when we do shakedowns like this we look through all their books, all their paperwork, see if we can t find any snitch notes, kites, anything like that. definitely we get a lot of our information. sometimes they like to hide them in the bible. they will stick them in the middle usually right in here. officials find no other escape paraphernalia in the cell. right now he is pinning a class b conduct report for possession of escape paraphernalia for what was found in his cell last night. without knowing his intentions you don t know if it could be just an arts and crafts issue or in two weeks from now could we be looking for him on the streets with this laying in his bed? coming up if you make the wrong choice, it has consequences. one of the most infamous inmates in indiana tries to start a new life at wabash. and later the investigation takes a surprising turn.
stone received jinkster as part of the cat adoption program at indiana state. he had to leave him behind when he was transferred to wabash. for the first several weeks, jinkster lived with another inmate. but then jinkster moved out to the country. he was adopted by stone s parents. jinkster is something else. he s not used to carpeting. and cloth furniture. everything was claws. i mean, he clawed up carpet, everything else. but, it was worth it because it was jim s. some people might not quite understand it. but my family we view our pets as family members. so you know, this was sort of like jim s kid. talk about your daddy. yeah. it s really, really hard for me to talk about jim. i love him so much. when he was a little boy, he loved to go for these walks.
years in confinement, christopher trotter values every moment outside. okay. this is what i call the old man workout. this is how we do it. one i haven t lost touch with humanity. i refuse to lose touch with humanity. when you lose that, that s it. that s it. when you let this place strip you, that s it. one trotter recently filed a request to be transferred from confinement back to general population where he would have considerably more freedom. five, six, seven because he was at the center of a 1985 riot one of the most violent incidents in the history of the indiana state prison system, the request must be approved by multiple levels of administration. including wabash s superintendent, dick brown.
the heading says reign of terror comes to end. fourth circuit court judge mary harper sentenced folsom to 36 years behind bars and denied his request to be placed in a therapeutic community program. you re a very dangerous young man, harper said. folsom s charges revolve around the brutal beating of an acquaintance he believed had stolen his ipod. we ended up getting into his truck before we started arguing because it was cold. and i started banging his head off the window repeatedly. i was real high on cocaine. it really is like a fog. and i got really angry and i got i did some, you know, some pretty good damage, banging his head off the window. the judge, she was pretty strict, giving me them 36 years. and i hope that it was just her trying to slap me in the face to tell me to wake up, because truthfully, i was lost. folsom completed his g.e.d. at wabash s youth unit. he plans to pursue a college degree from prison and hopes to earn time off his sentence by
he has developed good communication skills, good social skills. it s yes, ma am, no, ma am to me. and it s not fake. i can always tell when it s fake. i believe, personally, that he will be ready for general population before long. however, there are so many more people above me that will also have the input, and have known him so much longer than i have. so i ll have to respect whatever their recommendations will be. i d rather not see him come out. i don t think he s changed. he s going to hurt somebody. lieutenant gary mcmillan has been at wabash for the past 16 years. this is my opinion. he s a pretty violent individual. they may look at it like everybody s still a potential threat. but am i a threat? no. coming up really my biggest concern about being inside is just getting in trouble. fresh from wabash s youth unit an 18-year-old inmate