There are just no words for people this evil
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2016 3:00 am
have fun, relax, but above all ARGUE!
http://www.theplanbforum.com/forum/
http://www.theplanbforum.com/forum/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=15039
SAN JOSE -- The jail echoes at night with the rumble of boots on the stairs, the rattle of keys, and sometimes, the thuds of body blows and the pleas for mercy.
Ruben Garcia heard it all from his cell in the Santa Clara County Main Jail the night in August when Michael Tyree, a mentally ill drifter with a minor rap sheet, was found beaten to death in a nearby cell. Garcia said that he, too, has endured similar brutality -- and has a broken jaw to show for it.
Inmates have a name, Garcia said, for a group of correctional officers on the night shift that included the three charged with murder in Tyree's death and beating a second inmate earlier that same summer night. They call them "the Wrecking Crew."
"I've been through San Quentin, Pelican Bay, Corcoran and High Desert," Garcia, 50, a former gang member, said during a jailhouse interview, reeling off his involuntary tour of California's notorious prisons. "I was in Folsom in the '80s when we were at war with the Mexican Mafia.
"I've been beaten up. But I've never been beaten down like this."
Until Tyree's death, the stories behind hundreds of excessive force accusations against Santa Clara County jail guards had been locked up with the inmates. They were easy to discount, since the inmates' own histories of crime, malice and deceit have long made their allegations difficult to believe. And in the aftermath of Tyree's death and the multimillion-dollar lawsuits that surely will follow, attorneys who represent the guards insist the motivation for inmates to lie or exaggerate only grows.
I don't see much difference between inmates and guards on that score. Unfortunately. There should bethey are mostly make work for a class of people
A period at the end of the sentence? What do I win?MajGenl.Meade wrote:I don't see much difference between inmates and guards on that score. Unfortunately. There should bethey are mostly make work for a class of people
Ew.MajGenl.Meade wrote:My undying admiration
kmccune wrote: (Hey dude, follow the money trail-Guess whos name was on our jail underwear )a very highly respected TV celeb .
I've done work on behalf of various Sheriff's departments, which are the jail keepers here in MA. Let's just say that correctional officers are a very different, very weird breed, even when compared to other law enforcement. Too often they are the men and women who didn't make it in the police academy/police department or through that selection process.Long Run wrote:The guards in this story are criminals themselves, but are not representative of the workforce who do a thankless job of keeping criminals locked up. I've known a couple and when they retire, they often have to move across country so that the animals they have to try to contain cannot seek "revenge" when they get out.
I worked with a couple of retired correction officers at my last job...and honestly, I would rather work with most of the inmates. Their casual disregard for decency was just frightening.Guinevere wrote:I've done work on behalf of various Sheriff's departments, which are the jail keepers here in MA. Let's just say that correctional officers are a very different, very weird breed, even when compared to other law enforcement. Too often they are the men and women who didn't make it in the police academy/police department or through that selection process.Long Run wrote:The guards in this story are criminals themselves, but are not representative of the workforce who do a thankless job of keeping criminals locked up. I've known a couple and when they retire, they often have to move across country so that the animals they have to try to contain cannot seek "revenge" when they get out.
C'mon down! So much for that rumor. Bob Barker:kmccune wrote:My shorts had Bob Barker ,on them .Probably to much info ,but think a little ,someone profits from this stuff and rumor had it that a very prominent First Lady owned a major portion of the commisary business which serviced the correctional institutes and jails (overpriced and poor quality ) overpriced you say ? Try over a dollar @ Ramen noodle pack in some instances . (Heh heh , thats criminal )
That's why it took an inmate orderly to report this murder, and not another guard. That why the existence of this "shower" and its use was not made known long before it resulted in someone being boiled alive.Long Run wrote:The guards in this story are criminals themselves, but are not representative of the workforce