Watch Part 2 Here kzbin.info/www/bejne/jXXGgWl7oLWdqa8
@LiLaLizzy826 күн бұрын
This is a re-upload no?
@hensonlaura26 күн бұрын
Many thanks.
@ribtor26 күн бұрын
@@LiLaLizzy8 This is from 2013
@BlackStump17225 күн бұрын
@@ribtorGreat series but this episode I have not seen .
@yankeehunter472625 күн бұрын
@@LiLaLizzy8 It is
@CrustyUggАй бұрын
Going to prison saved my life. I was a drug addict for 10+ years and in 2019 I went to prison and found out I was pregnant. When I got there that night, the intake nurse told me I was pregnant. Thank god I was arrested when I was... by the time I got to the prisons OB, she informed me I was 8 weeks along. That was 2 weeks after I arrived so I was 6 weeks pregnant when I was arrested. Talk about a blessing in disguise! Prison saved my son's life as well. My son will be 5 this December (2024), I have over 5 years sober and I just started school in August for nursing ❤
@nadiac6042Ай бұрын
AMEN I’m so proud of you my sister.🙏🏼Gods blessings continued success, you will make it 🌹🌹🌹🙏🏼
@CarebearsiedАй бұрын
God is good! ❤
@sterlHAsilvaАй бұрын
Your son will never forgive you, I was born in a prison. You’re not saving anyone, you already did the damage.
@CrustyUggАй бұрын
@@sterlHAsilva my son wasn't born in prison you 🤡 I was let out after a month of being in there and have been sober ever since. You're mother is a 🤡 and a failure
@CrustyUggАй бұрын
@@sterlHAsilva it's so clear you're bitter and jealous. Some of us actually love our kids and turn our lives around for them! I just started nursing school as well. Bitter Betty 😂
@DovelunaloveАй бұрын
this INTERVIEWER is remarkable. His class, elegance, and empathy allow room for a very insightful interview.
@aaronjaben7913Ай бұрын
and he has the thinnest mustache ever
@krielkipАй бұрын
Well said, totally agree.
@7996hobguyАй бұрын
He seemed quite naive the whole time, and he was shaky. Joe Rogan is a better interviewer BY FAR.
@jcspider7259Ай бұрын
This is a 2013 production so I wonder how they're all doing now (2024). Yes, Trevor McDonald is exceptional in his ability to conduct these interviews in such a calm and respectful manner.
@hansendesignsАй бұрын
YES!! Muuuch better than that hack Piers Morgan. Even I wouldn’t say anything to Piers Morgan and my life is vanilla with nothing to hide.
@birriabrainАй бұрын
i hate how the other officers made the officer who helped an inmate escape as a victim. he’s a grown man in a position of power. he’s not some little boy who got influenced by candy.
@barbriley6021Ай бұрын
He was already running a game and sneaking in contraband, too.
@Kaleb1988Ай бұрын
Felt the same.
@Darrylizer1Ай бұрын
He made his stupid choice and now has to face consequences.
@simplysuzan21Ай бұрын
they always find a way to infantilize men
@wendywright5486Ай бұрын
Right It's not that he took advantage of somebody that was locked behind bars and desperate to get out
@careya14 күн бұрын
It’s eerie watching these women smile and laugh while describing their crimes.
@michaelleeannspringer324713 күн бұрын
Unclean spirits live within them.
@bernadettedevereaux869412 күн бұрын
The laughter is a embarrassment response rather than finding their crimes laughable.
@margaretem.38512 күн бұрын
Is prison life the worst way to spend your life … maybe they’ve crossed that threshold?
@dontaskdontpastel11 күн бұрын
What should they do? Cry in despair?
@westcoastbred774510 күн бұрын
@@dontaskdontpastel exactly they're definitely past that
@saesmith1Ай бұрын
I really like this interviewer… he’s so professional and respectful. He protects these women’s humanity and shows compassion without overstepping his boundaries.
@NakaidaBeauzecАй бұрын
Killing someone shows they have humanity?
