 лет назад +24

      David Anderson So could we un smart Americans have our UN money back?

    • @wesley5729
      @wesley5729 6 лет назад +52

      Christopher Bradley it's not the prison system it's the family unit. We have dumb parents raising their children to be gangbangers and rapists it's too late for them

    • @davidanderson2263
      @davidanderson2263 6 лет назад +2

      no moron its personal choices..

    • @wesley5729
      @wesley5729 6 лет назад +25

      David Anderson choices influenced by bad parenting

  • @RichardsWorld
    @RichardsWorld 7 лет назад +2142

    If someone truly has dementia and can't remember anything, then they are basically a different person than the person that committed the crimes. Keeping them in prison is a big waste of money.

    • @FlatRangeOperator
      @FlatRangeOperator 7 лет назад +120

      At that point tho they are fully assimilated, but yes the system is totally backwards as fuck.

    • @mundotaku_org
      @mundotaku_org 6 лет назад +292

      The problem is that many of those people don't even have someone outside to take care of them. This might sound insane, but some elderly are better in prison than being freed. Some don't even realize they are on prison.

    • @donnakhail426
      @donnakhail426 6 лет назад +38

      Richard's World Traveler and what would u tell the victim's family?

    • @CerifiedAbdi
      @CerifiedAbdi 6 лет назад +98

      So if killers forget the crimes they committed we should release them?

    • @kwcbomb
      @kwcbomb 6 лет назад +82

      You know what they say about dementia, You get to meet new people every day.

  • @jimmyross504
    @jimmyross504 5 лет назад +720

    they won't parole mr. Baxter because he's some of the "BEST" help they got in that prison

  • @newdogatplay
    @newdogatplay 5 лет назад +713

    Anyone in for drug charges that did not cause a death should be let go,

  • @captaincancer7786
    @captaincancer7786 5 лет назад +1200

    Remember, the longer those prisoners stay in prison, the more money the companies get.

    • @TheSpogNYC
      @TheSpogNYC 5 лет назад +51

      Keep in mind that for-profit prisons make up an incredibly small percentage of all prisons. This doesn't change the fact that private-run prisons is a total disgrace, but the amount of for-profit prisons has been drasticly blown out of proportion and sensationalized. That being said, I'm of the belief that for-profit/private/corporation run prisons should be outlawed.

    • @MrTrollinglol
      @MrTrollinglol 5 лет назад +50

      Even public prisons have big companies making millions off prisoners by marking up snack food items and such and also making family use an overpriced service to send "E-notes" to them to interact during holidays, the whole thing is fucked up no matter how you look at it

    • @eddilovee
      @eddilovee 5 лет назад +11

      MrTrollinglol yeah, lots of contractors making big bucks. Usually connected to politics on who gets those contracts. Not about who has the best service to offer for the buck.

    • @1bigfin
      @1bigfin 5 лет назад +15

      Don't do the crime if you can't do the time.

    • @harpskid
      @harpskid 5 лет назад +16

      @@1bigfin While i tend to agree, there are other countries experimenting with less strict prison time and shorter sentences. I think it was Denmark or Sweden that was trying a "house hold style" prison where everyone goes to work everyday (in the prison) cooks and cleans for themselves, etc.

  • @eddilovee
    @eddilovee 5 лет назад +473

    When I was 19 years old, I went to prison. One of the first things I noticed was that. There were many old men there.

    • @stephenb7829
      @stephenb7829 5 лет назад +33

      Did you want to add anything to that ?

    • @eddilovee
      @eddilovee 5 лет назад +169

      Stephen B, I can write a book about it. No, I never got raped if you’re trying to be funny about it. I did have an old man come onto me verbally. I was from the streets, my charge was an Armed Robbery. I was one of the most notorious criminals in my city at that time. A top member of the most violent gang in the city, in the newspapers often. So of course, this old man picked the wrong one. I beat the crap out of him, without him touching me. This happened during my first week. In the orientation unit.
      Life inside prison is a different world. With a new set of rules. There are rules to every single thing you do(e.g. using the toilet, approaching two men talking, etc), and you better catch on quick, or you won’t make it.
      Once I left the Orientation Unit, I was moved to a STG(Security Threat Group) Unit. When gang members came to question me for the first time, huddled in a U-shape around me. I told them I had no affiliation to prison gangs, but I am a gang member. I lied at the same time, I was a Vice Lord, but I didn’t want to rotate with them. I’m not the type of man to put in work for another man that I don’t know, just because we’re both under the same gang. Inside of prison, you start at the bottom, and move up in ranks. The bottom is where you have to do most of the dirt, to move up. I wasn’t with that. So they asked what street gang I was with. I told them the name, one of the men looked deep into my eyes squinting his. He asked if I was from Fort Wayne with a smile. Caught by surprise I answered, “yeah!” He stated that he knew my people, from doing time behind bars. He then began to name them, and which facilities they were in together. I finally felt at ease. The names he mentioned, were some savage men, doing serious time. I knew they had to be respected in prison.
      I stuck to myself, mainly in my cell. I’ve never been social around strangers. Always kept a straight face. You have to realize, I’ve probably been in more firefights than some war veterans. When other inmates look at you, you have to know how to look back at them. Let the eyes, and body talk for you. It can determine if they’ll extort, rob, rape, or take advantage of you some way. You don’t just want to go out and make friends. That can be a very dangerous thing. Being anti-social worked in my favor for that environment, so did my conduct.
      The guy who knew my friends would walk up to me, make small talk. Until eventually we became pretty good friends I would say. After my celly built his profile on me, he trusted me enough to show his cell phone. In which I was amazed, he said that if I paid the bill, I could use it anytime. A deal I was more than happy to accept.
      I got my first job soon after being idle. Working grave shift at the hospital, as a janitor. I worked with a group of gentlemen that I’ll never forget in my life. Memories and words I’ll carry with me forever. They took me in as a little brother, they were all grown men of character. Very articulate and wise. I for the first time in prison, let my guard down around other men. I loved going to work, just to be in their presence. It was an actual escape from prison life. Once I gained their trust, they filled me in on the ins and outs. The affairs with nurses, contraband smuggling, etc. We all became very very close. After about 6 months or so of working at the hospital. I decided I needed to go to school for a sentence reduction. So I had to quit my job. I hated that I didn’t get to see them as often.
      Soon, I started running into folks from my city. I didn’t know majority of them, they all knew of me. Until a few members from my city gang began to appear. My reputation began to grow bigger, all with a word of mouth from others, and my conduct. I started to get acquainted more and more with the shot callers. Discovering all of the corruption and hustles. Until I got my own corrupt correctional officer dropping off packages of illegal contraband weekly.
      My release date was sad, it was the end of a journey from State institutions. I still had a Federal retainer on me I had to deal with. I went through the same release procedure as everyone else. There are two gates to come in and leave prison. Only one may be open at a time. As guards escorted me for the walk to the gates, I stared at the white Jeep waiting in-between the two gates. As the gate opened, two federal agents stepped out of the vehicle. One opened a Manila envelope, showed me a warrant for my arrest. The other took shackles, out of the back. I was then shackled and escorted to my next journey.
      Since my release 6 years ago, I haven’t been back. Can’t recollect the exact rate of recidivism. I believe it’s as high as 80%. I’ve beaten the odds so far, and I’m very proud of it. I would rather be homeless in the real world. Than do the same amount of years inside of prison. The hardest thing about prison was being constantly surrounded by knuckleheads. It’s almost unbearable, because you have to live with them, for all of your stay.
      That fight I spoke of in State was my only one there. Feds was a different story, you have members from all 50 states in one prison. Additionally, from other countries. Nobody knows who you are unless you are big time. All you have to show them is paperwork about your case.

