but why? you haven t noticed me in two years. i was in a coma. well, i still deserve appreciation. who was there for you when you had amnesia? you know i can t remember that. stop this madness. if it s appreciation you want you should both get snapshot from progressive. it rewards good drivers with big discounts on car insurance. i have also awoken from my coma. it s called a nap, susan lucci. we re headed over to c facility. it s a full programming yard. it s dropouts. people would have proble on the gp yard. mixture of some sex offenders. people who dropped out of gangs.
learn the pressure points on the body, where to hit them, how much inches to the heart, hit them in the jugular vein, the vital arteries. you learn all of them. the weapons, you learn which weapons to use to affect a kill. an effective kill in the yard you get a metal piece. then have you other weapons like speers, cross bows they don t really do no damage, but when you mix it with poison. when you get caca and pee and let it sit for a little bit, it turns white on top. take the white stuff on top, put it on your shoe somewhere. you give it to the individual, it gives them gangrene. we re going to stop this interview, there s going to be
those sexual predators. the peculiar mix of inmates isn t celebrated by everyone. we ran into an inmate who dropped out of the aryan brotherhood gang who reluctantly calls this yard home. it s a cesspool of society on in yard. child killers and all of that. if i had known it was like this before i came out here, i would have stayed on the main line. most of these people out on this yard, they could die right there, and i would watch them die. i don t care about them. when i came to this yard, i surrendered a lot of stuff. you know what i moon? my name is gone, i had a good name in prison. i was always respected. i lost all that. i don t care about that. what i care about now is me, timmy duncan. i don t like those people, but i don t have to associate with them. i can t tell you ten people s names, i ve been in this building two years. i go to work 13 hours a day, i put the blinders on and i have to focus on me. think about $250 a month. i take care of the whole building as far a
status for the rest of the night. clearly the gang problem is so large, no part of the prison is safe from the politics. before officer garcia and the igi staff consider putting former gang members together on the sny, they must be convinced dropouts are sincere in their desire to leave the gang lifestyle behind. after the debriefing interviews have been conducted and the inmates have been approved, they move into the integrated yard program. this is phase two. what they have to do, is come over to this yard. it s an integrated yard program. they re going out to the yard with everybody that they used to, you know, consider their enemies. they all go out here. they all get along. they house them differently. you have blacks and whites together, hispanics and whites.
the business for them. sure. and they never came through although they said they would. at that point, i felt like, what s the point of this? since you ve entered the debriefing process, up until now you re getting ready to get endorsed to an sny, how has it been for your phase one, phase two? what have you been feeling? i feel like the world s been lifted off my shoulders. i had so much responsibility. i was always concerned about everybody else and what i had to do following these rules and regulations and all that of the circle. you ve had the opportunity to be out there on the yard with other inmates in the same type of situation. how s that feel being amongst other inmates? it s good. it s good. one of my one of my best friends is an ex-associated member and another is an ex-nlr member. those are two of my best friends. in the past, even though we re on a respectful level, we re all enemies. i want to thank you for coming in here and speaking with us. being open wi