tell you i love you. there s not one letter you wrote me telling me you love me. not one. don t try to make it seem like i told a little girl i love her and that i don t that s the thing. you told her, period. i m saying what do a child got to do with it? that ain t your child. it don t matter. you weren t there for me when i was 6 and 7. i was there. you weren t. i was there. you were out when you were 7. you called another man daddy. so i m saying who s supposed to be getting mad? who was with my mama when you went to penitentiary? it doesn t matter. that was your mama s choice when i went to the penitentiary. look, i only did this interview because they said you want to do it. i m saying for real, bro, we ain t got to go through this. i ain t give a [ bleep ] about this interview. he s trying to make it seem like it one sided like it s brian sr., he s angry. he s supposed to be. i mean, i get frustrated when i think about it because i already know t
me telling me you love me. not one. don t try to make it seem like i told a little girl i love her and that i don t that s the thing. you told her, period. i m saying what do a child got to do with it? that ain t your child. it don t matter. you weren t there for me when i was 6 and 7. i was there. you weren t. i was there. you were out when you were 7. you called another man daddy. so i m saying who s supposed to be getting mad? who was with my mama when you went to penitentiary? it doesn t matter. that was your ma many s choice when i went to the penitentiary. look, i only did this interview because they said you want to do it. i m saying for real, bro, we ain t got to go through this. i ain t give a [ bleep ] about this interview. he s trying to make it seem like it one sided like it s brian sr., he s angry. he s supposed to be. i mean, i get frustrated when i think about it because i already know that the majority of the situation got something to
visitation. he is on day 14 of his stay. how s it been going in here? it s all right, man. it s all right sometimes. sometimes all right. it is stressful, not being out there. you know what i mean? what i really learned is i need to get out there to my son. that is the only thing that is really stressing me out. because i want to seriously be a father figure. because i know what it feel like not to have a father. i don t want to send him through the same thing. you didn t have a father? i had one, but in and out. right now i m following in his footsteps. when is the last time you actually got to touch your child? i ain t. you never touched your child? huh-uh. so i m trying to stay sane, man. trying to calm down. it has been several months since brian edmonds has touched or spoken to his son, brian jr. who is incarcerated a floor
on any given day more than 2,000 men and women are incarcerated at the louisville metro department of corrections jail. most are working on their cases, hoping to clear their names and go free. today, however, two inmates, brian edmonds jr. and his father, brian sr. will attempt to clear long-lingering emotional wounds. edmonds jr., who could be sentenced to death if he s found guilty, asked jail officials to allow him a final visit with his father, who will soon transfer to state prison to start a 30-year sentence. the request was approved. it really might be the last time i get to see him for a while. what s up, baby? what s happening? you re ugly. what s going on? nothing. what s going on with you? well, let me tell you
entire dorm, they re able to identify the ring leaders of the incident, they ll be moved to single cells and not returning to that dorm. this ain t right. they re taking care to [ bleep ] up man. see how they got us laid out and [ bleep ]. it ain t right for real. [ bleep ] suckers. that s how i feel. these inmates are obviously still agitated, but as of right now, everything has gone the way we planned it. officers remove a number of inmates they suspect have rushed the door, to isolate them in the prison cells in administrative segregation unit for further questioning. the inmates remaining in the dorm are placed on 24-hour lockdown. among them is brian edmond, sr. right now, my life is kind of off track. you know what i m saying? i just had a rough life, my whole 36 years of living.