    • @Cyrus600
      @Cyrus600 5 лет назад +99

      Russell Maybe you should write a book about it. This was a great read, best of luck to you

    • @harrisons62
      @harrisons62 5 лет назад +17

      Russell yeah you thought you were hard in your little gang robbing vulnerable people good for you cause nobody gives a shit.

    • @eddilovee
      @eddilovee 5 лет назад +55

      Harrison Still I thank my teachers for instilling good characteristic in me. I remember each teachers name from 1st to 5th grade. Those people taught me everything I needed to know. You know, it’s proven that if a child is born in a high stress environment. That child most likely will be violent. Even a fetus is impacted by it. I didn’t get to chose how I was born. I was born into war. That’s all I knew. My only escape was education and knowledge.

  • @Thoroughly_Wet
    @Thoroughly_Wet 5 лет назад +475

    Keeping anyone in prison who no longer can take care of themselvs is just a waste of money

    • @TheHadesShade
      @TheHadesShade 5 лет назад +26

      They still need to be taken care of, no one else will do it. Especially not for the kind of payment they are giving people in prison to do that job. So in actuality, it costs less.

    • @user-ks6kj9no9n
      @user-ks6kj9no9n 5 лет назад +15

      Well if these old hags are let out they will die in street. They got no one

    • @mkmk4314
      @mkmk4314 5 лет назад +6

      Its inhuman

    • @darlene971
      @darlene971 5 лет назад +11

      I think if someone killed your child or other family member you would want tu hem to die in prison. Of course if they did not murder someone i would feel something else should be done to punish

    • @Advic77
      @Advic77 5 лет назад

      Unintended consequences of "life means life"..The prison system has become responsible for the care of the elderly. Like all elderly citizen, they are drawing down on their "pension" and there is nothing wrong with that.

  • @peterpoutypuss
    @peterpoutypuss 5 лет назад +379

    I am not saying prisoners should be coddled,but sometimes a little humanity goes a long way.

    • @jackmaster3134
      @jackmaster3134 5 лет назад +7

      @L Manning most are there for drugs you treat people like an animal they will act like one

    • @5Mariner
      @5Mariner 5 лет назад

      Would you be advocating for people like Ariel Castro, Dylann Roof, Jake Patterson, and Todd Kohlhepp?

    • @miapdx503
      @miapdx503 5 лет назад +4

      America is about the sickest nation when it comes to incarceration. We sentence men to be raped and brutalized. No other civilized country does what we do to people. It's disgusting.

    • @ShidaiTaino
      @ShidaiTaino 5 лет назад +3

      L Manning what’s the difference between a soldier, an executioner, and a murderer

    • @andrestapia7329
      @andrestapia7329 5 лет назад +1

      Noo. Let ppl do time. I did.mine..

  • @JASQNT
    @JASQNT 4 года назад +56

    You can see total compassion in Mr. Baxter’s eyes. Prison staff need to retrained by Mr. Baxter! In addition, yes I agree he will never get parole because he is their BEST officer!

    • @RespectMyAuthoritaah
      @RespectMyAuthoritaah 2 года назад

      The prison staff do not need training by Mr. Baxter. You need training by the prison staff. This is not a documentary it is a propaganda piece.

  • @SCORPIONSCOME1st
    @SCORPIONSCOME1st 7 лет назад +259

    I was once an inmate and I was teased for being housed in the elderly part of the compound, one one man passed away but I received more wisdom from some of those guys than family

    • @davidanderson2263
      @davidanderson2263 7 лет назад +4

      true..

    • @janethockey9070
      @janethockey9070 6 лет назад +12

      Wisdom comes from those with the most burn marks.

    • @ras_krystafari3333
      @ras_krystafari3333 5 лет назад

      *Then your own blood family* these guys are have family. Where do u thunk the wisdom came from?

    • @kevinparsley6806
      @kevinparsley6806 5 лет назад +1

      @@ras_krystafari3333 i tried man. i dont know what that says.

    • @kat7939
      @kat7939 5 лет назад +2

      “Teased”?? Were you in prison or Kindergarten???

  • @TyEdward1924
    @TyEdward1924 3 года назад +41

    I work as a caregiver for the elderly and I can relate to Mr. Baxter it’s heartbreaking. My patients that I work with don’t even know what they’re even doing in a nursing home.

  • @asylumbuilder2881
    @asylumbuilder2881 5 лет назад +21

    Very nice of that inmate to help elderly prisoners

  • @juneosborne862
    @juneosborne862 6 лет назад +66

    Me Baxter thank you for taking care of the elderly man. You will be Blessed for what you do. My Grandmother had dementia and it was hard for her to not be able to take care of herself and for her not to recognize us. There should be a place where these men are kept and taken care of 24/7 by nurse assistance’s. Thanks for all you do.