@Cloud99471Ай бұрын
This is very old. I watched this 4 years ago.
@ln14517Ай бұрын
Same, I love old-school non-sensational reporting.
@Navi-ArchАй бұрын
this sounds like a bot comment holyyyy
@Ccamero123Ай бұрын
It’s shocking to us from other countries to see the prison time these women get.
@jansean2497Ай бұрын
“Oh, he fell in love and was vulnerable, Sarah took advantage of him.” That’s pathetic. He was her drug dealing partner. She was doing it to raise money in prison. Why was he doing it.
@VoiceOfReason579Ай бұрын
Lol oh how the tables have turned
@sventer198Ай бұрын
Yep, there are always guards (in a position of power) willing to prey on vulnerable inmates (male or female), this was not something that Sarah had power in.
@TT-zu5prАй бұрын
Yea he was MORE responsible than her. She's expected to want to escape and make money by any means necessary, she's in prison for crying out loud. He abused his AUTHORITY AND POWER!
@adelaidemarieАй бұрын
That women is jealous of her.
@hunterdeath57Ай бұрын
there's good and evil in both sides
@Runeansfelt29 күн бұрын
I never knew I needed this reporter's voice and professionalism in my life. What a great person and way he carries himself.
@spectator514427 күн бұрын
he can go anywhere
@kopec8227 күн бұрын
Compassion I found his voice full of it
@anonymousmc772727 күн бұрын
Tru dat…he’s a real pro
@mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm315326 күн бұрын
@@kopec82 Compassion and respect, despite the despicable things those women have done he does not judge them.
@J.LS.24 күн бұрын
He seems really kind
@marielaward843417 күн бұрын
For those that don’t know him . Sir Trevor McDonald is a distinguished British journalist and broadcaster, renowned for his tenure as the presenter of ITV’s “News at Ten.” Born on August 16, 1939, in Trinidad and Tobago, he began his career in the Caribbean before relocating to the United Kingdom in 1969. In 1973, he joined Independent Television News (ITN) as a reporter, becoming the first Black news presenter on British national television. Throughout his career, Sir Trevor has been celebrated for his authoritative presence and exceptional speaking abilities. As of November 3, 2024, he is alive and continues to be a respected figure in journalism.
@dawnemile749917 күн бұрын
I guess I could have been given a title if I had immigrated to England where they hand out knighthoods like candy instead of Canada.
@abelis64416 күн бұрын
@dawnemile7499 Titles aren't given out like candy in England first of all, and Sir Trevor certainly deserves his. Second, you can always leave & go over there. I thank my lucky stars every day that my parents chose Canada and that Canada took us in. Being Canadian is the best title ever. And third, one has to deserves a title, they have to do extraordinary things. You get one for jealousy or whining.
@abelis64416 күн бұрын
Thank you very much for taking the time to write your comment about Sir Trevor. He is a terrific and compassionate journalist. 👋🇨🇦🌠
@santoshs93516 күн бұрын
Didn’t knew him…don’t want to know him. He’s just a normal journalist.
@aneeshmenon588515 күн бұрын
@@dawnemile7499 You are hereby bestowed the title Sir Grumpsalot
@katherineswart474Ай бұрын
I see how they blamed Sarah rather than the member of staff who acted unprofessionally.
@trashcanchicАй бұрын
Yep, apparently he was a poor baby with no will or autonomy of his own. Give me a break 🙄
@CrustyUggАй бұрын
If the genders were reversed and a female Guard helped a man, yall would be saying "he's a manipulating con artist!!"
@BunnyWatson-k1wАй бұрын
He probably got ten years.
@livelaughloafofbreadАй бұрын
@@BunnyWatson-k1whe got 7
@zinabchahine4817Ай бұрын
came to the comments to write this
@eangelfulАй бұрын
I’m glad they found the most gentlemanly man to host this show.
@Littlemouse88426 күн бұрын
Yes someone who is respectful and graceful towards these women
@bruisersdilemma35426 күн бұрын
Okay, all these comments must be BOTS because there's no way this is real.
