when the camera leaves, don t ask for it back. we catch a lot of flak. we laugh. we joke, you know what i mean. we hang out with each other all the time. we become close. we have your zip code tattooed on your biceps. how am i getting home? i m from east boston, 0212, send me on my way. while one of guiliano s prior stays here resulted in an additional conviction for smuggling drugs into the jail, he says this time he has a whole new attitude. going to work. what s going on? guiliano holds an inmate job as a runner. cleaning housing units and helping with meal and laundry deliveries. my little office right here. this is all new to me, cleaning, staying out of trouble, trying to anyway. it wasn t easy, wasn t easy over the years. i guess you could call him the problem child for a while. deputy boussa has worked at the suffolk county jail almost as long as giuliano has been frequenting it. years ago, always fighting, disrupting units. i was.
opportunity to get a lot of excess property items they weren t entitled to or authorized to have in their cells. you got a [ bleep ] outlet. fire hazard. guiliano says he wasn t surprised to be at the top of the deputies list. they target the ones they think know something first. why they would think me i really don t know, honestly, maybe before they had a reason to but i ve been staying out of trouble so i don t know why they, you know. still, giuliano has no regrets about his past. i m not ashamed of anything. i have the word tattooed on my back, shameless. george shipps says he has plenty of regrets about downloading and according to him unknowingly distributing thousands of images of child pornography on his computer. he is innocent until proven guilty, but as an accused sex offender, he must spend his time in protective custody while he
jail. i grew up in the south end, part of the city of boston, which is our neighborhood, not far from the facility. within seven years of this job i found i knew most people that i should know from childhood, from high school, and just from the neighborhood itself. inmates, too, often find themselves among friends and relatives. we re brothers, that s right. though not all inmates are housed in the same facility, those who have only been charged with a crime and are awaiting trial are held at the nashua street jail until the resolution of their case. those who are convicted and receive sentences of two-and-a-half years or less will usually serve their time four miles away at the house of correction. top of the world. 15 minutes! i told you. i told you. it was going to be nothing. it s a place sal giuliano has become very familiar with over the years. [ bleep ] keep a small circle.
that s pretty much my history. all of my crimes are drug related. i don t commit crimes for violent natures. it s drugs and if i can find ways to support my habit without hurting anyone, i ll take a shot at it. mattie? guiliano says even his childhood memories are tied to the drug trade. my father was an alleged cocaine dealer. i remember it before i was 10 years old bringing to school show and tell a homemade drug thing, the razors, the fake lines, a cut-up pepsi bottle. give these to phil. five years ago, giuliano was convicted of conspiracy to violate drug laws. welcome to the jungle. he served a three-year sentence in prison. that was for a charge i picked up here in this unit, as
my buddy shayne, mini me. south boston s in the house over here. we got one for you. what s up? these guys here, i grew up with them, from the same hometown. what s the table? what s up? i don t want to make any more friends. i have 13 commitments. i ve been in this jail 12 times. my last court date i had 76 convictions. i m doing the second half of a two-year sentence, i finished a year in may, went home on probation, placed me on a bracelet, house arrest. that didn t fit too good. i ended up cutting it off, the first of my own. i assisted a few friends before. giuliano s latest conviction is for breaking and entering. he says the crime was committed to support his heroin habit.