    • @genderfluidsneutral4591
      @genderfluidsneutral4591 3 года назад

      I'd prefer if he was never in jail, I don't even want to know what he did to end up in prison for so long.

  • @saltysouthernmomma9354
    @saltysouthernmomma9354 5 лет назад +78

    May God bless those volunteers & the men they care for.

  • @cynthiabauer5281
    @cynthiabauer5281 7 лет назад +482

    Put these prisoners in a separate wing so they will not be victimized. With a separate cafeteria and guards specially trained to handle them

    • @littlemoto1
      @littlemoto1 7 лет назад +3

      Cynthia Bauer they do

    • @ComradeRachel
      @ComradeRachel 7 лет назад +27

      Im sure many prisons do attempt this, but some that are overcrowded may not be able to do this easily. We have too many over crowded prisons.

    • @HollieMoodie
      @HollieMoodie 7 лет назад +6

      Some elderly people require around the clock care.

    • @TK-ib2vu
      @TK-ib2vu 7 лет назад +5

      Cynthia Bauer nah fuck that. Set up a government run old folks home. Specifically for inmates to old to stay with the general population.

    • @casoldierman
      @casoldierman 6 лет назад

      Cynthia Bauer stun gun and pepper spray handles them made my there government employees hahahahahahahah

  • @Agwings1960
    @Agwings1960 5 лет назад +51

    The saddest part of the whole deal is, if they just let most of those elderly prisoners go, they wouldn't have any care or housing at all.

    • @xeero24
      @xeero24 5 месяцев назад

      The saddest part actually is the lives that these animals took. The fact you feel anything for these annuals shows what a horrible person you are, also willing to bet you’re an alt left liberal as well. Shame on you.

  • @chickasaw9635
    @chickasaw9635 7 лет назад +485

    Law enforcement for profit is sick.

    • @dxb8086
      @dxb8086 6 лет назад +12

      That's what murica was build on. The penal system is murica's largest economy sector. It's a business model in the "land of the free".

    • @TheGhjgjgjgjgjg
      @TheGhjgjgjgjgjg 6 лет назад +11

      America is a fucked up country when you really get down into the nitty gritty.

    • @likearockcm
      @likearockcm 6 лет назад +6

      I agree but even worse is health care for OBSCENE profit.

    • @miapdx503
      @miapdx503 5 лет назад +3

      It absolutely is. Then it's no longer prison; it's state sponsored slavery.

    • @vivenomada
      @vivenomada 5 лет назад +2

      @Mark Davis and than you get judges like Mark Ciavarella who get paid to send people to jail

  • @karliebellatrixyoung6359
    @karliebellatrixyoung6359 5 лет назад +257

    Elderly inmates should have separate facilities, and senility should be taken into account when we assess parole. The size of the prison population in America is sickening, especially when you consider just how many inmates committed only non-violent drug offenses. The measure of the humanity of a society is how it treats it's lowest members.

    • @josephdugdale4150
      @josephdugdale4150 5 лет назад +12

      There needs to be an international effort to decriminalize drug offences. It would cut prison populations by over half and release millions of innocent people. Drug users are some of the most oppressed people in society and we shouldn't stand for such abuse. If it's a war on drugs they want, then we will give them a war.

    • @karliebellatrixyoung6359
      @karliebellatrixyoung6359 5 лет назад +2

      @@josephdugdale4150 Agreed, but IMO decriminalization is a half measure which leaves users disenfranchised. Legislation, regulation, taxation, and treatment for those whose drug use has become problematic. Prohibition is an experiment whose time is over.

    • @josephdugdale4150
      @josephdugdale4150 5 лет назад

      @@karliebellatrixyoung6359 I couldn't agree more!

    • @welderella
      @welderella 5 лет назад +11

      Put them on parole and they will end up homeless.

    • @davidjanssen894
      @davidjanssen894 5 лет назад +3

      There needs to be punishment prisons for violent crimes and rehabilitation prisons for other crime

  • @ms.moniquebrown6754
    @ms.moniquebrown6754 2 месяца назад +3

    Excellent story. Tremendous work is being done here. Mr. Baxter is a gem and his mama would be so proud. Mr Burdick is a grief counselor, so people aren't dying alone. That is amazing.

  • @PonchoANS7
    @PonchoANS7 9 лет назад +741

    That's depressing. American prisons should focus on reform rather than punishment. They go in criminals and come out something worse.

    • @yellabus
      @yellabus 9 лет назад +9

      Alfonso Navarro
      What does it matter when 1 in 10 inmates is serving a life sentence. May as well inprison all scumbag criminals for life. Then you don't need to rehabilitate, just punish, punish, punish.

    • @audiotecmark
      @audiotecmark 9 лет назад +12

      Alfonso Navarro Though I agree with your second statement, they do come out much worse. The fact is, most people get out of prison and end up either never going back in, or going back in multiple times. A lot of the time there isn't any way to rehabilitate people without extremely large expenses, as their mental issues are quite bad, and there's no guarantee it will work for them.

    • @robertruschak7083
      @robertruschak7083 8 лет назад +9

      Commies should donate there own money to these old Democrat voters!!!

    • @dougiequick1
      @dougiequick1 7 лет назад +9

      WHOLE lot of whack jobs can NOT be "reformed" and have proven such over and over again ...such HAVE TO BE caged like dangerous animals ...it is NOT about THEM it is about everyone else....

    • @waynerobinson2301
      @waynerobinson2301 7 лет назад +2

      Poncho it is up to individual to reform himself no one can do it for them . They have visiting ministers from every faith and the bibles and such . You cant live someone life

  • @slimesandglitterrainbows5183
    @slimesandglitterrainbows5183 7 лет назад +120

    They need to be in a separate prison like kids don’t go to regular prisons that should have something like that for the elderly

    • @davidanderson2263
      @davidanderson2263 7 лет назад +6

      disagree prison is prison,if you 17 and u commit murder u should be wit other murders whether 40 or 50 yrs old.. u both did horrible crimes..

    • @s.a.8548
      @s.a.8548 6 лет назад +2

      How about if you're 6 and commit murder. You should be taken to adult prisons?

