because the choices i made led up to all this. so i no longer accept responsibility, i take it, it s mine, i own it. it s actually it s my fault. even though eddie haro didn t pull the trigger that night, he is ready to take responsibility for the things he could have done differently, things that might have saved the lives of joe and gilbert flores. he s beginning to really take responsibility and accept some things. like he said, yeah, i knew something was wrong and i didn t do anything. so that s a different, deeper level of taking responsibility for the crime. in this harsh environment, a life-changing revelation in therapy means very little.
it brings it out in a little more depth, a little more detail. it puts me back where it was and where i made my mistakes. and how it how my mistakes ruined so many lives, changed lives, ruined lives. you want to say it s not fair. come on, man. not saying not fair to me, but it s not fair to the people that were hurt. haro has been given another chance to speak up about what happened that night at the orchard. he knows the other inmates in the group won t let him off easy. this is the first time he s telling the story in such detail and yet what the emotional
california state prison solano is a level 3 security facility with over 6,000 inmates, and each one has a secret. admitting your crime can get you killed in prison. but for six months, our cameras will follow as five inmates do the unthinkable. tell the truth about their crimes. this is eddie haro s story. my name is edward haro. i m serving a sentence of 31 to life for two counts of kidnap and two counts of second degree murder. 21 years ago on a dark, dirt road, two men were murdered. and eddie haro was there. it s like i allowed this to
to support himself and his family when he gets out. for him, this job is essential. i already have i have five job offers right now. they re waiting for me to come home. we have already contacted them, and they re very interested. they said i could work for them the first day i go home. but being the lead welder comes with a lot of responsibility and headache. you better get your hustle on. some of the guys at the shop are on haro s case, questioning his participation in the therapy program. some don t like it. they think we re doing something wrong, something bad. something that will keep us in prison instead of showing change. but proving you re a changed man is easier said than done when you re behind bars, and sometimes eddie haro needs to escape. it s the best view of the prison right here.
orchards and little farmhouses and so i thought that was a little odd. gilbert had gotten out of the car, and i was trying to get out. time s up! i took one step out, and that s when i more or less clammed up and went into shock myself, numbness. then fear set in. coming up, the group forces haro to reveal the final moments of a callous crime. when i looked up, joe and gilbert s bodies were right there. and later, haro surprises the group.