letter addressed to the citizens of san antonio. this was a letter he wrote not long after he was convicted. it says, my name is reuben m. cantu. i am only 18 years old. i have been framed in a capital murder case. so i m going to have to spend the rest of my life in prison or die by so-called lethal injection. it was an angry letter. he is outraged about what happened to him. it was some very, very four pull charges in it. for sam millsap, the letter was just another convict claiming innocence. as the years went by, millsap began to have doubts. it never occurred to me when i was 35 years old that i was
the rest of my life in prison or die by so-called lethal injection. it was an angry letter. he is outraged about what happened to him. it was some very, very four pull charges in it. for sam millsap, the letter was just another convict claiming innocence. as the years went by, millsap began to have doubts. it never occurred to me when i was 35 years old that i was the smartest guy in the room, that the criminal justice system could get it wrong in these cases. if i could do it over again, i never would have made the decision to prosecute ruben cantu for capital murder. imagine - she won t have to remember passwords. or obsess about security. she ll log in with her smile.
he will do good and he will tell you he will do good and his behavior is good right now, but not so long ago, he came out and assaulted an officer. he s a big man, he s hard to control, he s a dangerous man, and he is appropriately assigned in that segregation cell at this point. he is dangerous. as far as my vote, i don t think he never need to be in a population setting. segregation is a place of confinement for men who you must separate from the general population. and steven parker is one of those guys that must be separated. we must keep him controlled at all times. i guess i m going to go crazy. i don t know. i guess i m going to spend the rest of my life in prison and keep doing the same things i ve been doing. i don t know what else to do. until somebody kills me, i guess. i don t know. next on lockup: extended stay life on death row was a very traumatic experience.
that s what i m on death row for. i know that what i done was wrong. i deserve to be where i m at, whether they execute me or i spend the rest of my life in prison. i ve accepted that. the men who share the death row facility rarely break the rules of the castle. their basic behavior is directly related to them being able to say in their clemency plea that we were good guys while we were there. we didn t we didn t create havoc. we weren t violent, we weren t all of these things and try to obviously portray the good things that they ve done while they ve been incarcerated. i have a hope one day i can be out of prison, you know. even though that hope might be small. haight volunteers as a legal aide doing what he can to help his fellow death row inmates with their cases. the whole thing on the institutional life is being able to keep your mind occupied.
for. i know that what i done was wrong. i deserve to be where i m at, whether they execute me or i spend the rest of my life in prison. i ve accepted that. the men who share the death row facility rarely break the rules of the castle. their basic behavior is directly related to them being able to say in their clemency plea that we were good guys while we were there. we didn t we didn t create havoc. we weren t violent, we weren t all of these things and try to obviously portray the good things that they ve done while they ve been incarcerated. i have a hope one day i can be out of prison, you know. even though that hope might be small. haight volunteers as a legal aide doing what he can to help his fellow death row inmates with their cases. the whole thing on the institutional life is being able to keep your mind occupied. i m reading always reading something that pertains to law