i think that s enough. you mentioned the way the girl was looking at you. did you feel that she was flirting with you or something? no. i felt she was looking down on me. and that s what provoked you to do what you did with her? yeah. susan s friend narrowly escaped losing his life that night. he was just an innocent bystander in ronald brook s desperate act. ron, what was your intent when you picked them up? what were you going to do? what did you think you were going to do? probably to humiliate her.
officers will keep all the men involved under lock and key until they can get to the bottom of the incident on the yard. as rumors swirl about what caused the riot, the counselors wonder whether brook s confession of his sexual crime is to blame. if the trust in the group had been breached, it would mean the end of the therapy program. my big concern is that it didn t come from this group and that s the part that i m trying to process, and i m going to feel a lot better when we find out, really, who started it as far as outing him into the yard. because that s very serious. coming up, the counselors learn the truth about the riot and get their first glimpse inside the hole, as members of the group confront the impact of their crimes.
or the emotional state of a child, prison s perfect. they tell you when to get up. they tell you when to go to bed. they do your laundry for you, they cook your meals for you, tell you when to eat. they give you chores to do. if you re good, you get to go out and play in the park with the other kids. if you re bad, you go to your room. if you re really bad, they put you in a little special room. ronald brook feels his childhood was missing this kind of order and stability. in today s therapy session, ron brook is asked to talk about his marriage. a union, he claims, ended in betrayal. i married at too young of age, i was 22 21, and she was 16. much too young for either one of us, really. we had been married about a year
that i was on the run. how is it said, the guilty flee when no one pursues us? you know that? that s a fact. when you re guilty of something or you re on the run, you re running. even though nobody s chasing you. ron brook was comfortable in his new found domestic bliss, but he knew it wasn t built to last. a run-in with police marked an end to the fairytale. when they got me, it was the one time in five years that i had two i.d.s with me, two driver s licenses, and i hoped my wallet to get my driver s license out, and he saw the other one, and that s how i got caught. brook looked at this relationship as a turning point. i learned while i was with her that i could love a woman without her hurting me and without giving all of myself to
without giving all of myself to her to the point where i was vulnerable. brook never confessed his prison history to the woman he met on the run, but there are some secrets you can t escape. every inmate comes to prison carrying their crimes with them in more ways than one. they all have a set of papers detailing their offenses. these days, some inmates use these papers to brag about their crimes and gain respect. when i first came to prison, to ask somebody why they were in prison was like an accusation. but nowadays, the younger people coming in, it s just automatically saying, this is my paperwork, this is why i m in