The following are events that occur in meiosis. For each name the stage in which it occurs.…
In court, Wirz was testified by Dr. John C. Bates who was a surgeon at the Andersonville camp. Bates gave the jury a heavily detailed report of the medical condition of the prisoners in the camp. The majority of the prisoners had died or been permanently injured in the Andersonville stockade due to the lack of medical care and supplies. Since the camp also lacked quality food such as fresh vegetables, bread and meat (the prisoners only got small rations of coarse corn meal and a bit of rotten meat), prisoners fell ill with scurvy. They were also forced to drink from a stream used as the prisoner’s bathwater which gave them awful dysentery. The doctors at the camp were so scarce and many prisoners died because they couldn’t get assisted in time. However, Wirz is not at fault for this. He was not responsible for the medical care of the prisoners. In court, Otis H. Baker was Wirz’s defensive attorney and after Bates finished explaining the camp’s conditions, Baker cross-examination was simply that Wirz had no authority to demand better supplies. “According to Baker: …So far as you know, by whose authority was the amount of food per prisoner decided on? According to Bates: By the…
I'm across from PFC Dyer, and he’s not eating much. I’m nest to some Navy 04 from the BOS, and he’s chowing down. When he sees we aren't exactly FOBbits, he starts talking. I don’t tell him what we’re here for, I just say a little about our COP and how it’s good to eat something that’s not MRE. He points out the DFAC where they are serving (26).…
News of the first execution to occur in New Holland has come back, apparently having taken place on the 27th of February last year. The convict Thomas Barrett of the ship Charlotte was hung for his crimes having stolen butter, peas and pork from the government stores. While it seems to be a severe punishment, reports from the colonies say that many convicts are malnourished, as they are having difficulties planting crops, meaning the food supplies are some of their most valuable possessions. As well as Barrett, three other men were charged for the crime. According to Lieutenant Ralph Clark “the Provos Martial put the halter about the neck… he (Barrett) mounted the Ladder… when soon after the ladder was pulled from under him and he launched into another world”. There has been no confirmation from other officials that this is an accurate retelling of the events, though it is unlikely it is completely untrue.…
Prisoners of the Andersonville prison camp often found that life in the prison has been much worse than on the battlefield. The prison was often unsanitary and overcrowded, which led to disease. Many prisoners who were once healthy, died because of disease or malnutrition. These prisoners were not in these camps for doing wrong, but for fighting in the war. Furthermore, the Andersonville prisoner was not only in prison for different reasons than people of today, but also had much harder lives to live.…
This file of BIO 100 Week 4 Discussion Questions shows the solutions to the following problems: DQ 1: Post your response to the following:…
cowed faces of the longterm convicts, the scarred buttocks of the men who had been…
The custody levels were close and middle. If you were in closed custody you would only come out your cell for a shower and you would be handcuff tell you were lock into a shower. It was like an animal shelter there were not quite moment in that place. The only time the officer would come into the cellblock were to feed or if they were force to assistant. If the inmate needed medical attention or help from beaten to death by another inmate or hanging themselves, the officers would not open the door to the cell tell higher-ranking officer with a video camera was there. We are talking about human not animals. Inmates are being treated as if they were animals. Inmates were getting sick from the water that were causing life threaten illness, if the water or inadequate medical treatment did not kill them. There were reports of other inmates, officer or inmates taking their own life. It was just a normal day at Hobby Hell.…
This quote tells us that the rations of the marines had been reduced to equal amounts as the convicts to preserve remaining food. As seen in the quote, the officers were not that happy with their reduced…
Control of the experience was quickly lost. The prisoners have suffered - and accepted - treatment humiliating and sometimes sadistic on the part of the guards, and in the end many of them suffered from a severe emotional disturbance.Experience…
In 1788 the first fleet disembarked on the shores of Botany Bay. Shortly thereafter Australia became the first colony founded entirely upon the work of convicted felons. The traditional interpretation of the Australian colonies is that, it was a period of harsh and brutal forced labor, where convicts were treated as human commodities and labor was extracted by punishment. Convicts were subjected to various types of reprimands such as shortened rations, leg-irons, being placed on treadmills, head shavings, floggings, execution and forced transportation to penal stations, which was a place of secondary punishment. These punishments meted out in the Australian colonies came in various forms and extremities, which will be discussed throughout this essay. The traditional interpretations of the Australian colonies and its punishments have produced an ideological judgement, that convicts whilst in servitude were fundamentally slaves and New South Wales was a jailed slave society. However, this depiction of colonial Australia has come under considerable debate. It is important to consider that Australian convicts had to be sent before a magistrate before a punishment could be administered by a constable. Many of the constables were ex convicts, this statement in itself brings to light the opportunity and…
Being one of the most dangerous and deadly prison in American the prisoners are expected to do whatever they need to survive while doing time there.…
When inmates enter the institution, they are thoroughly searched and their clothes and personal effects are taken from them. They are told that they may not cause trouble and no political speeches will be allowed. They may write one letter each week and attend church only on Sunday. If they violate any rules, they will immediately be put in solitary confinement without any food for 24 hours. Because of the high inmate population, there are four inmates to each of the cells, which were designed and built for one. Two inmates must sleep directly on the concrete floor. Inmates who get seriously ill have no access to medical care.…
Americans all know that our prisons are the final frontier for the socially rejected criminals and violent offenders. Once they are convicted, prison is their new home. For which it can be five years or the rest of their lives until death. When the door closes behind them the rest of the world doesn’t matter. It is inside the prison that matters. Those of us who are outside the prison are unaware of what goes on in there, such as prisoner’s abuse.…
A large number of prisoners go on a hunger strike in response to complaints by some inmates about their deprivation of rights by being placed in administrative segregated housing units. A spokespersons for inmates say that many inmates are willing to sacrifice their health and safety to stop the harsh segregation policies. The inmates refuse to eat, work assignments, leave cell, nor exercise. Prison officials claim that the hunger strike is a ploy by powerful prison gangs to increase their influence behind the walls. They claim that inmates are still eating food brought in the prison commissary and no one is at great risk. The corrections staff claim that current segregation policies are necessary to protest the safety of inmates and staff. The prison states that to give…