was put on earth to do was to have my son. my daddy. my daddy. we were there when hall s mother, sister, wife, and 3-year-old son orion arrived for a visit. the first with orion since he was an infant. but there wouldn t be so much as a hug between them. hall s prior behavior problems resulted in a non-contact visit. hey, you. hi. here s orion. can you say, i love you, daddy? i love you, daddy. i love you, too. i miss you. orion was a bright light from the second that we saw him. he was very aware of his surroundings. he was over the moon to see his dad.
it s either it happened or it didn t. i ve asked d.o. bryant earlier what is your history of behavior problems. and he said you ve had a few minor, but not so serious. i m going to take that into consideration, okay? you understand? so, with that said, i m going to find you guilty, but i m going to reduce it down to two weeks instead of 30 days no commissary. crawford has avoided additional criminal charges for the incident, and even though she says she never struck out at an officer, she will spend two weeks in segregation. adriana lopez s future has also come a bit more into focus. she has just accepted a deal for two years probation on her tulsa county charges of drug paraphernalia possession and resisting arrest, but now she s about to leave one jail for another. any words for matthew? love you, babe. i miss you. hurry up and do what you have to do and get to creek county. that s about it. soon to be on a van headed to the nearby creek county jail to face an additional ch
yeah. on her shift to watch mayberry, officer lombardi fills the time by reading to him. i felt some compassion for him coming in to be in a little room day after day after day with very little interaction. and i read to him some articles from time magazine, and several people came up afterwards saying thank you because other inmates were listening. so it was kind of nice to feel a little bit more needed than just sitting there watching somebody. mayberry says he has suffered from mental illness since age 12. he is representative of a problem that is draining finances and resources from jails and prisons nationwide. some of them i think got in the system really early on and just have stayed in the prison system instead of getting any kind of care for their symptoms. dr. elizabeth leonard is the jail s psychiatrist. i think there s a lot of people that are behavior
people that are behavior problems in the jail that it s just made it worse and exacerbate their already underlying illness, being in a stressful, close approximation to other people. the whole system is helping propagate another type holding ground or treatment facility for the population that can t get into the mental health center. william jarrett says he suffers from an anxiety disorder which has been made worse by his 23 hour-per-day confinement in a small cell. i seriously cannot meditate in here. doesn t work, doesn t work for me. while classification orders review jarrett s request to be moved back to general population, officer chamberlain hopes he has found a temporary solution. i ve got permission to move william jarrett to another room. so he s going to be in a slightly bigger room. it s not that much bigger, but it s better. might be a little psychologically better for him. mr. jarrett, you ready for your move?
record of what he s doing, if he s being compliant, you know, if he s eating his food, is he drinking, those are the things that we re keeping track of. number two, you ready? yeah. on her shift to watch mayberry, officer lombardi fills the time by reading to him. i felt some compassion for him coming in to be in a little room day after day after day with very little interaction. and i read to him some articles from time magazine, and several people came up afterwards saying thank you because other inmates were listening. so it was kind of nice to feel a little bit more needed than just sitting there watching somebody. mayberry says he has suffered from mental illness since age 12. he is representative of a problem that is draining finances and resources from jails and prisons nationwide. some of them i think got in the system really early on and just have stayed in the prison system instead of getting any kind of care for their symptoms. dr. elizabeth leonard is the ja