    • @rs72098
      @rs72098 6 лет назад +10

      @@davidanderson2263 I disagree, a 70 year old mind is much different than a 20 year old. Yes they should be in prison, but separate from a 25 year old who could see them as easy prey. Same reason you wouldn't put a 13 year old in prison with a 30 year old. Many prisoners can be predatory.

    • @timothyterrell1658
      @timothyterrell1658 6 лет назад

      LA is reputed to have a brutal callous penal system.
      Yes we do, when that is what is needed. But there is another face to the coin.
      At Angola, one of the hardest prison's in the country they have a entire unit dedicated to elderly inmates ,to protect them from other inmates. And give them the special care they need. You find compassion in the strangest places.
      They are not trying to be cruel .cruelty of itself is pointless.

    • @timothyterrell1658
      @timothyterrell1658 6 лет назад

      @@s.a.8548 Yes they should. But we have special protection units for this thing 9 and12 year olds would not last a day in population. There is no justifiable reason to do that.
      If a child is so hot a reformatory can't handle them ,they have to go to prison. Eaven if they don't want them there.

  • @mechanicjobs
    @mechanicjobs 6 лет назад +27

    God bless Mr Baxter efforts to help others.

  • @shadowcrimsonflare
    @shadowcrimsonflare 5 лет назад +54

    If I had a loved one that lost their life due to the actions that put one of these elderly people in prison, I might not view them with such pity.

    • @edwardinfante2602
      @edwardinfante2602 2 года назад +2

      I have no pity and how could I? They got to live their life. Albeit was in prison but it's still a whole lot more than their victim got.

  • @GoodVibesNewlevel2023
    @GoodVibesNewlevel2023 5 лет назад +447

    I think it’s interesting that most of these documentaries with topics such as poverty, homelessness, incarceration, sex trafficking, disease, high cost of.education, unemployment etc in America are produced by media outlets in other countries. I think it’s good, so others can see that the US is not as perfect as they may believe.

  • @MadMan-xx8sf
    @MadMan-xx8sf 5 лет назад +18

    Thank you Gold Coat Brothers.
    God Bless each of you.

  • @julesmendoza7283
    @julesmendoza7283 4 месяца назад +4

    Imagine being in prison and having dementia then forgetting why your even in prison for life

  • @marianyulo9066
    @marianyulo9066 6 лет назад +15

    This man helping has his way into heaven . He’s helping these older people he’s got a good heart . Awesome

    • @ganrimmonim
      @ganrimmonim Год назад

      Amen.

    • @taniaaustin6433
      @taniaaustin6433 Год назад

      Some people do bad things it doesn't always mean they are a bad person. I think in the USA where it's acceptable to carry guns it must be very easy to pull out a gun almost in impulse and shoot someone without even thinking about it. It's something we don't have much of in the UK. One impulsive action and your life is messed up. In UK they say if you carry a knife yourself you more likely to be stabbed. I wonder if the same goes with guns. Maybe your more likely to put yourself in a dangerous situation because a false sense of security.

    • @WildlifeWarrior-cr1kk
      @WildlifeWarrior-cr1kk 10 месяцев назад

      There's no such thing as heaven

  • @ClaimClam
    @ClaimClam 5 лет назад +48

    BAXTER IS A GOOD MAN, WE NEED MORE LIKE HIM IN PRISON

  • @jamestown8398
    @jamestown8398 5 лет назад +23

    The Gold Coats Program seems like a good idea; it helps protect the elderly vulnerable prisoners and allows some of the younger ones a way to feel useful and helpful.

  • @DyanneGavin
    @DyanneGavin 7 лет назад +130

    The 'Gold coats', wow, thank you for the loving work you do. You all are a fine example of what all of us need to do all of the time. Goes back to the golden rule, "Do unto others as you would have them do unto you"! Blessings, Love and Peace for All, NOW!

    • @Wardell43
      @Wardell43 6 лет назад +2

      No, she far to stupid. Where are our Gold Coats??
      Where are the Bleeding Hearts that worry about the Health Care of our Vets??
      No one gives a rats arse what happens to some old child molesters.
      Kindness leads to more stupidity.

    • @Hfajardo97
      @Hfajardo97 6 лет назад +4

      Except that they aren't. The two people who they told us about were murderers. They are a fine example of trying to make up for what they did but they should only be role models for criminals in prison.

    • @alexkrasnic3850
      @alexkrasnic3850 6 лет назад +1

      You know they are all serving life for murder, right???

    • @soulspeakreadings9713
      @soulspeakreadings9713 6 лет назад +1

      Idiot.

    • @bozkurt158
      @bozkurt158 6 лет назад

      The Revolution Will Be Televised,
      She doesn't realise they're only doing it for themselves and parole hearing.
      Most of those "Goldcoats" shot and killed a person.

  • @duanestewart9149
    @duanestewart9149 5 лет назад +15

    We protect them. Thx Brother. Me Baxter. Sending you good will and positive vibes

  • @miapdx503
    @miapdx503 5 лет назад +21

    Mr. Baxter, I hope you're out and reading this.

  • @chicohaze787
    @chicohaze787 5 лет назад +26

    When you get handed a life sentence you can’t help it to get old. Or the wave of people getting sentenced during the 90s are getting older now

  • @mikaelamilazzo5070
    @mikaelamilazzo5070 5 лет назад +12

    My father was arrested and spent two days in jail while he was doing at home hospice care and getting ready to die. He had Parkinson's, Dementia, and could not walk. They screamed at him because he wet his pants(he no longer had any control.) and died two weeks after he was released. He was arrested on a warrant that was issued 22 years ago for driving while suspended. This is ridiculous, prison is not a nursing home.

  • @gabbygirl3951
    @gabbygirl3951 8 лет назад +191

    the care the elderly inmates are receiving from the gold coats is probably better quality and personal then the care they would receive in a nursing home on the outside. Most residents in nursing homes also don't get to leave the facility either so they may as well be in prison. They should not get released from prison just because they are elderly because their victims didn't even get a chance to become elderly. Those who are elderly who did not commit violent crimes and are now so incapacitated they are no longer a risk to society are the only ones who should be considered for release.

    • @TypeOneg
      @TypeOneg 7 лет назад +8

      Gabby Girl you are high.

    • @gabbygirl3951
      @gabbygirl3951 7 лет назад +3

      Victoria Love why do u think so?

