opera. unfortunately it was my life and wasn t a soap opera for me. it was tv s first blockbuster trial. scandalous and sensational. her sexuality was the star of the pam smart show. the explosion of flashbulbs. it s body heat, it s fatal attraction. pamela smart accused of bewitching a teenage student into murdering her husband. i pulled the trigger. another look at the frenzy. it was just crazy. the trial. i made a mistake. was killing your husband one of those mistakes? no. it s not at all who she was or is. the case some say changed the way americans witnessed justice. i don t know enough will ever be enough for anyone in this case. pamela smart liv. the beautiful, young widow stepped hello and welcome to dateline. you ve heard about it. pamela part lived it. the beautiful young widow from her small town into america s most gripping trial. a very real drama that inspired a hollywood hit movie. now you re about to hear the chilling story from th
saying is the sentence fair? that s the kind of question many criminal justice reform questions are asking. more and more states are rethinking mandatory sentencing and the value of life without parole. a lot of forward progressive thinking governors are saying the sentence is archaic that it leaves no room for any real change in rehabilitation or redemption or mercy. pamela smart would say she s the poster child. i have one master s in law and one in english literature. she s an inmate advocate, studies music, and she does this. praise dancing. praise dancing, which i do often in church. it makes me feel free. it s one of the times here that i do feel free. friends who have stood by
Several inmates are on a hunger strike in Saskatchewan's correctional institutions wanting the government to hear their concerns, including clean drinking water.
and i m working on a doctorate in biblical studies right now. she s an inmate advocate, studies music, and she does this praise dancing. praise dancing, which i do often in church, it makes me feel free. it s one of the times here that i do feel free. friends who have stood by her have waged a social media campaign to get pamela smart out of prison, #freepamsmart. they say it s unfair that the person who pulled the trigger and killed gregg smart is free, while pamela is not. so legally, what s left? what s left is i m have a petition in front of the new hampshire governor, asking that my sentence be reduced to anything but life with no parole. why do you believe that you should be allowed to walk free?
Most people don’t care about the brutality that happens in New Jersey’s prisons | Opinion
Updated Jan 31, 2021;
Posted Jan 31, 2021
Paul C. Williams, who was formerly incarcerated and created a project to help ex-offenders, says there are decades of credible and documented allegations of abuse and brutality that has occurred throughout New Jersey’s jails and prisons - including the Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women - yet there have been few efforts to meaningfully address and resolve this disaster.
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By Paul C. Williams
While many have heard and read about the recent allegations of abuse at New Jersey’s Edna Mahan Correctional Facility for Women, many more have no genuine interest or concern about it. This is abundantly evident from the facts that the nature of what is alleged to have occurred recently is not an anomaly or isolated to only Edna Mahan.