i had a back injury first, stabbed. i was assaulted by an inmate in handcuffs. i was stabbed seven times. if you show the inmates fear, then they re going to go ahead and feed on it. keeping that fear in control can be difficult inside this 100-year-old prison because what was state of the art at the turn of a previous century is now the biggest challenge to the officers safety. when we return, cellblock 5, the most notorious cellblock inside folsom. female announcer: sleep train s interest free for 3 event!
you become a walking dead man in here. you understand what i m saying? you re a walking dead man. ain t nobody really see you. it s like the old saying goes, out of sight, out of mind. 33-year-old inmate herman johnson is doing 12 years for a felony drug conviction. he is currently housed in cellblock 5. in here you lose a lot of things on the outside. and you really find out a lot about people by coming to prison, you know. paul poplin has been to prison several times over the last ten years for drugs and fighting. this is a big cell actually because of the way it s situated with the toilet over here. there ain t much to them. you know. i guess it ain t that bad here, you know. it could be worse. been in worse. like being in a cage basically. that s why i try and stay out as much as possible.
have some type of altercation. the officers at the end of the tiers for visibility, but it still makes it difficult for observations, especially 150 yards down the tiers. sergeant rudy carmella supervises cellblock 5, one of the oldest operating prison structures in the united states. to walk up to a cell, to look to see what is going on, you have to sometimes look inside. so it puts us at close proximity to whomever, whatever is in here. sometimes it could be dangerous. he could spear you through these holes, and they make the antiquated type out of a newspaper with a blade at the end of it. very simply it could be done, stab you in the face or the side and so forth. officers in newer prisons avoid the hazard of getting close to inmate doors. the newer prisons are now all automated with button control. one officer could actually control up to 100, 200 cell doors at one given time. here in this unit, every individual door has to be opened by key. every single door.
for all of the scrutiny over things inmates are not allowed to have, one of the things some of the inmates are allowed is conjugal visits. well chain-linked fence and barbed wire are made available for family visits for inmates who are eligible and demonstrate good behavior. in other words, i behaved myself well enough to get out from behind the wall. gordon simpson was sentenced to 5 1/2 years for receiving stolen property. he has 2 1/2 years left, and his wife, barbara, is allowed to visit. we met through a friend. through my best friend, who was they were in the same county jail together, and they were writing. she gave him my address to write to her, and i kept getting these letters, and i sent them on to her. but i got these really good vibes from these letters. and i have never written a stranger in my life, and i wrote him. you know, we just wrote back and forth. then we finally put in for an application for visiting. it took me eight months to
suit, you d never guess i was in prison. so you can t judge an individual by just looking at him. you have to get to know him, bottom line. one mistake, no juvenile, criminal history, no drinking in public or anything like that. one mistake. one mistake. and all because i was being a follower and not a leader. i was an impressionable kid who just thought he would never get in trouble. bryan thomas cello has been at folsom for ten years. he was sentenced when he was 21. i committed a crime of kidnap/robbery, jewelry store owner. went into the home, home invasion, took the safe, and the purpose of the whole crime was to go to the jewelry store and it didn t work out like that and the guys i was the youngest one in the crowd, so the most impressionable one, and the