    • @executiveoo7694
      @executiveoo7694 7 лет назад +3

      Says every woman who has had abortions if it was a man he would be in jail and keep in mind some are for killing there own kids

    • @littlemoto1
      @littlemoto1 7 лет назад +2

      Gabby Girl go help the elderly then

    • @MsJoyce31202
      @MsJoyce31202 7 лет назад

      They are getting what they deserve by paying for their crimes in jail. Now unless the system is going to kill these people (death penalty), they are going to need care when they can't take care of themselves. And of course you don't use death penalty for just any reason. It is good to have Gold Coats to care for these indivuduals. No one is dead until they are dead, so they will need care. This is something to think about for those who are incarcerated for life without parole.

  • @Elleshante
    @Elleshante 6 лет назад +5

    The relationships between these men are awesome this saddens me the elderly and dying in prison

  • @joanneortiz3251
    @joanneortiz3251 5 лет назад +13

    Wow, I have nothing but admiration for these men. They are doing a great thing.
    Also, I second what everybody else has said about the ineffectiveness and cruelty of the American prison system. But under the current system as it stands, these men are doing what they can.

  • @tms9995
    @tms9995 7 месяцев назад +2

    This report is a BRUTAL TRUTH
    Seriously

  • @scottrjmatmsncom
    @scottrjmatmsncom 4 года назад +11

    I'm surprised that they don't have senior inmate wards just for there protection

  • @undertyped1
    @undertyped1 5 лет назад +25

    2:50 i love how she calls it an institute. It's not there to rehabilitate anyone.

    • @wildboris1
      @wildboris1 5 лет назад +1

      Its not supposed to? The people in there are murders and are getting what they deserve, to rot behind bars

    • @undertyped1
      @undertyped1 5 лет назад +4

      @Ryan Anderson i'm sure creating millions of hardened criminals is doing great for society. Rehabilitation? pah who needs it, what this world needs is more criminals and killers.

    • @ben76326
      @ben76326 5 лет назад

      @Ryan Anderson that makes no sense. IQ is rough estimate towards the average intelligence of people of the same age. With 100 being the average. So if you killed everyone below 115, then tested again those same people would have an IQ of less than 100.
      Also IQ isn't a great measure of ability (especially in the long run), because it is subject to change in both the short and long term. And it's practically impossible to have an IQ test without bias.

  • @Tashafhickman
    @Tashafhickman 5 лет назад +25

    So who feeds the inmates when they can't anymore? Who changes them when they can't make it to the bathroom ? Let them go to a nursing home,honestly it's like prison in my opinion.

    • @Craig-pm2kc
      @Craig-pm2kc 3 года назад +1

      So if the guy killed someone, let him go?

    • @edwardinfante2602
      @edwardinfante2602 2 года назад

      @@Craig-pm2kc yep. Who cares as long as it wasn't somebody I know.
      Sure seems that's the way people are thinking.

  • @gabrielgarcia5629
    @gabrielgarcia5629 5 лет назад +51

    As a Christian I strongly believe that God has gives many opportunities in your life path to bring you back to him.
    These men called the gold coats are a blessing.

    • @renitabragg9108
      @renitabragg9108 5 лет назад +2

      I agree that is reforming at its finest

    • @theboyscout0156
      @theboyscout0156 5 лет назад +1

      Renita Bragg so if someone murders your mom, you want them to get free education?

    • @jonaveul
      @jonaveul 5 лет назад

      God does not do anything, it’s the persons choice to Break the law and go to jail.

  • @lauravaughn6740
    @lauravaughn6740 5 лет назад +11

    It's so sad how people make decisions that causes them to end up in prison not knowing what they're going to face once they're there. They should separate the old people that are sick.

  • @berniesands6201
    @berniesands6201 4 года назад +6

    Much Love & Respect for the gold coast guys that look out for the older guys that can't do for them selves anymore. In an environment filled with predators they still find the kindness in their hearts to care for another human being.

  • @jiggyfun807
    @jiggyfun807 7 лет назад +156

    In Norway max sentence is 23 years. If your gonna have the world's biggest prison population at least offer medically assisted suicide, if I was gonna die in prison and had no idea why I was there, i'd choose death.

    • @davidanderson2263
      @davidanderson2263 7 лет назад +21

      america believes that if your a criminal your no longer a human..

    • @nathanielmathews2617
      @nathanielmathews2617 7 лет назад +19

      David Anderson Sadly true. Norway has an amazing prison system that fixes so much. Costs less, decreased crime, decreased gangs/mafia, decreased recurrent offenders, smaller prison population. But people are too blind to actually take the initiative.

    • @nathanielmathews2617
      @nathanielmathews2617 7 лет назад +14

      Akash Sandhu Yes, quit with your revenge bullshit- they are punished no matter what.

    • @MrWhite-pn7ui
      @MrWhite-pn7ui 7 лет назад +11

      +Nathaniel Mathews-Bovee Costs less? Socialist norway spends about $93,000 per inmate each year, about three times more than the US. Violent scumbags are coddled like tourists and given pathetically short sentences, it's outrageous.

    • @nathanielmathews2617
      @nathanielmathews2617 6 лет назад +21

      Mr. White It leads to a lower crime rate overall leading to it costing less. Also without the death penalty and keeping prisoners in for a less amount of time then the overall cost is less. You say that shit, but what they do leads to less civilian deaths and a overall higher quality of life. You just want prisoners to be treated like shit, and by doing so when they get out they commit crimes again. This has RESULTS. Quit getting a hardon for America's fucked up prison system and look to actually save lives.

  • @satanas6740
    @satanas6740 5 лет назад +12

    The past couple of years of my life have been kind of crazy, I've found myself in jail about 5 different times in this time span and evertime I always see elderly people being locked up, it's insane. I hate to see them there, it's no place for an elderly person

    • @TheJayTex
      @TheJayTex Год назад +1

      Hope you’re doing well and have stayed out of jail

  • @nickc3657
    @nickc3657 5 лет назад +17

    “Prison hospice program”
    Just.... wow

  • @atomic59313
    @atomic59313 5 лет назад +2

    Imagine how many of those old men were falsely accused of a crime they didn’t commit and just stopped fighting their case and had to come to terms they were gonna grow old in prison. So sad.

