charles taylor s wait for his mother enters its sixth hour. okay. well, i ll see if i can t get ahold of his mom again, see how far out she is or if she s hung in traffic. okay. bye. let s try her again. i feel my mama getting close. i feel it in my heart. the best part of the body. the heart. just kicked over to her voicemail again. try the 736 number and my sister. tell her call the phone. call my mother s phone. and see where they are located and she can call you back. what is your sister s name? sharelle. i am very eager to see her. it s been a long time. she s been there for me through thick and thin. so it s always going to be that way. i have been through more stressful obstacles, and i can overcome this one with ease.
through. and it s no fault of their own. i m in the captain s office. it s somewhere we mostly don t go. i feel privileged, chilling with the old capitan, head honcho, head of all heads. that s enough. you re going home. we already signed the papers. going all the way home. some students when they come to me, school is either a good place or a bad place. and they either don t care and don t want to care or they re working towards getting out of here as quickly as possible. and charles is one of those students who came to me ready to do what he needed to do to get out of this facility. and i think he has leadership potential. i hope, i pray that he does well. because he really could. he could do wonderful things. while charles taylor makes the best of the wait that has already stretched to more than five hours, 18-year-old michael brehm continues his gruelling interview with the committee that will decide his fate. i haven t been this nervous since court.
get me, i ll be fine with that situation. let s try her again. she must have turned it off. it went straight to voicemail. as long as she get down here though. she ll be here. the captain isn t the only one sweating. staff throughout the facility are nervous about what comes next for charles. charles obviously is frustrated. he was worried about this before. i think he s had some issues with mother coming through and not always being there. he s upset. he s worried. it s obviously frustrating. we built this kid up, do this so you can get home. follow the rules. work this program. make some changes so you go home. and they ve done the work, they ve followed the rules, they ve worked the program. they ve done everything they had to do. then mother doesn t come
my mom, she quit drinking. she quit drinking for me. because i asked her to. i was like, mom, when i go home, i know you like to have your cocktails every now and then. but you re going to have to do me a favor and stop that. she told me she respects that and she ll do it for me. you re exactly right. because if you re around it, you re going to be tempted. okay, michael. i m going to have you go over in that room and wait for a second while we have a discussion and then we ll have you come back out. thank you. okay. what s going on? everything sounded good. i answered every question, straightforward the best i could. told her what my plans are when i get out. and the captain said i have done a good program. ms. blessinger agreed and they said they re proud of me that i got my ged on my own free will. i hope everything goes well. i think he s a party animal, what do you think? oh, definitely. definitely. back in the captain s office, charles taylor s wait for his moth
through it. as long as she get down here to get me, i ll be fine with that situation. let s try her again. she must have turned it off. it went straight to voicemail. as long as she get down here though. she ll be here. the captain isn t the only one sweating. staff throughout the facility are nervous about what comes next for charles. charles obviously is frustrated. he was worried about this before. i think he s had some issues with mother coming through and not always being there. he s upset. he s worried. it s obviously frustrating. we built this kid up, do this so you can get home. follow the rules. work this program. make some changes so you go home. and they ve done the work, they ve followed the rules, they ve worked the program. they ve done everything they had to do. then mother doesn t come through. and it s no fault of their own. i m in the captain s office. it s somewhere we mostly don t go. i feel privileged, chilling with the old capitan, head honcho, head of