North Carolina Death Row Inmate Writes Letter About Life of 'Leisure'Danny Robbie Hembree Jr. was found guilty of murdering 17-year-old Heather Catterton in 2009 and was sentenced to death on Nov. 18, 2011.
1/25/2012 9:22:52 PM
He should be nominated for troll of the year, IMO.[Edited on January 25, 2012 at 9:26 PM. Reason : what a sick fuck, but he is definitely trying to make rotting away in a 4' x 8' cell sound like fun]
1/25/2012 9:25:41 PM
good thing he has access to that 24/7 medical care so he can get the necessary daily anus retightenings
1/25/2012 9:31:03 PM
Let's give attention and credibility to death row inmates, and adjust our processes and procedures based on their lunatic ranting!That's the solution!
1/25/2012 9:43:09 PM
Jail =/ Prison.And if he liked prison so much, he wouldn't be hankering for a way out. Prison in NC is not the cup of tea he makes it out to be.
1/25/2012 10:31:37 PM
You jelly?
1/26/2012 12:04:21 AM
USA #1War on Drugs introduced by Nixon in 1971. For-Profit prisons introduced by Reagan in 1984.Leading For-Profit Prison earningsSome more fun facts:There are more black people, TODAY who are in prison than there were enslaved black people in 1850.http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/10/12/michelle-alexander-more-black-men-in-prison-slaves-1850_n_1007368.htmlNearly one out of three kids today will be arrested before the age of 23http://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/story/2011-12-19/youth-arrests-increase/52055700/1Schools in Texas now have their own police force, tasked with arresting students for disrupting class:http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/jan/09/texas-police-schools?newsfeed=trueSeriously, goddamit, man.[Edited on January 26, 2012 at 2:03 AM. Reason : ]
1/26/2012 1:58:15 AM
I bet if they didn't count drug offenses we wouldn't be near the top.
1/26/2012 2:03:23 AM
1 out of 3 kids get arrested. THAT'S AMAZING! I can't get over that. I mean, it sounds about right, though.
1/26/2012 2:08:20 AM
and that number is sure to go up once we start bringing home our military equipment and passing it down to the state level so that we can militarize our local police districts.I'm looking forward to the day when military drones are patrolling our cities.
1/26/2012 2:10:00 AM
1/26/2012 4:02:24 AM
Also, can someone please list the differences betweenjailprisonpenitentiaryI use the words interchangeably and it wasn't until this thread that people had a problem with it.
1/26/2012 4:05:15 AM
well, it is all in the wording.P.S. dont let life get you down; you're going to die unhappy while eveeryone else is having fun
1/26/2012 8:09:41 AM
Jail - Locally run, used for holding prisoner for first appearances and some sentences; I believe sentences less than 120 days. Prison - State or Federal; Sentences greater than 120 days, felonies. On another note, I wouldn't doubt that this guy is bragging about the posh conditions of prison. Despite all the control(s), the prisoners run a prison, not the state or its guards. There are thousands of prisoners in a facility and only a handful of guards; it makes sense to keep the majority happy.
1/26/2012 8:34:01 AM
^Yep, that's the distinction. And the way he makes it out to be, prison is a cakewalk. What he doesn't say are that those 3 meals a day are prepared by other prisoners, and often are infested with roaches, etc. before you eat it. That the cable you get to watch is in a room of like 60-100 guys, and usually it's daytime television. Torture for just about anyone. You're lucky if your cell has electricity consistently, and if you get to shower regularly. And for most of them, there are no contact visits and you might get a phone call every 6 weeks. But it's not torture, there's a clause in our constitution that prevents that.
1/26/2012 9:48:34 AM
I like how he specifies color TV as if black and white TVs are still common.however, if he's stuck watching Standard Definition TV, that's pretty rough.
1/26/2012 11:30:21 AM
Dat prison-industrial complex. Drugs will never be legalized. Individuals working in the incarceration industry have built their lives around locking up innocent people. The same can be said for law enforcement.Some policies just aren't likely to be ended through democratic means. Revolution or economic collapse are really the only ways out of this vicious cycle.[Edited on January 26, 2012 at 11:43 AM. Reason : ]
1/26/2012 11:37:01 AM
Strictly speaking I guess it is a "life of leisure," because you get shit for free and, to my knowledge, don't have to do any work.In this case, though, there's a distinction between "leisure" and "fun."I still say we stick a needle in his arm and be done with it. Not because of this real life trolling, but because he's a fucking murderer.
1/26/2012 6:44:49 PM
1/26/2012 11:24:50 PM
I'm sure he was joking.But.....http://articles.latimes.com/2011/dec/10/nation/la-na-drone-arrest-20111211
1/26/2012 11:43:32 PM
I'm just glad that the technology we've spent our tax dollars on to murder innocent hillbillies in Pakistan can be applied to murdering innocent hillbillies in North Dakota.
1/27/2012 12:30:19 AM
"innocent hillbillies" is a stretch. Most people smoked by drones are neither.In fact, I believe the hunt for bin Laden was a primary impetus for the development of armed UAVs (Preds, I think) back in the 90s.
1/27/2012 2:39:21 AM
^
1/27/2012 2:59:17 AM
As we all know, the point of prison is to humiliate and break down the people that are put in there, so we as a society can indulge our sadistic, collective revenge fantasies.
1/27/2012 9:20:52 AM
Mothafucka think I can't jail!?