@deealex140225 күн бұрын
he is the best, well spoken and treats all people equally.
@Littlemouse88425 күн бұрын
@@bruisersdilemma354 😂
@birdie791025 күн бұрын
And the questions he asks are so on point. He's listening and he is definitely educated on all subjects
@Theresa-t6dАй бұрын
Poor vulnerable grown man prison guard trafficking drugs into the prison, was just an innocent little flower 😂
@lincolja604026 күн бұрын
Poor baby grown person guard saw her (an inmate) as a saviour and couldnt help to have an independent critical thought about the situation. She, an evil calculating woman manipulated this poor weak delicate prison guard into helping her break out... Yeah he was importing contraband but otherwise he was an outstanding officer
@Theresa-t6d26 күн бұрын
Poor weak delicate prison guard lmao 😂
@yaramubarak260226 күн бұрын
Thank god someone commented on that!
@shawnkelly69526 күн бұрын
When i go to work im there to work not fall in love with my customers
@TamunoeneGilbert26 күн бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@tierabrianne14 күн бұрын
I’m a nursing student and I’ve gotten to work prison units. You have to remember why they’re there in the first place. They ALWAYS come across as super sweet, charismatic, and knowledgeable. They’ve mastered the art of manipulation. Maintaining professionalism and setting limits is KEY. Edit, Before anyone else gets triggered** My opinion is based on MY personal experience while working with inmates. I’m emphasizing the importance of maintaining professionalism and boundaries. Take what I said with a grain of salt. If the shoe doesn’t fit, leave it be.
@rebeccasnell295312 күн бұрын
Sounds like they are master deceivers
@lavishMade-m6s10 күн бұрын
U are beautiful ❤
@Silversky110 күн бұрын
@@lavishMade-m6sstop simpin
@kinndah251910 күн бұрын
When I had a chance to speak with some women in prison and look at their cases, I realized how many women were in there due to them being used by men or toxic and/or controlling family members, or untreated mental health conditions including postpartum. Yet some are given harsher sentences than males whom did more violent crimes. The western legal system feels the need to be more mad at women for some reason. I no longer work much with the legal system, but I will admit many things are more fair than I assumed. However, the matters that aren't fair are truly not fair. The justice system isn't the problem, it's some of the people running it.
@2024-JOKER10 күн бұрын
Wow,You sound like a terrible nursing student. I hope you fail. You power hungry!
@shelby2117Ай бұрын
The babying of the guard who let Sarah out is INSANE! HE is fully responsible for that lol.
@kyrralynne857529 күн бұрын
right? and only seven years for everything he did?!? yet she is in sever isolation? Don't get me wrong i'm def not excusing the murder she deserves to be in prison, but so does he at least for a while longer.
@nz.exploree.nz2428 күн бұрын
Don't forget he was bringing in contraband prior to all of her plans
@666myname66628 күн бұрын
r u playing the blaac card. The blaac girl that killed 3 innocent human beings whith another blaac person also got7 years. SO why are you doing this. Are you that slow lol
@bernardzsikla564028 күн бұрын
@@kyrralynne85757 years in big boy prison is no joke. It certainly not that summer camp with bars. Btw- female prison officers, psychologist and prison officials have also fallen for male prisoners and also deserve compassion. Please look up the term misandry 😉
@jiggyjay68227 күн бұрын
if her lips were on my D she can have whatever she wants.
@jamessmith165226 күн бұрын
The interviewer is Trevor McDonald, he is a household name in the UK because for decades he presented the late evening TV news. Great man! He is truly a model of composure.
@thechurchladytm268326 күн бұрын
I knew I could hear a slight accent. We adore him here in the USA. ❤❤
@shellylavigne591326 күн бұрын
Wonderful interviewer
@wombat525226 күн бұрын
@@thechurchladytm2683 You couldn't tell his accent? You're also forgetting that in the US, many black people act ''ghetto''. They are so much more classy and elegant in countries like the UK. "I axed you a question!"
@lvthud26 күн бұрын
AKA Trevor McDoughnut. Showing my age now.
