A white inmate held in a Wisconsin correctional facility is headed back to trial once again — and not for the homicide(s) of which he was convicted. He’s actually accused of catching another body — a Black inmate — seemingly as a result of trying a join white supremacist prison gang.
Jayson "Beaver" Weaver, 46, and Waylon Pitchford, 45, are now part of a massive prosecution aimed at the Aryan Brotherhood, linking the prison gang to 11 killings and several more unfulfilled murder plots.
A ministry program student at a Texas prison. Some inmates cite religion to avoid gang recruitment. Robert Daemmrich Photography Inc/Corbis via Getty ImagesThe United States incarcerates a larger proportion of its citizens than any other developed country in the world, with around 1.5 million people serving time in prison. But to anyone who doesn’t work or live in a facility, life behind bars largely remains a mystery. The public gets a glimpse of life on the inside only when there are riots, ex
of a society close to the edge. it s the two guys who smoked this. you guys come here. what is this that they are actually smoking here? immediately one can identify the criminal markings that sl been etched all over- on the inside of the premises. there you see the number 28, - one of the notorious prison gangs. we came to this premises now- and we were able to remove some persons that shouldn t have been here. - but in this case, you can see that this premises, i this sports facility, has really been stripped bare. you re looking at the at the light fixtures and the copper, - all the copper cabling, the wiring has all been removed. the rafters, the light fittings, everything is gone. it s been stripped. it has been. unfortunately, this is happening throughout our facilities - and you ll find instances .