On Monday, a local man who has mental health issues was released from custody. District Judge Chris Seldin freed William Hallisey after he had been in custody for more than two years in Pitkin County Jail. Hallisey’s mental health issues have prevented him from being prosecuted while he was in jail.…
A Pelican Bay State Prison inmate, Jesse Perez, was recently awarded $25,000 in damages in reference to a case filed against correctional officers that were accused of acting in violation of the prisoner’s First Amendment rights. Perez was identified by officers at another prison as a member of the Mexican Mafia. After he was identified in 2005, Perez was transferred to Pelican Bay’s Security Housing Unit. The lawsuit was filed against the officers who claimed they identified him as a member of the Mexican Mafia. Perez claims that their determination and decision to reassign him was a violation of his rights by way of the constitution.…
They were living in their own filth. They had only one spot to shower or bathe, go to the bathroom, or get drinking water, and it was from the stream that ran through the prison. This stream pretty quickly was contaminated due to the filth that the prisoners put in the water. People still went in and drank the water though because there was nowhere else they could go to do that. This caused thousands of prisoners to become sick with several different diseases such as dysentery and scurvy which would end up being one of the major causes of the high mortality rate in Andersonville. The standard of living in this prison was, quite obviously, extremely low. The commander of the Andersonville prison camp, Henry Wirz, claimed that he had put out several requests to the government to get more food and better living conditions at the camp but this request never ended up being fulfilled. Even outside of the stream everything was filthy and overcrowded. The prisoners had no other choice but to act like animals and so they…
In Germany, before being taken away to a camp, prisoners had to pass an interrogation. Because of the Geneva Convention prisoners only had to give their name, rank, and serial number. German camps were usually rows of barracks enclosed by a barbed fence, lined with guard towers. These towers contained guards that would shoot any escaping prisoner. POWs were given two meals a day consisting of soup and bread, though this was not enough, and most had to coop with hunger. Sometimes the Red Cross would bring items such as butter, chocolate, or condensed milk. Only some of men had to work while the others had to survive from the boredom. When weather was nice the prisoners were allowed to play a wide variety of sports and sometimes they even got to enjoy concerts put on by German bands.…
While outside factors could play an important role in enhancing survival chances, many internal mechanisms played their part to allow the prisoners to deal with the trauma and horrors of their daily lives. No matter what phase of his experience a prisoner was going through, these mechanisms were used. One of these mechanisms was apathy that desensitised the prisoners and allowed him to cope with punishments and the terror of concentration camps. Other mechanisms, similar to apathy, detached the prisoner from his surrounding or distracted him from his suffering. Without these mechanisms a person's suffering would have been unbearable and would have lead to his certain death. While finding a meaning in life was important to survive and to withstand the trauma a prisoner experienced, other factors and mechanisms also played a very important role in the struggle for survival that all prisoners of concentration camps…
PD Penitentiary is a moderate security prison. At the PD Penitentiary our main goal is to rehabilitate troubled teens and young adults between the ages of 18 and 25. The PD penitentiary is a male penitentiary located on Douglas island, British Columbia. It offers psychological therapy to help tackle the root causes behind the crimes the committed, and to provide problem solving techniques to help cope with their development. It has been proven that the male mind is not fully developed until the age of 25, without a fully developed brain, males have difficulty making decisions and are more likely to make more negative than positive ones. By offering…
Prison is commonly used as punishment for those who break the law, so hopefully after prisoners released to community, they are able to adapt and to do positive activities. Occasionally, the jails provides diverse skills and knowledge, regular meals, good facilities and opportunities that prisoners can make money inside the jail by selling handicraft, art painting and varied attainments. The casemate also allows visitors to see and to meet with prisoners that make them feel comfortable. If prisoners do something positive and good behavior, the sentences will be considered to be reviewed by authorities.…
A jail is a place of confinement for anyone who commits a crime, and they can be held there for up to one year depending upon the nature of their crime. The Wabash and Miami County Jails both hold their inmates to keep them out of their communities. However, the Wabash County Jail and Miami County Jail have many differences that set them apart from each other, such as the building designs, the rights of visitation, and the differences in capacities between the two facilities.…
Dr. Frankl elaborates on the psychological motives of both prisoners and himself in his novel A Man’s Search for Meaning. He starts by explaining, “It is easy for the outsider to get the wrong conception for camp life, a conception mingled with sentiment and pity. Little does he know the hard fight for existence which raged among prisoners” (22). Frankl gives insight on how difficult it was to live, but also to survive in the conditions of the camp. It shows how the men begin focus on merely surviving in such an environment, almost succumbing to their animalistic nature. He begins by recalling how after getting off the train that had brought them to the death camp, the men and women were stripped from their belongings and then separated into two lines were a man who would either point left or right. One way was the direction to the crematories, the other to a cleansing station.…
The prisoners already had to do work most every day, so the poor living conditions just added to the pain of the prisoners. First off, they didn’t get an adequate amount of food. “They received too little food (an average of 600 calories per day), [which] is why many got sick very quickly and ended up being unable to work. A prisoner, Harry Carver, declared after the war that he was treated like a slave: ‘I worked 12 hours a day on diet consisting of soybeans and algae.’” (Ovidiu Popa).…
Treatment and punishment towards prisoners during the 1900’s for their beliefs was extremely unfair and some unnecessary. Men chose to fight for what the belief in and do what they thought was right but received endless jail time and cruel punishment. Three men specifically whose names are Philip Grosser, Robert Lipscomb, and Morton Sobell. They all had their way taking action in what they believed in but were punished. Standing up for what you believe in should never come at cost where you lose your rights as an individual.…
There were many prison camps used during the Civil War and they were all terrible. The prison camps during the Civil War helped claim the lives of thousands of the deaths from the Civil War, and most people don’t know how much of an impact the prison camps had on the total number of deaths throughout the Civil War. They killed thousands of soldiers on both sides, making an impact on each side’s soldier count, and adding another fear to the soldier’s head. The prison camps used during the Civil War killed as many as 56,000…
The prisoners of the war were treated horribly. For example, “They were tied up with telephone wire and had their hands bound. And sometimes they were beheaded and bayonetted” (Bard 126). The prisoners were both American and Filipino. Consistently the prisoners were weak and exhausted. Gerhard Weinberg wrote, “The prisoners were very weak because they received little to no food and water during the march. Those who struggled were shot or bayonetted. Once they had reached the railroad around six hundred Americans…
The internees were transported to the camps in long buses with fenced up windows. All of these camps would be overcrowded and the living conditions at the camps were very poor. All prisoners were housed in small tarpaper barracks, which are buildings used to house soldiers, and sometimes entire families would be housed in one barrack. All of these barracks had a poor building structure and were built without plumbing or cooking facilities. Most of these camps were located in remote areas where the weather was not always enjoyable or favorable for the prisoners. They had to all use communal areas for washing, laundry and eating. One victim, Mine Okubo, had said “The camps represented a prison: no freedom, no privacy, no ‘America’”.…
Many of the “inmates” taken to the camps ended up malnourished, looking like skeletons after not being fed well and not being able to get enough food to survive. Sickness and death was an everyday occurrence to the average camp survivor. Among the very long list of diseases that developed frequently with the locked up Jewish…