@joseplaza944225 күн бұрын
Uncle tommy
@lisamcgrath98725 күн бұрын
I was actually instrumental in having my daughter sent to prison. I couldn’t think of any other way to save her life. Her addiction to ice turned her into the worst person and somebody I did not know. I was raising her children. I was constantly being raided by police to which was traumatic for the children and myself. I couldn’t take anymore. Now years later I am happy to say I have my daughter back. She has rebuilt her life and her relationship with her children. I am so proud of her.
@varunshahvo-tv985424 күн бұрын
Wtf Addicted to ice😅
@motherknowsbest119224 күн бұрын
So instead of sending her to rehab, you locked your daughter in prison?
@makadoodledoo24 күн бұрын
so you ruined her life by giving her a messed up permanent record instead of sending her to rehab and youre proud of that?
@Shamkk24 күн бұрын
@@makadoodledoo Clearly rehab wasn't working idiot.
@Shamkk24 күн бұрын
@@motherknowsbest1192 You literally just read she was raided by police, rehab doesn't substitute prison, idiot.
@KryztoferKurchatov-k5l17 күн бұрын
I found my teen doing morphine which is a legal drug, I warned him about its consequences like addiction and he continued to do it. One day I found him stealing money from my neighbors(To buy the drug) and called the police and had him sent to juvenile detention for 6 months. I did this out of love and only due to that! This taught him a lesson that would remain forever with him and keeps him from breaking the rules. He thanks me for that till now after like 8 yrs since he did that, coz that prevented him from going to the wrong side and becoming a typical criminal. He was 14 when that happened. The judge even provided me an option to put him under probation, I said no to it and let him get his punishment. I broke into tears when he told me this when he got released - 'Dad, I'll never take freedom for granted, ever again. I accept my mistake and am extremely sorry for what I did. I Love you! ' He never went into that direction after all this.
@williambecker618716 күн бұрын
Did the same with my son , except it was shop lifting, took the products and him back to the store and drop them off ,never happened again.
@laurieb370312 күн бұрын
You're an absolutely incredible father! You probably saved his entire future
@oldtowngirl896812 күн бұрын
I would do the same too if I am in your shoes. Tough love I called it. It hurts but is the only right way to parent difficult children.
@justicejane242912 күн бұрын
@@williambecker6187did they arrest him when he went back to the store?
@pricklypear75164 күн бұрын
@@justicejane2429 Does it matter? The point is that "tough love" has to come from parents, and that it works.
@GiorgiaGiorgiaGiorgia26 күн бұрын
I just looked up an update on Addie Harts. She was released in 2013, the year this documentary was filmed. She’s 36 years old now, she’s a grandmother too. Had another kid a few years back. People asked her how her life has been and she said it’s been a “roller coaster” but she’s grateful for it all
@mychannel880926 күн бұрын
She has sweet energy, I wish her the best
@kcrun26 күн бұрын
Very cavalier about robbing people. The giggling is nuts.
@peterkonitzer441026 күн бұрын
At 36 I'm surprised she's not a greatgrand mother
@tutalilly26 күн бұрын
Doing the math, she had her first child at 14...
@hailieeiceman204425 күн бұрын
Amen
@tofinoguyАй бұрын
This gentleman exudes decency, compassion, intelligence, and a genuine desire to understand. This is a masterclass for this genre of documentary. I hope would-be investigative reporters watch his stuff.
@bruisersdilemma35426 күн бұрын
Shut it
@sparksx69425 күн бұрын
@@bruisersdilemma354 I hope you find peace and love.
@Nefsz20 күн бұрын
😂 bruh
@charlesterrizzi831114 күн бұрын
He could quote Tupac and make it sound decent
@andiecph27 күн бұрын
So because that first woman managed to outsmart the department and embarrassed them for their lack of security, she gets 110 years in prison. But a pedophile gets 7 max no matter how many kids he rapes? How about their embarrassment? How about the life's that will be traumatized forever? This!! This right here is the true embarrassment!! 😡😡😡
@thewatchfemme405127 күн бұрын
I think she got 110 years for orchestrating the murder of two people.
