enforcement, he still carried himself like a cop. and here he was incarcerated in a pretty hard core prison, and i could see he hadn t come to terms with the fact he was once a law enforcement agent and now he was an inmate. he still obviously struggled with that fact. he was lucky he was put in a protective custody unit, otherwise he would be in grave danger. i wouldn t probably last five minutes on the main line. why? they don t like cops. you know. or ex-cops. tiano says if nothing else his experience here has helped him see the people he used to arrest in a new light. i ve been dealing with these people for many, many years. and you know, there s a lot of them that aren t, i mean, you know, there s a perception, unfortunately, by the majority of our society that everybody is in prison is really a bad person.
custody unit because otherwise he would be in grave danger. i wouldn t probably last five minutes on the mainline. why? well, they don t like cops. you know, or ex-cops. tiano says if nothing else, his experience here has helped him see the people he used to arrest in a new light. i have been dealing with these people for many, many years. and you know, there s a lot of them that aren t, i mean, you know, there s a perception, unfortunately, by the majority of our society that everybody in prison is really a bad person. and that s not the case. my heart aches for some of these youngsters you see come in here. 21, 22 years old that are facing life sentences because of a stupid mistake. i mean, you just wonder how is this 22-year-old kid going to get through to age 65, 70, 75, 80? this is it.
he was put in a protective custody unit because otherwise he would be in grave danger. i wouldn t probably last five minutes on the mainline. why? well, they don t like cops. you know, or ex-cops. tiano says if nothing else, his experience here has helped him see the people he used to arrest in a new light. i have been dealing with these people for many, many years. and you know, there s a lot of them that aren t, i mean, you know, there s a perception, unfortunately, by the majority of our society that everybody in prison is really a bad person. and that s not the case. my heart aches for some of these youngsters you see come in here. 21, 22 years old that are facing life sentences because of a stupid mistake.
and here he was incarcerated in a pretty hard core prison, and i could see he hadn t come to terms with the fact he was once a law enforcement agent and now he was an inmate. he still obviously struggled with that fact. he was lucky he was put in a protective custody unit, otherwise he would be in grave danger. i wouldn t probably last five minutes on the main line. why? they don t like cops. you know. or ex-cops. tiano says if nothing else his experience here has helped him see the people he used to arrest in a new light. i ve been dealing with these people for many, many years. and you know, there s a lot of them that aren t, i mean, you know, there s a perception, unfortunately, by the majority of our society that everybody is in prison is really a bad person.
cops overwhelmingly put their lives on the line. there are a number of them that live in a bubble. there are others who don t think like him. but he s in a bubble being protected, by the way, by cops and ex-cops. just a couple weeks ago, he just had to call the cops to his estate 13 days before he whipped up that crowd when somebody broke on his property. it s the same guy in hollywood that makes tens of millions of doll dollars imitating the lives of these cops who make 50,60,th$50,60,00. hillary clinton met with the mother of trayvon martin, fine. but also, the mother of michael