little bit. we re give and taking here, okay? get some lunch in you and tomorrow, we ll start all over and if you ve got conflict with that teacher, just let that go because you re there to get your ged, which in the end, has nothing to do with her, right? yeah. because that s for down the road. she was the reason i got no. you need to take on the accountability. you re here because whatever happened with you. but you re also going to get out of here because of whatever you do. so you ve got the control with that. so take her out of equation. does that work? okay? thank you. 99% of the time i would say they just want somebody to listen. they just want somebody to talk for a minute and i think that that s why the c.a.r.e. team works. most of the time, they just want to talk to somebody. coming up on lockup juvenile, who will survive the competition for the last spot on echo 15? in the past you used to think that with your fist and not your head.
while he s at the facility and returning them back to a safe environment than he was in before he came here and the idea is when they complete the future soldier program that they ll be released directly into one of the military branches and leave here again right to boot camp. housed in pendleton s echo 15 unit, 24-carefully screened offenders make up the future soldier s program, but getting their prison walking papers and marching straight to boot camp isn t so simple. there s still red tape. military requirements demand offenders be out of pendleton 30 days after their release before they can officially enlist and 30 days can be a lifetime for kids like madden, who returned to drugs and gang infested neighborhoods. what really makes me nervous is him returning back to his old environment and the situations like that got him in trouble the first place. it s harder to maintain discipline and the structure they have here once they return to the home of the streets. i feel like
i love this program. i am a vietnam vet myself. counselor frank sawyer is a corporate retiree. you are dealing with the physical parts of the program? like i ve done 250 push-ups today alone. good. that s excellent. inside pendleton, he found the work of a lifetime with kids like madden and the future soldiers of echo 15. the futures soldiers program kind of breathes extra life into what i m trying to do. attention on deck. when you step in there, somebody s in your face. good morning. good morning, sir. attention. and they answer you, if not yes, it s yes, sir. yes, sir. this bed is a train wreck. it needs to be fixed. yes, sir. when you come face to face and head on with that kind of in charge discipline it really tells us who wants to be in the program and who does not.
these resources in the offender while he s at the facility and returning them back to a safe environment than he was in before he came here and the idea is when they complete the future soldier program that they ll be released directly into one of the military branches and leave here again right to boot camp. housed in pendleton s echo 15 unit, 24-carefully screened offenders make up the future soldier s program, but getting their prison walking papers and marching straight to boot camp isn t so simple. there s still red tape. military requirements demand offenders be out of pendleton 30 days after their release before they can officially enlist and 30 days can be a lifetime for kids like madden, who returned to drugs and gang infested neighborhoods. what really makes me nervous is in returning back to his old environment and the situations like that got him in trouble the first place. it s harder to maintain discipline and the structure they have here once they return to the hom
be compliant for him to give a little bit. we re give and taking here, okay? get some lunch in you and tomorrow, we ll start all over and if you ve got conflict with that teacher, just let that go because you re there to get your ged, which in the end, has nothing to do with her, right? yeah. because that s for down the road. she was the reason i got no. you need to take on the accountability. you re here because whatever happened with you. but you re also going to get out of here because of whatever you do. so you ve got the control with that. so take her out of equation. does that work? okay? thank you. 99% of the time i would say they just want somebody to listen. they just want somebody to talk for a minute and i think that that s why the c.a.r.e. team works. most of the time, they just want to talk to somebody. coming up on lockup juvenile, who will survive the competition for the last spot on echo 15?