@evelynwaugh405326 күн бұрын
She didn't get 110 years for escape. She bought a shotgun for her drug dealer boyfriend that he used to murder two people who were going to testify against him and helped him helped dispose of their bodies. Most states have felony murder laws. Most defendants are offered generous plea deals to admit guilt and sometimes testify against their co-defendant. If they refuse the plea deal and go to trial, they get the full, not the reduced, sentence.
@angelarich845525 күн бұрын
@@evelynwaugh4053people in this country have too much sympathy for the criminals not the victims
@Radbiker3335725 күн бұрын
Way to show your IQ Andie by getting manipulated into believing the 110 year sentence criminal’s story rather than researching and looking up the facts of the case yourself. Why would you believe a single word she said? 😂 quit being gullible and easily manipulated. Also pdf files should get minimum 25 or 30, just my personal opinion. I don’t think they need to be around society so soon.
@intensity.density220825 күн бұрын
The system is designed to protect pedophiles. As a lot of the people running the system are predators themselves
@raychelmaclean10915 күн бұрын
The way they “baby” that guard who helped Sarah is INSANE! He was bringing in illegal stuff before she ever even got to him. HE chose to help her get out. HE knew better! And now they punish her beyond belief because THE PRISON messed up and they are super embarrassed. Unbelievable
@troyott233424 күн бұрын
110 years and she did not pull a trigger, 16 years for robbing a purse without a gun, UNREAL ABSOLUTLEY UNREAL. The entire CRJ system needs to be dismantled and made anew. Tragic beyond belief.
@d.c.503324 күн бұрын
Maybe 16 years because it was three victims, well planned out, etc. She also said there were other instances where she didn’t get caught. She probably deserves the 16 years.
@eisirt5524 күн бұрын
I agree . Sounds inhumane .
@jadesouttakes24 күн бұрын
@@eisirt55the point being that we have child rqpists getting less time, there are worse people doing worse things and getting smaller sentences
@Fani77724 күн бұрын
@@d.c.5033 to get 16 years (15, but actually you get like 10 and then 5 in parole) in Germany you need to commit a planed murder. For her crime in her age (18) she would not even be in jail 1 day.
@bandito24124 күн бұрын
@@d.c.5033this is exactly right.
@MargaretRiojas22 күн бұрын
I have to applaud Mr. McDonald. He treated all of the ladies he spoke with incredibly kind. He spoke and let them speak with dignity. I loved the interviews.
@Nefsz20 күн бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@Faretheewell60819 күн бұрын
The British love to rag on about the barbarous US system
@AprilStrickland-zu2kw17 күн бұрын
Everybody does..talks with a different tone of voice about certain people.
@withgoddess716415 күн бұрын
Women, definitely NOT ladies...
@withgoddess716415 күн бұрын
Women, definitely NOT ladies...
@Jasmineflowerkisses25 күн бұрын
@7:03 I know she’s a criminal, I’m not discounting that, however, to completely put the blame on here her and make the guard look like a victim is absolute garbage. There is an obvious power dynamic between prisoners and guards.
@touchofgrace321725 күн бұрын
He was given a 7 yr sentence so they did not see him as a victim but they did acknowledge how manipulative she is compared to other inmates. She went from tears at 42:22 to excitedly bragging about her reputation at 43:32.
@Jasmineflowerkisses25 күн бұрын
@@touchofgrace3217 Oh, absolutely. It’s obvious that she is extremely manipulative, and she’s honestly not that good at it. Her emotions are fiend, over exaggerated, she furrows her brow too frequently, she opens her mouth in surprise. It’s all very performative. But there is still apower imbalance, in no world should a guard form a relationship with a inmate. He took advantage of her regardless if she’s manipulative or not.
@lhr883325 күн бұрын
Those words, “she prayed on him” what??? He was in a position of authority and trained to deal with people like her.
