it doesn't matter just for horseplaying. it's what it's going to be. 45 days in the hole. i leave in 10 days. >> most inmate fights do result with time in the hole, or as it's formally known, disciplinary segregation. locked in a cell 23 hours a day with nothing to do is already hard, but sometimes there's a higher price to pay. >> coleman is symbolic of so many inmates that we meet. he actually has a great shot. he's going to be getting out soon. he has a family, and he has work on the outside that he can go back to, and yet he consciously engages in a fight that sets him up in a much worse situation. it could possibly get him outside charges which would give him a lengthier sentence in prison. >> that is, if the jail or the other inmate files criminal charges, and for coleman, it was another 9 1/2 years of probation ahead of him. that possibility began to sink