  • @khallilmarshall
    @khallilmarshall 7 лет назад +22

    Depressing.

  • @baymz420
    @baymz420 7 лет назад +26

    this is a really good program and for those inmates who will be getting out it has also given them a skill on top of the empathy that they will need to be productive members of this Society

    • @grooveythoughts
      @grooveythoughts 7 лет назад

      Denise are you going to hire one of them, let them care for your kids, thought not. These are societies 'unforgiven' not a silly hollywood movie this is real life where a person isn't given forgiveness their past puts them into charity jobs that their sponsors feel entitled to check on weekly (indentured slaves).

    • @maiu.9366
      @maiu.9366 7 лет назад +2

      Life is what you make it, somebody will have a heart to give these guys a chance. Maybe they'll end up having to do it on their own, it's so easy to be negative amd so hard to be positive. When you're positive any shitty situation becomes meaningless. Food, clothes, shelter, and anything else is just a want...

    • @milascave2
      @milascave2 6 лет назад +1

      There are other jobs besides caring for kids. And, if we don't give them work, or some source of income, they will be right back in quick.

    • @bernardpopp541
      @bernardpopp541 6 лет назад

      great comment...agreed!

  • @patriciaschuster1371
    @patriciaschuster1371 Год назад +5

    Growing old on the outside isn't too great, either, especially if you don't have money.

  • @rodneyschells9632
    @rodneyschells9632 5 лет назад +4

    You guys are doing a great thing for these elderly prisoners God is going to find a great place and have them for you for doing this God bless you brother

  • @rickanduiza186
    @rickanduiza186 3 месяца назад +1

    Has to be the worse feeling in the world. Knowing you're locked up for the rest of your life. Never being with your wife, kids, family, won't experience anything in the world again. Then on top of that, to grow old, rot away and just die alone in their.

  • @chrisjames5254
    @chrisjames5254 5 лет назад +96

    i hope Mr baxter gets out ....seams like a good man

    • @mostdope216
      @mostdope216 5 лет назад +28

      I doubt the family of the man he murdered share the same sentiment. Think before you type

    • @ruffprophetproductions
      @ruffprophetproductions 5 лет назад +5

      yeah i agree i would assume he has come to terms with the wrongs he has done and it looks like he is trying to do right by others (whether it was his choice or not he is still doing it)

    • @mostdope216
      @mostdope216 5 лет назад +19

      @@chrisjames5254 I'm an asshole because I consider the victims of his crime? The family is still mourning the loss of their loved one and you want to set their killer free... Yeah. I'm the asshole.

    • @chrisjames5254
      @chrisjames5254 5 лет назад +6

      @@mostdope216 Didn't you hear the first time.SHUT THE FUCK UP no one gives two fucks about your opinion . Ever think the guy he killed might have been an evil scumb bag who deserved to die.Come to think of it to bad you were not the one who was killed . Nobody wants to hear your diarrhea of the mouth

    • @mostdope216
      @mostdope216 5 лет назад +16

      @@chrisjames5254 yikes

  • @dorothymason8882
    @dorothymason8882 6 лет назад +15

    Privately owned prisons are huge for profit businesses 🗽

    • @MR..181
      @MR..181 5 лет назад +1

      Dorothy Mason .points out the criminal clàss of antihumans

    • @sherryballard5963
      @sherryballard5963 5 лет назад +1

      It's not just private prisons

  • @judedumatteo3413
    @judedumatteo3413 5 лет назад +3

    I hope they release that mr. Baxter he deserves to be out and probably could get a job in a assisted residential living he really cares about his people and the elderly population bless his heart

  • @xostler
    @xostler 5 лет назад +9

    Get rid of statutory minimums for nonviolent crimes. Tell politicians to stop making every damn little thing illegal.

  • @biggdaylon2
    @biggdaylon2 5 лет назад +68

    Use me as a “Let him go home” button

  • @kisselkimber
    @kisselkimber 9 лет назад +9

    There are so many things wrong with this.

    • @dirtysanchez5154
      @dirtysanchez5154 6 лет назад +1

      @Kimber Kissel. No there is nothing wrong this ! Tell that to the victims family !

  • @romanavolny4347
    @romanavolny4347 6 лет назад +7

    Eye opening! Thank you for doing this documentary. Everyone should see it.

  • @peterpoutypuss
    @peterpoutypuss 5 лет назад +44

    America has no heart or compassion--all due to financial considerations. Compassion hurts the prison`s bottom line,which is paramount!

    • @josephdugdale4150
      @josephdugdale4150 5 лет назад

      Erm it's called capitalism

    • @Sure_You_Betcha
      @Sure_You_Betcha 5 лет назад +2

      You're right killing murderers and rapsist is a far better option.

    • @wildboris1
      @wildboris1 5 лет назад +2

      They are murders, they all deserve to rot

    • @jrivas5563
      @jrivas5563 5 лет назад

      Well the thing is the more omey you have the less you care about other people. Money simply means you fucked a lot of people. What a great world right

  • @ratapaga5963
    @ratapaga5963 2 дня назад +1

    I think there should be a separate prison for elderly

  • @kerimartens3519
    @kerimartens3519 4 года назад +2

    If the younger inmates cannot be released, helping the elderly is a great service to mankind. The older inmates cannot just be released into a society that cannot or will not care for them. Unfortunately being in prison might be the safest place for them.

  • @TheGamingREZ
    @TheGamingREZ 6 лет назад +71

    damn that food at 2:34 looks better than what I ate today 😂

    • @adrianborinsky2989
      @adrianborinsky2989 5 лет назад +1

      they're lucky to have salads, rice and beans though is nothing to be thankful for

    • @nordmenn0855
      @nordmenn0855 5 лет назад +1

      Yep same, they eat better than me

    • @XavierZara
      @XavierZara 5 лет назад +1

      Not even the high school food is that good

    • @adrianborinsky2989
      @adrianborinsky2989 5 лет назад

      @@XavierZara your highschool must be really shit

    • @i.t9390
      @i.t9390 5 лет назад +1

      @@adrianborinsky2989 You should be thankful for everything

  • @DavidElstob73
    @DavidElstob73 6 лет назад +45

    If you do wrong you deserve to be punished, but not the over the top sentencing that America dishes out. Just a heartless country that loves bullying people. It also shows that all the guns in America don't put people off committing crimes in the first place!