@BonnieSmith-s9r24 күн бұрын
@@touchofgrace3217 that's y she is in prison from last 24 years and that in itself is a very long time
@melsafken76422 күн бұрын
"She" was the vulnerable one. They way they talk, she pursued him? I can see her flirting, but she couldn't r*pe him from behind bars. HE went home at night.
@quanglobaldocumentary18 күн бұрын
Sarah's story is a chilling reminder of the complexities of human behavior, even behind bars. It's a stark look at survival and strategy in a brutal world.
@yeahyeahwowman80995 күн бұрын
Its not a chilling reminder, stupid people get manipulated and smart people do not fall for it. It's just that stupid people breed in high numbers, make people like the security guard.
@pricklypear75164 күн бұрын
There's very little "complex" about human behavior. It's ALWAYS self-serving. Even when it's apparently altruistic, it's self-serving. That isn't cynicism; it's just the way we're built. But what's "chilling" is the absolute lack of awareness in the guard calling her "a female Charles Manson" and saying that "If she could manipulate a trained professional. . . " she must be some sort of criminal mastermind. What rot!
@quanglobaldocumentary4 күн бұрын
@@pricklypear7516 Well we all being manipulated and misled in someway.
@jeremythurman5261Күн бұрын
Wildly the Prosecutor Larry Sells now believes she needs released.
@indiewest7200Ай бұрын
Child predators don't even get long sentences like what these women got.
@burntbeansoupАй бұрын
Child predators often get 5-10 years.
@joedurt2220Ай бұрын
@@burntbeansoupwho and where. Lol
@sonnycalzone7784Ай бұрын
Agree, however that woman strongly downplayed what she did something doesn’t add up with those numbers
@lindaflow5434Ай бұрын
which is crazy since they are more threat to society than some of these woman…😢
@marcsimpson3Ай бұрын
Aww the poor girls finally got some of that equality they've been fighting for. Lmao good
@manfredieboyd2071Ай бұрын
These women make me realize just how important a support system is when they enter society.
@angelblue52Ай бұрын
Word.
@paws2reflect27 күн бұрын
I think it's almost impossible for them to succeed after prison without that support system. It almost feels like it's set up for them to fail.
@kasperkjrsgaard144726 күн бұрын
Hopefully they’ve been able to get a good education while incarciated. That way they should be able to live a decent life when they’re released back to freedom.
@joy_long11 күн бұрын
10000%- I’m currently working on a research paper for my sociology of punishment class, specifically on reintegration!
@Justmama19xx6 күн бұрын
Absolutely!!! Sadly most will never get it, many state programs don't even exist to help offenders out of prison anymore, and most will either die or end up back in Prison. At the end of the day It's a business, not a justice system.
@CheapsKate77Ай бұрын
The 25 yr old having a 9 and 7 yr old is crazy. But then she said her mom had gone to prison when she was a teen. That obviously took a toll on her and she definitely acted out in many ways. I hope she is able to steer clear of her former ways and teach her children so they won’t end up in prison. 🙏
@dothetwist29827 күн бұрын
If you look at her mannerisms you can see that she’s touched in the head, I highly doubt she’s gotten hold of her anger problems. She belongs in a psychiatric ward.
@ManiyaVinas27 күн бұрын
I bet the father was a pedo degen
@JustLIkerapunzel27 күн бұрын
Definately sounds like someone who's definately been set up to fail with those life circumstances. Also hope that when she's done with her time that she'll be able to break the cycle for the future of her kids
@truckingoover27 күн бұрын
Sounds like she is exactly where she needs to be
@da1stamericus27 күн бұрын
O i would love a follow up of her life.
@veronicaave478714 күн бұрын
Very respectful and compassionate man ❤ these women are being so candid he’s sensitive to their emotions i appreciate that
@GabrielWood-d9c6 күн бұрын
You have a very beautiful smile, How are you doing and where are you from!
@SavvvyahСағат бұрын
@@GabrielWood-d9ci dont think she likes u
@Eisengras23 күн бұрын
In Germany, escaping from prison is not punished because freedom is a natural human need. However, crimes committed while on the run are punished.
