First used in 1934 as a punishment for prisoners, it was exactly what it sounds like. The prisoner was forbidden to talk, anywhere. The goal was to silence the man so long that he would forget what his own voice sounded like. Of course it didn't work and was eventually done away with.
What is the gender ratio for prisons?
The average gender ratio in prisons is 9:1 (Male v. Female). For all prisons in the US, about 93 percent of prisoners are male, and the remaining 7 percent are female.
What are the procedures for getting a divorce from an inmate?
Essentially, the procedures are the same as if he were not an inmate. You will file the divorce. He will be served papers. Where it differs is he may not be (likely will not be) writted out so that he can attend any court hearings.
What are some sick facts about prison life?
Inmates sometimes make wine in the toilets. They may collect garbage like fruit peels, and the trusties may smuggle yeast and fruit out of the kitchen. Then they guard the toilets as they let it ferment. This "wine" goes by various names like "Buck" or "Bruno", and is sold for quite a bit of money in there, maybe $20 a shot.
Inmates can turn almost anything into a weapon. Eating utensils can be broken and sharpened. Or if someone is in a metal shop on work release, they might try to bring back pieces of metal. If they find some wood and some tape, they can put the metal in it, and have a knife. Wall molding, table legs and more can be used as weapons.
Some inmates give or get tattoos while in prison. That requires some sort of ink. They will make that out of cigarette ashes and water. That is not sterile, obviously, and any needles used won't be sterile either. No wonder why hepatitis is so high in prisons.
Invisible ink can be made with fruit juice, or sugar and water. If they lack those, they may use semen. Then when the "invisible ink" is heated, it darkens.
They may use pencils and outlets for starting fires. Sometimes the fires are for smoking or eating, but fire can also be used as a weapon, a distraction, or to help start a riot.
Why should you not drop the soap in prison?
Because somebody might try to have anal sex with you while you are bent over naked.
When was big meeche sentenced to prison?
Demetrius "Big Meech" Flanory plead guilty in 2008 to Federal drug trafficking charges. He is currently serving a thirty year sentence.
Kern valley state prison to send my son money on line?
The best way to send an inmate money is through J-Pay, you can do this on line, or at your local wal-mart store.
Does anyone know what is El Debarge's release date is from prison?
I have been looking all over the web for the answer to that question. It was back in October 28, 2007 when Eldra was sentenced to two(2) years for the possession charge.... If he was able to receive "good time" and not rack up any points while in custody... he should be out This week (October 21,2009). As far as we know he could be out already. Let us all welcome this brother back to society and hope that he and his family heal some of those wounds.
How do you find out the release date of an inmate at lancaster prison California?
You will need to call the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation Inmate Information line. Contact the unit by calling 916) 445-6713 during regular business hours.
What is detainer when person is in prison?
If a prisoner is being prosecuted for another crime and the charge is still pending then the prosecutor can file a detainer with the location where the prisoner is confined. This ensures the prisoner will not be released back to the street without first answering for the other crime. The prosecutor can writ the prisoner to their location prior to their release from prison to try to dispose of the case or the prisoner can be taken into custody when released on parole.
How do you find an inmate in the Segovia Unit in the Texas DOC?
Search inmate or Offender information on the Texas Department of Corrections Website. You must have the person's full name, and date of birth. This site will inform you of the inmate's location regardless of what unit he is currently housed.
How long was Andrew Dufrense in prison?
A fictional character can never be in prison, except in your mind.
Comparison between publicly funded and privately funded prisons?
The comparison between public funding and privately funded prisons is public funded comes from your tax dollars that is voted on by your state legislature that allocates money for the running of state prisons. These funds pay corrections officers, administration, inmate health care, and food. The current average for a U.S. inmate per day care is $52.00, that covers food, bunk, health care, dental, and have access to the most expensive law library money can buy. A privately run prison gives basic medical care when needed, and cost about $26.50 per day to operate, really their is no comparison. When an inmate hears they are being transferred to a private run prison they do everything in the world to stay, from writing letters to state officials, filing law suits, because they know the party is over, they are going to have to work and the diet will be once again basic, not like a public run institution where the food is prepared according to the inmates wishes. In California the Muslim inmates stopped all pork from being served, and vegetarians have only veggies on the menu, all through a law suit under "Prisoner Rights". If you are of voting age we should all vote to privatize prisons in all 50 states saving on the average 1.2 billion per year per state.
