death and goes away for the rest of his life this is a facility that houses 418 total inmates, a couple familiar names. ted kaczynski, the unabomber, eric rudolph, richard reid the shoe bomber. they re all there in this super max. essentially below ground no light for the rest of their lives. their cells, 12 feet by 7. they spend at least 23 hours a day locked behind steel doors in soundproof cells. the cell windows, four inches wide. that will be his reality for the rest of his life if he s not put to death. paul i believe i still have you. let me bring you in here and talk about dzhokhar czar nef. sitting in this courtroom, i can only imagine the picture as it s been described over the last couple weeks, as the layout will
we met her two years later. you know, they all know me. the guys know me. i used to work in the intake unit when the new arrivals would come in. they know me. i ll be all right. never imagined it for all these years later. never imagined it. at the time of the attack, officer talley was responsible for supervising b cell house. an important part of her job was securing the inmates back in their cells with a system called rolling of the bar. an older, manual cell locking device. that day, chow lines had run late. i said, come on, guys, go in your cells. you miss roll-in, you know what happens. i figured all of them would be in. i rolled the bar. bigger than anything, here is three of them didn t make it. so i went down the range. i started at the end and worked my way up. the last cell that missed roll-in was 424. i locked his door. went to 418. locked his door.
so i went down and i started at the end and worked my way up, the last cell that missed roll in was 424. i locked his door, went to 418. locked his door. went to the next cell, 410. i said, come on, go on in your cell. he said, i m not going in. i said, just go in. and i had never had an incident. never had cross words with him, and he kept slow walking and this was totally out of the norm. at that time a sick feeling just overcomes you and you think, wow, something is not right. so i called for my sergeant on the radio. he said it ll be a minute. and the guy just hit me. and the first hit, i believe, knocked me out. i remember going down and i don t remember the actual impact of hitting the ground.
the last cell that missed roll in was 424. i locked his door, went to 418. locked his door. went to the next cell, 410. i said, come on, go on in your cell. he said, i m not going in. i said, just go in. and i had never had an incident. never had cross words with him, and he kept slow walking and this was totally out of the norm. at that time a sick feeling just overcomes you and you think, wow, something is not right. so i called for my sergeant on the radio. he said it ll be a minute. and the guy just hit me. and the first hit, i believe, knocked me out. i remember going down and i don t remember the actual impact of hitting the ground. she was up against the expanded metal in the fetal position and he kept kicking at her, aiming at her head, her stomach, trying to get to her
i went to 418 and locked his cell and went to the next one, 410. i said come on, go on in your cell. he said i m not going in. alone on the with the inmate she said she knew immediately she was in the trouble. at that time a sick feeling overcomes you and you think wow. something is not right. and the guy just hit me. both of my eyes were busted right in the eyebrows. i had 50 stitches in my eyebrows. he broke my jaw. it was broken in two places. the doctor said i don t know how much more you could have taken. had he kicked you one more time, he could have killed you, without a doubt you could have died. her attacker received an