ராம்சே அலகு News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Stay updated with breaking news from ராம்சே அலகு. Get real-time updates on events, politics, business, and more. Visit us for reliable news and exclusive interviews.
Top News In ராம்சே அலகு Today - Breaking & Trending Today
, by James Conaway, to be published this spring by Alfred A. Knopf. “My only regret is that Dean isn’t here now, so I could tell him what a good job I did killing him.” He sits cross-legged on a folding chair in the hospital ward of the Harris County jailhouse, laughing and brandishing a Marlboro. White fatigues hang open at the neck, revealing a sunken chest and the colorless flesh of the restricted prisoner. Rubber thong sandals dangle from grubby toes; gone are the wispy beard and shoulder-length hair of those blurred news photos, replaced by dark, oily curls pressed against his head. Bluish acne scars cover his cheeks and the back of his neck; beneath curving brows lies the intimation of his reputed IQ of 126. The eyes dominate a face most notable for its nastiness, speckled green and too large, conveying an extraordinary distance that continues to impress long after the gaze wanders, the ready smile fades. ....
Hungry, cold and victims of inhumanity behind Texas prison walls By Gloria Rubac posted on February 22, 2021 Houston On an average day in Texas, prisons are hellholes run by racist officials and a Texas Department of Criminal Justice prison board that won’t request the legislature allocate money for proper maintenance. Every weather emergency in the state, from hurricanes to flooding to subfreezing weather, has proven time and again that prisons are not fit for human beings. Snow-covered fields, Ramsey Unit prison unit, December 2004 As documented by incarcerated workers’ contraband cell phone messages and photos to reporters, and by their approved phone calls home the fact is that as Texas froze during the week of Feb. 21, so did prisoners. ....
Until life on the streets took him in, Jesus Monge says, he was a quiet kid who did well in school in Pleasant Grove and made friends easily. He remembers being an avid learner, bilingual in reading and writing. He won a few spelling bees, something he’s still proud of at 34. Monge’s parents were immigrants. His mom worked two jobs and his dad was the silent, stoic type. Then, the summer before his freshman year of high school he was introduced to the Dallas gang Eastside Homeboys. A friend’s older brother was a member, and while Monge and his friend were too young to know much, they were old enough to recognize the respect the gang’s leaders received. ....
Houston “I just can’t take it anymore,” Michael Beck told other prisoners at the W. F. Ramsey Unit state prison, in Rosharon, Texas, 33 miles south of Houston. Then during the first week of January, he wrapped a fan cord around his neck and tied the other end of it… ....
Ramsey Prison Unit: The terror of Texas By Nanon M. Williams Nanon Williams was arrested in 1992 at age 17 for capital murder and spent years on death row. In 2005, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled people under 18 could not be sentenced to death. His sentence, along with 70 others, was commuted to life and he is still fighting to prove his innocence. He has earned two associate degrees, a bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree; he was about to finish his second master’s, when the prison declared no one could earn two masters. Nanon Williams with his mother, Lee Bolton, when she visited him on death row in 1998. ....