prison 16 years earlier. since then, he s been in administrative segregation at wabash s secured confinement unit. the holy koran, read this every day. mcquay says his koran has helped him grow spiritually, other books in his cell have helped him grow physically. this is what i call my weight bag where i every day i do me some curls, right? i do these. i do shrugs. what they call shrugs. what they call shrugs. do these. back arms like this. like this. this is probably about probably about 55 or 60 pounds. mcquay has spent years trying to learn his way back to general population. but his history as a violent offender continues to haunt him. i basically engaged in what i considered an emotional response
for the murder of a corrections office at a prison 16 years earlier. he has been in administrative segregation at wabash s segregation unit. read the quran every day. the other books in his cell have helped him grow physically. this is what i call my weight bag where i every day i do me some curls, right? i do these. i do shrugs. what they call shrugs. do these. do back arms like this. like this. this is probably about probably about 55 or 60 pounds. mcquay has spent years trying to learn his way back to general population. but his history continues to haunt him.
isolated in rural southwestern indiana the wabash valley correctional facility is more than a hundred miles from a major urban center but it has plenty of reminders of urban problems behind the walls. wabash has 43 different gangs and approximately 400 different gang members. that doesn t reflect all of the suspected members. those are all confirmed members and we have approximately somewhere between 200 to 300 suspected gang members at this facility. most of the gangs are divided along racial lines. but the majority here belong to white supremacist gangs like the aryan brotherhood and the saxon knights. officials believe that a growing religious might be a front for white supremacist gangs. marcus murray one of the leaders at wabash denies that. there has never been anything in my studies that says one race is more dominant over another
but prison officials have begun to see it as something else, a front for white supremacist gangs. wabash has banned gatherings. the white supremacists are using it to have the gang meetings in the services itself and it has been disrupt everybody at other facilities. murray denies ties to white supremacist gangs and wants to appeal the ban on the meetings. it is not a gang or promote gang mentality or criminal elements at all. it s a religion based on virtue and knowledge. the ban hasn t stopped murray from recruiting new members. his latest william jones, jr. marcus has been teaching me about what the hammer means and what the gods and goddesses are.
problems behind the walls. wabash valley has approximately 43 different gangs, approximately around 400 different gang members. now, that doesn t reflect all of our suspect eed members. those are all confirmed members. we have approximately somewhere between 200 to 300 suspected gang members at this facility. most of the gangs are divided along racial lines. but the majority of gang members here belong to white supremacist gangs like the aryan brotherhood and the saxon knights. prison officials suspect a growing religious group known as asatru might be a front for white supremacist gangs. markus murray, one of the leaders at wabash, denies that. there has never been anything in my studies that says one race is more dominant over another or one culture more dominant over another nor one religion