@sharonhatzenbuehler459123 күн бұрын
That is really interesting, I lived in Germany and never knew that. Thanks for sharing
@Eisengras23 күн бұрын
@@sharonhatzenbuehler4591 Ist tatsächlich so. 😄👍
@Nico_8323 күн бұрын
Krass, wusste ich auch nicht.
@alpenjodel2422 күн бұрын
Well, its kinda impossible, you would still have to break doors (damaging state property) bribe or blackmail someone (ofc illegal) someone, or something else. But yes, assuming the prison left all doors open, you would not get additional punishment. They would still search for you to serve the rest of your sentence obviously :D
@Eisengras22 күн бұрын
@@alpenjodel24 In Germany, escaping from prison is not actually punishable by law. This is because German criminal law acknowledges the so-called "natural instinct for freedom." The desire to regain one's freedom is seen as human and understandable, and therefore it is not considered a criminal offense. The legal basis for this can be found indirectly in the German Criminal Code (Strafgesetzbuch, StGB), as there is simply no provision that defines escape itself as a criminal act. However, there are limitations: any crimes committed during the escape, such as property damage, assault, or taking hostages, are, of course, punishable and will be prosecuted in addition. Relevant in this context is § 120 StGB, which addresses prisoner liberation, meaning assistance from outside. This is punishable, as is being armed or using threats of violence during the escape. Leaving the facility during temporary release or misuse of prison leave can also lead to sanctions. In summary: Escape itself: not punishable, as long as no further crimes are committed. Crimes during escape: punishable. Outside assistance: punishable under § 120 StGB.
@johnnywalker485724 күн бұрын
He definitely made a positive impact on these women, and they seemed very receptive to him. He showed empathy and asked intelligent questions. They opened up about why they were there, what it's been like there, and it seemed like his presence inspired them to want to strive for improvement. It was a good move sending him in there.
@TheSapphireSprit18 күн бұрын
He may have been the only respectful man they’ve ever experienced.
@MinervaAlvarez-dx3jc16 күн бұрын
Though the fact that the USA imprisons the most women out of any country "speaks volumes" as the phrase goes. I think this documentary misses a huge amount of prison sentences for non-violent drug offenses (i.e. no child in their custody and not operating a vehicle at the time of using). Then you have another layer of women who get prostitution charges who grew up in broken homes or being trafficked. They get handed sentences for the only life they knew in a country that doesn't give them many resources like housing yet has high-cost taxes and goods. Not sure this reveals the USA as the "great and just" nation they are always trying to claim themselves as. Also take in mind, these prison sentences cost taxpayers more and more money the longer the sentences are (guards paychecks/benefits, food, utilities). And not surprisingly they keep these prisons filled over-capacity with non-violent offenses. And don't get me started on the US' for-profit prisons
@daynasafranek7807Ай бұрын
I absolutely enjoyed this interviewer. He treats people with dignity and asked honest questions without making the inmate feel uncomfortable.
@NattyNickDxB27 күн бұрын
Crazy to me that people don’t know Trevor McDonald
@msmee007912 күн бұрын
I served 19 months in federal prison for trafficking. Changed my outlook on my life & freedom! I was 23 then I'm 45 now that was all the lesson I needed....haven't took my freedom for granted since
@katelayton782926 күн бұрын
y’all ain’t seen this man interview many other people in various different states and prisons before ?!?!!! master class, no one better
@noorgonzalez107625 күн бұрын
Yup yup yup yup yup yup yup yup💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎💎 Always Reminds me of masterpiece Theater….♥️🕊️ Mr. MCDONALD♥️🕊️♥️🕊️♥️🕊️♥️
@noorgonzalez107625 күн бұрын
Revelation 12:12 Psalm 37:10,11 Psalm 37:29
@ohffsnoway28 күн бұрын
28 years old, with 4 children - oldest 13yo - that woman’s situation brought tears to my eyes - just devastating
@ScoobyDoo-xu6oi27 күн бұрын
With some luck, she'll be a grandma by the age of 30
@AliceAtTheEndOfTheWorld27 күн бұрын
@@ScoobyDoo-xu6oi I wouldn't call that luck.