He Was Framed Because i Texted Him Today!! ALL THESE HATERS WILL BRING YOU DOWN!!
What is the Pennsylvania Penal System?
A penology system based on the premise that solitary confinement and silence would encourage rehabilitation and reformation.
Why are inmates in correctional institutions executed?
However, if put in a State prison for murder and the individual have been fairly convicted due to good evidence then I could pull that switch if need be. Do the math on what it costs tax payers every year for each prisoner. It's staggering. These criminals can't be let back out into society EVER!
YOU DO THE CRIME YOU DO THE TIME or LIVE BY THE SWORD, DIE BY THE SWORD!
Canadian Correctional Institutions are just for that, CorrectionsIt was my error for not taking into consideration about the U.S. The answer at the top is excellent and informative. I am Canadian and our Correctional Institutions are just for that, Correction.I understand what the poster is saying in leaving the punishment up to the justice system is correct, and my comment of "I could pull the switch myself" was a statement and I would NOT take justice into my own hands. I was a witness at an execution (hanging) for my cousin who was brutally raped, tortured and left stuffed in a tree trunk. I watched it and felt nothing! As far as I was concerned the perpetrator got what he deserved! There is no room for bleeding hearts when it comes to cold-blooded murder and especially when it's inflicted on children. Even the inmates of prison can't stand these people and that's why these types of prisoners is segregated from the rest of the prisoners. You kill a child you might as well end your life right then and there or they'll do it for you. Dahmer is a good case study. Here are the correct statistics and the reasoning for it (some pro/con):
Executions since 1976, by jurisdiction Jurisdiction Executionssince 1976(as of August 31, 2006)[1] Inmates on Death Row(as of April 1, 2006)[2] Texas 373 404 Virginia 97 22 Oklahoma 83 93 Missouri 66 52 Florida 60 392 North Carolina 43 188 Georgia 39 107 South Carolina 36 71 Alabama 34 191 Arkansas 27 38 Louisiana 27 88 Ohio 23 195 Arizona 22 126 Indiana 17 24 Delaware 14 17 California 13 652 Illinois 12 9 Nevada 12 81 Mississippi 7 67 Utah 6 9 Maryland 5 8 Washington 4 9 Nebraska 3 10 Pennsylvania 3 232 U.S. Federal Government 3 41 Kentucky 2 37 Montana 3 4 Oregon 2 33 Tennessee 2 108 Colorado 1 2 Connecticut 1 8 Idaho 1 20 New Mexico 1 2 Wyoming 1 2 Kansas 0 8 New Hampshire 0 0 New Jersey 0 13 New York(On June 24, 2004, the death penalty statute of New York was declared unconstitutional) 0 1 South Dakota 0 4 U.S. Military 0 9 United Statestotal 1,042 3,370*
NO CURRENT DEATH PENALTY STATUTE: Alaska, Hawaii, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, North Dakota, Rhode Island, Vermont, West Virginia, Wisconsin, District of Columbia, American Samoa, Guam, Northern Mariana Islands, Puerto Rico, and U.S. Virgin Islands.
Capital punishment in the United States is officially sanctioned by 38 of the 50 states, as well as by the federal government and the military. The overwhelming majority of executions are performed by the states; the federal government maintains the right to use capital punishment (also known as the death penalty) but does so relatively infrequently. Each state practicing capital punishment has different laws regarding its methods, age limits, and crimes which qualify. The state of Texas has performed more executions than any other state.
Capital punishment is a highly charged issue with many groups and prominent individuals participating in the debate. Arguments for and against it are based on moral, practical, religious, and emotional grounds. Advocates of the death penalty argue that it deters crime, improves the community by making sure that convicted criminals do not find their way out onto the streets to offend again and is cheaper than keeping convicted criminals in high security prison for the rest of their natural lives. Opponents of the death penalty claim that "capital punishment cheapens human life and puts government on the same low moral level as criminals who have taken life." [3].