1/27/2012 10:16:33 AM
As we all know, the point of prison is to humiliate and break down the people that are put in there, so we as a society can indulge our sadistic, collective revenge fantasies. make life as miserable as possible to deter a prisoner from wanting to come back. If the worst thing that can happen to you is "watching color TV in the A.C., reading, taking naps at will, eating three well balanced hot meals a day" for killing, robbing, and stealing, then not a single person is going to learn. Being in prison should be at least as hard as being unemployed with no free medical care.
1/27/2012 12:36:18 PM
That dude was just trolling. Here's what he told his family and it's a much different story:http://www.gastongazette.com/news/hembree-66578-letter-death.html
1/27/2012 12:48:17 PM
1/27/2012 4:19:02 PM
^ gg wasting a bunch of time on a troll post.
1/27/2012 4:26:06 PM
It's not a waste of time because I know for a fact this message board is filled with sadists who are legitimately appalled when any prisoner is treated like a human being.
1/27/2012 4:27:13 PM
See, here's where I think you're wrong. People aren't sadists. They're economical. We've got a finite amount of money to go around, and how it's spent has to be prioritized. I don't think it makes a person sadistic to put "people who have committed serious crimes" as a lower priority that many other things the government does -- entitlements, defense, education, infrastructure, emergency services, etc. Who wants to dump money into educating prisoners when we're already not doing a very good job of educating our kids?If you and synapse both get poisoned and I only have one antidote, and you have kicked me in the testicles in recent memory, I'm going to give the antidote to synapse. Not because I'm going to revel in your death, but because a rational part of my brain figures I'm better off helping the guy who hasn't already fucked me over. Crime is the fucking-over of society.Now, it's probable that this sort of thinking is short-sighted, and that investing more money and effort into the prison system would pay off in the long run. But once again, I'm not going to call someone a sadist just because they lack the vision or information necessary to take the long view on these matters.---The system requires attention and improvement, but the approaches you're taking are horseshit.Educational opportunities are not alien to the US prison system, but they're underutilized and largely useless when a felony conviction makes a person all but unemployable. Meanwhile, there's the simple fact that society already tried to educate these people, mandatory and free of charge, in school. If they didn't take advantage of it then, what reason to believe that they'll do better this time around, when they're surrounded by other criminals and have essentially no responsibilities? I can see why people are leery of making the investment.Using the example of Norway is a joke. It's a homogeneous country with a high, consistent standard of living and a relatively small population. It lacks the longstanding glorification of criminals present in our society (is there a Norwegian Bonnie and Clyde? A Scandinavian Jesse James? Do Norwegian musicians gain credibility by going to Halden Jail?). It has a communal mindset that is absent from American thought. I'm faintly shocked that it has any criminals at all.Even under the best conditions, where we dramatically reduce the prison population by decriminalizing most drug offenses while initiating reforms, replicating the Norwegian system would be vastly more expensive without nearly such dramatic results. You know how you get Norwegian results? You have to become Norway.
1/27/2012 4:51:35 PM
1/27/2012 5:05:43 PM
You seem passionate about the subject.and I assure you, people in this country are 60% recidivism because their punishments don't fit the crimes 60% or more of the time.all that other crap you wasted your time on indicates nothing except that the United States is not a free country.[Edited on January 27, 2012 at 6:02 PM. Reason : .]
1/27/2012 5:59:51 PM
As long as we're sending drug offenders to jail, the whole system is going to be fucked up. Not even worth talking about prison reform until we release these innocent people.
1/27/2012 6:09:26 PM
1/27/2012 9:00:38 PM
2/16/2012 2:48:19 AM
I'm sure they will be immediately. It's not going to be too long before an unmanned drone is used to fire a missile into a meth lab or something similar. Of course, any accompanying death will be used to justify tacking murder onto the various drug charges that will already be piled onto the person who owns said house/operates said drug business.
2/16/2012 5:15:46 AM
yeah, but what happens when they get bad intel and bomb an innocent family?
2/16/2012 6:40:10 AM
^^i'm ok with this. might as well get protection from gangs and crime with unmanned drones. sort of a free 'preventative healthcare' if you will.
2/16/2012 8:45:37 AM
2/16/2012 12:53:06 PM
^ exactly. same applies to the USA toojust give us 'govt sponsored health care' aka free money and we'll all just shut up and be happy finally[Edited on February 16, 2012 at 1:12 PM. Reason : -]
2/16/2012 1:10:08 PM
hmmmmm[Edited on February 21, 2012 at 1:50 AM. Reason : .]
2/21/2012 1:47:22 AM
experiencing envy/hatred at the comfort of prisoners or welfare or whatever deserves one of those colorwheel memes. perhaps a guy in a USS Abraham Lincoln ball cap with head shy children. did 10-20 years working for the military sucking off the public tit and doing nothing for society but hate ppl buying steak with foodstamps.
2/22/2012 4:31:38 AM
^try typing that again sober
2/22/2012 9:22:56 AM
3/2/2012 4:00:33 PM
damn...that graph at the top listing prisoners per 100k people is interesting.the japanese sure know how to behave themselves
3/2/2012 5:08:53 PM
Maybe it's the cynic in me, but what reason do the powers that be have to reform prisons? It's a source of good, cheap labor. What is worrying me is that private prisons are becoming more and more popular. Profit-driven prisons is where I draw the goddamn line.
3/6/2012 6:45:16 PM
3/6/2012 10:51:31 PM
I was talking to a woman the other day who does a lot of her research on the privatization of the prison system and is a fan.BAT SHIT CRAZY.
3/6/2012 10:55:00 PM
set em up[Edited on March 6, 2012 at 11:45 PM. Reason : ]
3/6/2012 11:42:14 PM