and it took like a whole month for him to tell me that he was on parole. you know what i mean? but he finally told me that he was on parole and he had also told me that he was married. he was married. you know what i mean, to a female out there. so he had a wife when i met him, you know, but and we both ended up in here together, you know what i mean? when i seen him, i was like, whoa, you know what i mean? so we decided to go ahead and become cellmates. he told his wife on the streets about me. he wrote a letter and told her about me, and about a month later, she served him divorce papers. he got divorce papers served here. that s my number one hero. i m always going to love her. that s going to be my one pride and joy. ain t nobody else step in front of that. nobody. i got sunblock on my hand. we ain t worried about it. look at the camera.
i don t regret it. i don t regret it. the only thing i miss is fighting. that s it. fighting because i could defend myself. i could defend myself against anybody. coming up he made a statement that we don t have to speak. we re just two inmates in a cell. so you are not talking to each other? no. two cellmates have a falling out. and you just told all over on yourself. i am in jail anyway. danielle benefield comes clean about the skirmish that landed her in segregation. y six months i m accident free. because i don t use my cellphone when i m driving. even though my family does, and leaves me all alone. here s something else. i don t share it with mom. i don t. right, mom? i have a brand new putter you don t even know about! it s awesome.
i feel i feel some type of way about toilet paper. i don t know why, but when i go through one roll, i need two back. i feel like i can never have enough. we got more toilet paper than cos got. two bags of coffee. four back. we make money off of our advantages, too. like a little store, you know. we do what we can, you know, try to make a little bit of money on the side. two for ones, sell a soup, you get two back. anything, you get two back. i m a businessman. i like money. i like being included on anything that gets my money up. and the cellmates say they always get paid back. i m more the aggressor. i m definitely more the aggressor. i don t i don t mind it, though. i say i got too good of a heart, but nick gets it done. some people, i think, i m like, you know, he s a good guy, just let him go with that.
extreme violent behavior. i m often curious as to why or how they became this way. but i also think it s a part of the human condition. and i think it s important that people understand that. part of it, i think, is created at birth, but also a big part of it is how one survives in prison. more often than not, a lot of these stories of violence have occurred in the prison setting. in order to survive in such a violent world, most of these people feel they have to be violent. in 1992, robert glenn was sentenced to three years for auto theft. when we met him 15 years later at california state prison corcoran, he was still in prison. and two of his former cellmates were six feet under. glenn murdered the first one while he was still in county jail. i slashed his throat repeatedly. blood was everywhere. and then another inmate passed me a shank. probably about that long with a
so now, the once-dedicated warrior tries to focus his energy on spirituality. that s one thing that i struggle with now. i understand how hypocrisy of my words speaking to you right now. you do all this, you know it s wrong. yeah, hey. i got some atonement i guess you could say to make up for it. things are looking rough i could say if i do believe in afterlife. would you kill someone today? oh, yeah. sure. you didn t even hesitate, christian. you want me to lie? no. pretend? you know what i mean? yeah. yeah. next on lockup raw i slashed his throat repeatedly. blood was everywhere. a predator targets his cellmates. i like that. that was one of my favorite ones right there.