Since the reinstatement of the death penalty in 1976 there have been 1024 executions in the United States (as of May 24, 2006).[4] There were 60 executions in 2005.[5]
67% of capital convictions are eventually overturned, mainly on procedural grounds of incompetent legal counsel, police or prosecutors who suppressed evidence and judges who gave jurors the wrong instructions.[6][7] Seven percent of those whose sentences were overturned between 1973 and 1995 have been acquitted. Ten percent were retried and resentenced to death.[8]
HistoryThe Espy file lists less than 15,000 people executed in the United States and its predecessors between 1608 and 1991. 4,661 executions occurred in the U.S. in the period 1930 to 2002 with about two-thirds of the executions occurring in the first 20 years.[9] Additionally the United States Army executed 160 soldiers between 1930 and 1961. The last United States Navy execution was in 1849.
The largest single execution in United States history was the hanging of thirty-eight Dakota men convicted of murder and rape in the Sioux Uprising. They were executed simultaneously on December 26, 1862 in Mankato, Minnesota. A single blow from an ax cut the rope that held the large four-sided platform, and the prisoners (except for one whose rope had broken, and who consequently had to be restrung) fell to their deaths. [10] The second largest mass execution in United States history was also a hanging: the execution of 13 African American soldiers for their parts in the Houston Riot. Notably, both incidents involved ethnic minority defendants, and military tribunal judgments in time of war.
Capital punishment was suspended in the United States between 1973 and 1976 as a result of several decisions of the United States Supreme Court, primarily the case of Furman v. Georgia, 408 U.S. 238 (1972). In this case, the court found the application of the death penalty to be unconstitutional, on the grounds of cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the eighth amendment to the United States Constitution.
In Furman, the United States Supreme Court specifically struck down Georgia's "unitary trial" procedure, in which the jury was asked to return a verdict of guilt or innocence and, simultaneously, determine whether the defendant would be punished by death or life imprisonment. Their line of reasoning was further clarified in the Woodson v. North Carolina, 428 U.S. 280 (1976) and Roberts v. Louisiana, 428 U.S. 325 (1976), 431 U.S. 633 (1977), which explicitly forbade any state from punishing a specific form of murder (such as that of a police officer) with a mandatory death penalty. The 1977 Coker v. Georgia ruling barred the death penalty for rape of a 16 year old married female, and, by implication, for any offense other than murder.
In 1976, contemporaneously with Woodson and Roberts, the Court decided Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153 (1976) and upheld a procedure in which the trial of capital crimes was bifurcated into guilt-innocence and sentencing phases. At the first proceeding, the jury decides the defendant's guilt; if he is innocent, of course, or otherwise not convicted of first-degree murder, the death penalty will not be imposed. At the second hearing, the jury decides the facts necessary to support imposing the death sentence, and in many jurisdictions, the ultimate penalty as well -- either death or life in prison, either with or without parole.
Executions resumed on January 17, 1977 when Gary Gilmore went before a firing squad in Utah. Since 1976, 1,029 people have been executed, almost exclusively by the states. Texas has accounted for over a third of modern executions (362 as of March 30, 2006); the federal government has executed only 3 people in the last 27 years. California has the greatest number of prisoners on death row, but has held relatively few executions. Throw Away The Key, a group that advocates tougher sentences and victim's rights, estimates that about 1800 people were murdered by the first 1000 people executed since 1976. This is out of a total of 600,000 people murdered in the United States since 1975.
In Prison Break what is Michael Schofield's prison number?
At Fox River in season 1, Michael's number is 94941. We hear him tell it to Bellick as he is processed as a new prisoner.
What prison was alex in clockwork orange?
Winchester Prison in Hampshire is incorrect. The exterior shots were of Wandsworth Prison in London, while the interior shots are in the old Woolwich Barracks (now demolished).