out on the street and more, a lot of them find out that they have actually found their niche here in the jail. one of the jail s newest officers is deputy burke. whose only 8 months into the job. i m the rookie. i know it. they know it. they know old facts and know when if new people come in. i get called the rookie every day but it doesn t bother me. clark you need is have your shirt on. your shirt. your uniform. i don t come here to make the inmates stay miserable. i come here to do my job and go home. and if they mess up i m going to look for it. and i m going to see if i can catch them. while paroling the murder pods burke think he s done just that. smelled some spoke in b pod. after he smelled smoke he pulled two inmates out. inmate bell and kirkendal were walking through satellite port i noticed inmate bell messing with something in his pants.
staff keep a close eye on walker. my control officer called me down in the office and said there was something unusual going on in the cell in the second tier of b-pod. so i went up to that cell, and the two inmates that were in the cell didn t belong there. one of them was walter walker. being that they weren t where they were supposed to be, i decided to strip them out and find out what was going on, and mr. walter walker had a bottle of tattoo ink on him. which he finally gave over when i started to do the strip-outs. and at that time, he realized i was going to have to write a report on him for having tattoo paraphernalia. and i would put some more over here that would go all the way what s the image, though? this is the one i was going to get. wages of sin. right? coming up david laudone s case takes an unexpected turn.
i already hate. she s like, guess what, miss mcmeans. i m like, what. you re out. and as soon as she said that the whole pod started clapping. i found out that most of the people that were involved in her case had bonded out. so due to the fact that she had a lot of people in the unit where she was housed with severe problems mentally, i decided that it would be in her best interests to get her moved out of that as fast as possible. mcmeans was moved into a general population unit. now i get to come out and go up and down the stairs, and in and out my room. i get to take a million and one showers a day if i want to. i can do anything. since we ve moved her to b pod, she s calmed down. she s you know, she can interact with other inmates now. what s your plans when you get out? get real. beside your babies.
out on the street and more, a lot of them find out that they have actually found their niche here in the jail. one of the jail s newest officers is deputy burke. who is only 8 months into the job. i m the rookie. i know it. they know it. they know old facts and know when if new people come in. i get called the rookie every day but it doesn t bother me. clark, you need to have your shirt on. your shirt. your uniform. i don t come here to make the inmates stay miserable. i come here to do my job and go home. and if they mess up i m going to look for it. and i m going to see if i can catch them. while paroling the murder pods burke think he s done just that. smelled some smoke in b pod. after he smelled smoke he pulled two inmates out.
i ll do that for five bucks, six, seven bucks, something like that. i could do much better than this. it s just people don t want to pay, you know what i mean? so the lowest prices i ll give them, i ll give them low quality. not that i m a [ bleep ] but, you know, you get what you pay for in here. but tattooing is strictly against prison rules. tattooing is always a big deal at prisons. the inmates use it as a way to make money. it causes us big problems just from the health standpoint because they spread diseases such as staph infections or hepatitis by tattooing. as a result, correctional staff keep a close eye on walker. my control officer called me down in the office and said there was something unusual going on in the cell in the second tier of b-pod. so i went up to that cell, and