no. it s been quiet. as far as how it was handled, did we handle it quick enough for you? yeah. i think an hour, hour and a half after i wrote the kite he was out of here, so i was surprised about that. the kite that you wrote got our attention immediately, with the new prea standards that the correction facilities have to abide by, any suggestions of inappropriate conduct we look at real serious and that s the main reason why we took action as quick as we did, and looked into it, did an investigation, interviewed you at least once or twice. okay, thank you very much, guys. a different sort of drama now plays out for joe leija. going to get sentenced today.
nation. besides housing people accused or convicted of crime, it s also become the primary mental health facility. we don t film inmates deemed to be severely mentally ill because they cannot consent. hundreds of others suffer from a range of disorders that often contribute to inappropriate behavior and require medication prescribed by the jail s consulting psychiatrist. at any one time, i have 500 detainees on medication. this is a jail with 1800 detainees. there s a number of limitations. we don t have enough psychiatrists here. we re doing the best we can with what is typical for correction facilities which is limited resources. being out of the public eye. we need to raise the consciousness that there s more people receiving mental health care in correctional facilities than any other facility combined. if we took all the mental health series in the country and all
two inmates who fled a florida prison have been captured together. they were found in a motel in panama city. they are serving life sentences for murder. in california two bay area transit workers were killed by a train. it comes on the second day of a transit strike. bob filner pled guilty to sexually harassing women who worked for him. back to lock up. due to mature subject matter, viewer discretion is advised. unlike many large correction facilities, the tulsa county jail was designed as single story structure with double tiered cells.
factories and bad schools. why can t we fix it? why can t we fix it? what we ve got to do is intervene early with kids. if we can prevent kids from getting into middle and high school, not reading, we could deter the number of people who end up behind bars. when you go into prisons and i actually have done work in some of the correction facilities here in new york city where we sponsor debate programs, what you find is large numbers of the young people who are incarcerated can t read. they have lacked basic skills. even when they get out, what kind of jobs can those people find. so really, education is our best strategy for deterring crime and ensuring that we have a greater number of americans who are productive citizens. i m always amazed by what parents and grandparents and family goss through to try to get that quality public school education. a report from northeastern found that schools across the country, are actually more segregated than ever. here s why. in several major c
when officials obtained the nickname of a courier that would lead directly to osama bin laden, and that was from an interrogation at guantanamo bay and how the military tracked down one of the most wanted terrorist, and here we have our military analyst barry mckak mccaffery, and sir, with all of the questions over the practices of gitmo, and this is a lead from the courier and how significant is that and how does it validate the work done at guantanamo bay, sir? well, thomas, i have been to guantanamo bay and wrote a report at mccaffery.com, and it is one of the best-run correction facilities anywhere on the face of the earth and part of it is a counterintelligence service, that while respecting the rights of the accused, they don t go into their lawyer s writings, et cetera, and still a lot of intelligence comes out of it.