Nothing else to do but sit around work, play cards, drink coffee. he does about, i d say, eight to ten cups a day. tough habit to keep up with, the coffee habit. but on the outside, mcnee and his brother share far more dangerous addictions. on average day, i could spend anywhere from $300, $500 to $1,000 a day. on what? heroin, cocaine. i lived the life of an addict to the fullest and i m embarrassed by it. drugs have had a hold on mcnee and bubanas since a young age and played a major role in their troubles with the law. when we re out there getting high, all we re thinking business the next high. scheming, plotting. what we ll do, how we re going do this, how we ll get that one. i m like jekyll and hyde when i m using when i m not using hfl
Being and put your hate behind you. so there s always this kind of uneasy truce. but for the most part, if they have respect for each other and each other s space, then there s usually not a problem. while segregated from the rest of the general population, within this unit the inmates are integrated. meaning a member of a latin gang could be housed with a white supremacist. we try to create a balance throughout the building, you know? so they kind of have to live around each other, but there s not a big congregation of one gang versus another. they ll hang with their certain group. they are in such a confined spaces they re still basically forced to interact. they will do calisthenics. they ll lift water bags, play hand ball, play cards. it just brings more tension. they re trying at first to get along. but not everybody thinks that way. there s other gangs that just don t just don t want to get along. felix solis is a member of occ, ogden s craziest chicanos, a local utah
City in syria. they drive their kids to school, play cards at night, they go to the mall and buy nice clothes, then, as she told me, the missiles started to rain down on her neighborhood. it s when her kid s arm got badly burned, she decided she had enough. you think about your own neighborhood where you live and think what if that sort of thing happened to us? and i don t mean to make this sound overly dramatic, but that s what we re talking about. this is what s is happening. these are people just like us. they re parents trying to do right by their kids and by themselves and they suddenly find themselves in this situation. you talk about kids. i look at you, you re our chief medical correspondent, a surgeon, and also you re a dad. i know you well enough to know you re going to bed, closing your eyes and thinking of the kids in the camps. that s incredibly it s really painful. you know, i think because it s complicated as these geopolitical situations are, i can t help but thin
Wall. they re always constantly on the monitors when they go to the yard. they have cameras out there. also, we have what we call always under the gun. and if you can see upstairs, we have a correctional officer who s always has weapons up there. ready at all times in case an emergency arises. we do little puzzles, play cards, homemade chessboard. try to stay occupied. if you sit around and think, then you dwell on a million and one regrets. three times a week inmates get one hour of exercise in a row of wire cages. it s like being in a dog pound. teeny little dog run cage. it s better than nothing. getting sunlight. like a lizard, it takes a minute to get going. not all inmates are in ad seg for violence or contraband. some are here because the prison doesn t know where else to place
Everybody in here. you know. part of getting along you have to learn how to be a human being and put your hate behind you. so there s always this kind of uneasy truce. but for the most part, if they have respect for each other and each other s space, then there s usually not a problem. while segregated from the rest of the general population, within this unit the inmates are integrated. meaning a member of a latin gang could be housed with a white supremacist. we try to create a balance throughout the building, you know? so they kind of have to live around each other, but there s not a big congregation of one gang versus another. they ll hang with their certain group. they are in such a confined spaces they re still basically forced to interact. they will do calisthenics. they ll lift water bags, play hand ball, play cards. it just brings more tension. they re trying at first to get along. but not everybody thinks that way. there s other gangs that just don t just don t wan
Around work, play cards, drink coffee. he does about, i d say, eight to ten cups a day. tough habit to keep up with, the coffee habit. but on the outside, mcnee and his brother share far more dangerous addictions. on average day, i could spend anywhere from $300, $500 to $1,000 a day. on what? heroin, cocaine. i lived the life of an addict to the fullest and i m embarrassed by it. drugs have had a hold on mcnee and bubanas since a young age and played a major role in their troubles with the law. when we re out there getting high, all we re thinking business the next high. scheming, plotting. what we ll do, how we re going do this, how we ll get that one. i m like jekyll and hyde when i m using when i m not using hfl
Have to learn how to be a human being and put your hate behind you. so there s always this kind of uneasy truce. but for the most part, if they have respect for each other and each other s space, then there s usually not a problem. while segregated from the rest of the general population, within this unit the inmates are integrated. meaning a member of a latin gang could be housed with a white supremacist. we try to create a balance throughout the building, you know? so they kind of have to live around each other, but there s not a big congregation of one gang versus another. they ll hang with their certain group. they are in such a confined spaces they re still basically forced to interact. they will do calisthenics. they ll lift water bags, play hand ball, play cards. it just brings more tension. they re trying at first to get along. but not everybody thinks that way. there s other gangs that just don t just don t want to get along. felix solis is a member of occ, ogden s
Wall. they re always constantly on the monitors when they go to the yard. they have cameras out there. also, we have what we call always under the gun. and if you can see upstairs, we have a correctional officer who s always has weapons up there. ready at all times in case an emergency arises. we do little puzzles, play cards, homemade chessboard. try to stay occupied. if you sit around and think, then you dwell on a million and one regrets. three times a week inmates get one hour of exercise in a row of wire cages. it s like being in a dog pound. teeny little dog run cage. it s better than nothing. getting sunlight. like a lizard, it takes a minute to get going. not all inmates are in ad seg for violence or contraband. some are here because the prison
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Over and tore a hand-drawn picture of his wife off the wall. they re always constantly on the monitors when they go to the yard. they have cameras out there. also, we have what we call always under the gun. and if you can see upstairs, we have a correctional officer who s always has weapons up there. ready at all times in case an emergency arises. we do little puzzles, play cards, homemade chessboard. try to stay occupied. if you sit around and think, then you dwell on a million and one regrets. three times a week inmates get one hour of exercise in a row of wire cages. it s like being in a dog pound. teeny little dog run cage. it s better than nothing. getting sunlight. like a lizard, it takes a minute to get going.