    • @compache2044
      @compache2044 5 лет назад +2

      @Does It Matter yea its at a decline but its not shit.

    • @brandonwoodard1515
      @brandonwoodard1515 5 лет назад +1

      91% if major crimes are committed in a gun free zone.

    • @kevinparsley6806
      @kevinparsley6806 5 лет назад +1

      @@brandonwoodard1515 likely has less to do w being free and more about why its gun free..on other words, the crimes would occur either way. even if an area is not gun free its going to be a small number of people, if any, that actually have one anyway

    • @dchall8052
      @dchall8052 5 лет назад +2

      That's the dumbest thing I've heard. First off, the 2nd Amendment is to defend against tyranny, which its done quite well. Secondly, America's violent crime rate is far below many developed countries, take England for example. Over 2.2 million crimes are deterred each year in America by law abiding citizens owning a gun. Facts don't care about your feelings.

    • @DavidElstob73
      @DavidElstob73 5 лет назад +2

      @@dchall8052 I'm from the UK and are you seriously suggesting that the UK has a worse crime rate than America? We don't have tones and tones of drugs flooding across the border like you for starters. You have plenty of mass shootings, etc. I could go on, but can't be bothered arguing with a gun nut.

  • @booradley2302
    @booradley2302 6 лет назад +6

    When they hit 65, let them out.
    What kind of harm could 99% of them do after turning 65.

    • @danieldougan269
      @danieldougan269 8 месяцев назад +1

      At 65, they could still do a lot of damage.

  • @smileyface8832
    @smileyface8832 5 лет назад +12

    *I feel really sad for the elderly...*

  • @RickyIcecubes
    @RickyIcecubes Год назад +4

    I can't even imagine how awful dying in prison must be.

  • @iaretehleet
    @iaretehleet 5 лет назад +5

    a for profit, private, prison industry, what could possibly go wrong?

  • @McLKeith
    @McLKeith 5 лет назад +32

    Good grief, when will American society become enlightened. Revenge is not an appropriate principle to guide the justice system.
    Anyone who has taken a first year psychology course learns that punishment is poorest method of changing behaviour. This scientifically proven. Prisons should be about changing behaviour for the better, not getting to feel good about torturing inmates.

    • @kevinparsley6806
      @kevinparsley6806 5 лет назад

      in criminology they learn about that. unfortunately everyone in the justice system goes to school for criminal justice, which is the arcane approach.

    • @Sure_You_Betcha
      @Sure_You_Betcha 5 лет назад

      @@kevinparsley6806 you are aware most people have to take psychology courses to get basically every other degree right?

    • @wildboris1
      @wildboris1 5 лет назад +2

      Taking psych, man those prisoners doing more with their lives than you. They murdered people, and will rot for it. Justice

    • @CliqueOverAnything
      @CliqueOverAnything 5 лет назад +2

      I disagree. Maybe not the best punishment for nonviolent crimes like drugs, etc, but for murder, rape, and molestation bet your ass you're staying in there.

    • @naelyneurkopfen9741
      @naelyneurkopfen9741 5 лет назад

      Pathological altruism isn't a virtue. Crime deserves punishment, not petting.

  • @r.a.contrerasma8578
    @r.a.contrerasma8578 4 года назад +4

    I was there in the late 90's - early 2000's. They had this program on the East-D Yard, where most of the severely mentally impaired inmates are housed. They had the Gold Coats and the Blue Coats. I was a blue coat inmate who helped with prisoner intake and administration. The correctional officers on that yard are trained to be more empathetic towards the more sensitive needs of these types of inmates. I knew many of the Gold Coats who were interviewed and they do a yeoman's job for meager pay. Also if an inmate owes state restitution, (back then) some 33% was taken out of that $36 paycheck. And most jobs started out at just 30 cents an hour. WOW. The flashbacks I get seeing that place after so many years ago...

  • @nowaywithyoueveragai
    @nowaywithyoueveragai 5 лет назад +2

    Massive incarceration or no jail time for "lesser offenses" would cause a wave of new problems. What inmates need is opportunities that change their lives for good. There is where the penitentiary system keeps failing. The society owes ppl like Mr Baxter immense gratitude for what he is doing.

  • @leonoremoore1159
    @leonoremoore1159 11 месяцев назад +1

    If you are homeless, prison with 3 square meals a day, a nice bed, laundromat ... much beter than outside ...

  • @vonnababeimyamansfantasy8436
    @vonnababeimyamansfantasy8436 5 лет назад +12

    They done turned the inmates into CNAs and the prison into a nursing home😳 I cant believe this....Like I'm a whole nurse and I am ABSOLUTELY appalled by this.

  • @TypeOneg
    @TypeOneg 7 лет назад +11

    Can you imagine waking up in prison everyday and not remembering why you're there? THAT is torture. Unconstitutional.
    The reason they won't commute them is because the sick, dying, and old can't fight back. It's an uneven playing field.

    • @mattkennedy3474
      @mattkennedy3474 7 лет назад +1

      Victoria Love don’t be fooled be their grandfatherly appearance many of these seniors committed horrible crimes in the past. If one of these guys killed a family member of yours you’d be screaming for them to grow old, lose their mind and rot in prison until death released them from the ethereal plain.

    • @davidanderson2263
      @davidanderson2263 7 лет назад

      family members have a higher chance of killing u,or anyone else in ur family then some random stranger... those people the inmates killed were people they know..so remember that..

    • @TypeOneg
      @TypeOneg 5 лет назад +1

      To you both. A family member of mine was killed. By a family member.
      So who should I be? A hateful cunt or a loving mom and grandma ?
      People change and age out of criminal thinking - which we all have, btw.

    • @elgallofino7906
      @elgallofino7906 5 лет назад +2

      @@TypeOneg exactly people need to forgive instead of judging

    • @adrianborinsky2989
      @adrianborinsky2989 5 лет назад

      good, they deserve torture, most of them with life sentences are in for murder, they deserver nothing but torture

  • @HUDVlogs
    @HUDVlogs 4 года назад +5

    1:31 looks like Stanley from the office

  • @sweetbaby-y5x
    @sweetbaby-y5x Год назад +2

    ELDERLY INMATES SHOULD BE HELD ACCOUNTABLE FOR THEY WRONG DOINGS

  • @Oldhandle012
    @Oldhandle012 Год назад +2

    This is why people support the death penalty, one day, someone will pity your loved ones killer and argue they should be set free...

