days in prison. i m an ada porter. that means i help the wheelchair people, anybody that have canes, wheelchairs, whatever and i m also a slash porter. i keep the pod clean. in the morning, clean the pod, clean the windows, whatever. once i get that done, i go to the wheelchair guys and see if they need anything done. i ll keep their wheelchairs clean. push them to chow, push them to the yard, push them back. but at the end of the day, armstrong still faces the grinding monotony of life in a small two-man cell. the emotional toll here, it s like water torture. i compare it to that. every day it s like a drip, drip, drip. if i got out of here tomorrow, i know i would not come back. i honestly say if i got there tomorrow i know i would not come back. i don t deserve to come back tomorrow. i can honestly tell you, unless i two to the parole board and
and it led to her i can t even phrase it. what happened to her shouldn t have happened to her. armstrong told us he chose to plead guilty even though he wasn t the hit man. i knew what happened. i was definitely complicit. i could have stopped it but i didn t. i can t blame anybody but myself personally. my mom and dad are married. i am from the inner city but it was the good part of the city. went to one of the best schools in the bay area, saint francis high school. mostly middle class families. once in prison, armstrong earned an additional six-year sentence. the sergeant sprayed a guy in a wheelchair for no reason. i didn t like it and i harmed him. what does that mean? physically hurt him. and what happened? other police came and they physically hurt me back. that impulse to defend disabled inmates is now a key part of how he spends his long days in prison. i m an ada porter.