from sdisciplinary segregation. he say he s done trying to bring drugs into jail. suboxone, it is fun while it lasted. right now he says he s used to the past and making life comfortab comfortable. i look for easy targets and easy money. i need to find a matt. you got one? you are go going to get robbed. black boy is going to run on you. you can deal with me or just get everything taken. i would not call it extortion, maybe protection. give me a bag of coffee or two bags of cookies or do this or do that. clean my room. i made a cake for nick for his
he s been in the idu, our segregation unit, disciplinary segregation unit, i think for 5 1/2 months now. and he s been conduct clear throughout that time. so that told me that he really is motivated. how you doing, man? welcome. thank you. they got you up today, right? wednesday. wednesday? bailey was recently transferred from idu to the residential treatment unit or rtu, where he s given more privileges and ongoing counseling. other guys like, yeah. we can do it like he did it, you know. well, yeah. remember, you re trying to change your path. you ve been going down a certain road for many years. my only concern is we have to make sure that you have the skills in this initial part to not get suckered into something that s going to trigger your anger.
closed to t ed td to the public government shutdown. and celebrations as the eight-month battle to liberate mosul, iraq from isis appears to be almost complete, u.s. advisers are embedded with iraqi troops throughout the city. battles are still under way in small pockets where isis terrorists are dug in. now back to lockup. due to mature subject matter, viewer discretion is advised. at the sheriff al cannon detention center, inmates with major rule violations are segregated in single-person cells 23 hours per day. inside unit a1a, disciplinary segregation. isolation segregation, all of it affects individuals differently. depending on the individual. some people like to be by themselves and they function better that way.
deal with the problem, you get less resistance from them. no, you get into a fight, you hit one somebody who s got something, you don t know. officer skipper is a six-year veteran with the jail. most of that time has been in unit a1a, disciplinary segregation, where inmates with major rule violations are confined 24 hours a day. they lose most of their possessions and privileges, as well. they got to have us shackled because we in disciplinary. i been wearing these shackles so time, it s like sometimes it don t be there. it s just the normal routine. hey, mr. gathers. how you doing? did you have a bad day today? kind of. what happened? i been dealing with melvin now for maybe a little over two years. and he is one that you can t come at hard.
inside the sheriff al cannon detention center, a1a, disciplinary segregation, is not unlike other jail segregation units throughout the nation. it s solitary confinement 23 hours a day for inmates who violate jail rules. but here in charleston, there is one aspect of segregation that makes it different from nearly all others. it houses both men and women. while women comprise about 10% of the total inmate population of 1,300, relatively few get into serious trouble. we never have more than three to five females at a time. so to take up an entire housing unit for just females doesn t seem to make a whole lot of sense. just give it to me when you come out. we keep the females closest to the officers desk because they want to monitor the communication between the