  • @sheldonlatimer5911
    @sheldonlatimer5911 5 лет назад +3

    This is a great program, and hope that it continue for those above 65 years of age

  • @godschild6391
    @godschild6391 6 лет назад +8

    This is a huge problem for not just elderly since most are in for petty crimes! Yes this is true or false accused. Murderers and rapists should fill prisons and nothing else, but violent crimes. So sad how many our government puts away that could be reformed if given the chance at a life. Hell even rapists and murderers have been let out or never go.

  • @ATM180
    @ATM180 5 лет назад +3

    This is a fantastic video, very informative and well presented!

  • @andy3949
    @andy3949 3 года назад +1

    These Gold Coat guys deserve some sort of reward for the work they do. It is rather hard and messy work.

  • @Montyturnbow
    @Montyturnbow Год назад +1

    I have no sympathy for murderers young or old , or whatever condition their in . I only see a murderer .

  • @ryanjones7681
    @ryanjones7681 5 лет назад +39

    Forget a retirement home. I'm just gonna rob a bank at 80 and just chill in jail. Free food, bed, health care, tv.

    • @strelingowen7232
      @strelingowen7232 5 лет назад +4

      Bob Oznek i doubt this guy will have this immature mindset at 80

    • @zimbabueycazeau2874
      @zimbabueycazeau2874 5 лет назад +1

      U need jesus bro

    • @sleeper9152
      @sleeper9152 5 лет назад

      Fuck u

    • @tylerdurden5150
      @tylerdurden5150 5 лет назад

      Shut up bitch

    • @ildikoivanyi6873
      @ildikoivanyi6873 5 лет назад

      I'm pretty sure this is why many people purposely go in and the high recividism. Not everyone can be fully independent and self sustaining on the outside. It's sad because there is more humane ways to handle this instead of locking people up.

  • @jaekoff5050
    @jaekoff5050 5 лет назад +9

    Is it just me or does prison bear a curious resemblance to high school?

    • @graniteamerican3547
      @graniteamerican3547 5 лет назад

      I am in highschool now, and can say, no, they don't, high school is honestly better, except for the food.

    • @jaekoff5050
      @jaekoff5050 5 лет назад

      @@graniteamerican3547 maybe in YOUR highschool...

    • @graniteamerican3547
      @graniteamerican3547 5 лет назад

      @@jaekoff5050 whats wrong with yours?

  • @alianagutierrez2733
    @alianagutierrez2733 4 года назад +4

    This break my heart 😢

  • @OrieCipollaro
    @OrieCipollaro Год назад +2

    Cheaper to keep them there unfortunately. An outside long term care facility would be triple the cost.

  • @dawnnicolas7617
    @dawnnicolas7617 5 лет назад +2

    Big Respect for these guardian Angels! God bless them! 😇💜

  • @E.P.1
    @E.P.1 5 лет назад +5

    If you got life,vou grow old in prison Gold coats are doing a great service maybe better care than public nursing facilities.

  • @californiascreaming1131
    @californiascreaming1131 5 лет назад +9

    God bless the gold coats

  • @thisislaflaretv5250
    @thisislaflaretv5250 5 лет назад +3

    36$ a month. Please

  • @H3llsEmper0r
    @H3llsEmper0r 4 года назад +1

    Who thumbs down this video? Like really, most elderly people still need care and attention. If I were in that situation I would want someone helping me.

  • @michaellipken9726
    @michaellipken9726 2 месяца назад +1

    Poor inmates . Come to think of it going to a nursing home can feel like prison but at least there’s no shackles as far as I know

  • @fobbitguy
    @fobbitguy 6 лет назад +29

    It's seems like a decent retirement plan. No medicare part b programs to worry about, full pharmacy and dental bemefits, free room and board. For those who didn't save for theirretirement it sounds good. The elderly in prison don't seem to be socially isolated as they would be on the outside

    • @alissunwolf8249
      @alissunwolf8249 6 лет назад +5

      kevin murphy This also spares loved ones from making the wrenching decision to put you in a nursing home.

    • @kat7939
      @kat7939 5 лет назад

      Alis Sunwolf Lol...you guys are crazy!

  • @mariaferrell9844
    @mariaferrell9844 4 года назад +3

    Paying $36.00 dollars a month is an insult. The prison is getting paid well.

  • @Dreaded88
    @Dreaded88 9 лет назад +12

    When we said: Life, we fucking meant life! This needs to be shown in schools to kids who think going in is cool.

    • @MysteriousBlue77
      @MysteriousBlue77 7 лет назад +2

      Dreaded88 yes because what we need is to show kids that cruelty = cruelty because that really solves the situation. Compassion is what needs to be taught and reform.

    • @Dreaded88
      @Dreaded88 7 лет назад +2

      +Lil King:
      Oooh, no! Noooo.... We need to teach: "Ye' pull a knife I pullout a Streetsweeper! Ye' send one'a my guys to the Hospital I send eight of your guys to the Morgue!"

    • @FrancescaEleonora
      @FrancescaEleonora 7 лет назад

      +Mysterious Blue i lose my sympathy for those who committed murder rape ecc, yes, 40 years it is. a few grams of cocaine? no, it makes no sense to keep them for 20 years

  • @orobleh77
    @orobleh77 7 дней назад +1

    It is shame and black eye for America that a frail old man or woman who can barely take care of themselves are still in prison.

  • @MrGeno-ud3dw
    @MrGeno-ud3dw 5 лет назад +1

    Those guys helping them are hero's to me.

  • @rogerwilco2
    @rogerwilco2 5 лет назад +2

    The problem is that the US justice system is all about punishment and revenge, but those serve very little purpose, except get a few politicians to seem tough.
    Prison should be about deterrent, prevention and rehabilitation.
    You want to prevent and dissuade people from committing a crime. A few are crazy and do need to stay behind bars for as long as possible, but most of them are human beings with few opportunities, who think they will not get caught. Increasing the chance to get caught, and giving people more real legal opportunities, will help a lot more than any punishment will ever do.