@EZ_Case27 күн бұрын
@@AliceAtTheEndOfTheWorldsounds more like a nightmare.
@Leo2956827 күн бұрын
I feel sorry for the children. Imagine the life they are living with their mothers locked up. The inmates are so young and yet they seem to have 3 or more children. Sad. For both the children and their mothers.
@PraxyMubz26 күн бұрын
@@ScoobyDoo-xu6oiIkr.
@KE-xj9vmАй бұрын
The biggest thing that stands out to me is the generational cycles. The 9yo with her mother and uncle just locked up and her dad just released. What a life
@izzyhezz27 күн бұрын
Trauma is generational.
@sallykayekaufman511926 күн бұрын
When this is your student, imagine what it is like for them around other kids celebrating Mother’s Day.
@ComewithHONORAH25 күн бұрын
My thought exactly 😢
@clementinemarsh47623 күн бұрын
it’s interesting seeing this because when this was released (2013/14 it sounds like from the comments) my mom was locked up too and i was 9 years old… it’s feels like forever ago but to think that little girl is grown up and the same age as me is crazy, i think about all my parent’s friends and their kids and how they ended up too, some weren’t as fortunate and ended up getting locked up young too
@KE-xj9vm23 күн бұрын
@ 🥺
@michaellicavoli392111 күн бұрын
Sarah’s escape would make a great Netflix drama!
@raniab95465 күн бұрын
Boycott Netflix. Free palestine!
@michaellicavoli39214 күн бұрын
@ what is Palestine?
@shawnanicolebradley88514 күн бұрын
She made them do it was a lifetime movie.
@juliemedina4653Ай бұрын
He is such a respectful man.
@elld-elld7 күн бұрын
Because he's old. You don't know what he used to be like.
@HaysamK18 күн бұрын
The host here managed to balance professionalism with an authentic human touch, allowing the voices of the inmates to resonate powerfully and respectfully. This approach not only sheds light on their stories but also encourages the broader public to reflect on the importance of empathy and understanding in the face of difficult circumstances, fostering a more compassionate society.
@GabrielWood-d9c6 күн бұрын
How are you doing and where are you from!
@joeymayes9140Ай бұрын
23:15 the Department of Corrections is completely skipping over the fact that the officer that helped her Escape also moved loads of contraband
@sonnycalzone7784Ай бұрын
That was the least of their worries lmao
@traceyjones2010Ай бұрын
Yeah sounds like there sugar coating his actions all the way around and I would bet he's rated a few women in there to just sad.
@stargater2892Ай бұрын
@joeymayes9140 That is not the point of this program.
@blueclover991829 күн бұрын
They mentioned it
@Matilda-y28 күн бұрын
💯 they paint him as a poor vulnerable guy, what a joke
@alexandralark12375 күн бұрын
the empathy in these comments is incredible. As someone who was in the system, the amount of hate and judgement the world can give us is devastating. Yes, we deserve to feel ashamed, but we do that on our own. These comments give me hope. People can change, or we’re just in a bad position when they were arrested. Not everyone who has been a criminal is a bad person. A lot of us had crime done onto us that we projected. Taking accountability and making the steps to change is the path to healing, but others being kind and understanding makes us feel as though we can truly be accepted by the common folk. Thank you to everyone with a kind heart
@elistraufАй бұрын
That one chic laughing & all bubbly talking about her crimes. She comes across so sweet. Scary!
@R.Oates7902Ай бұрын
She's only 25. Probably nervous
@pablosingman4304Ай бұрын
She is getting so many years for just robbery. It's insane!!!
@uncapabrew4807Ай бұрын
She doesn’t owe what she’s doing - 😢 Until she totally gets Will be same scenario
@dianahelman1553Ай бұрын
She seems very immature.She doesn't seem like she learned her lesson
@duane_313Ай бұрын
@@pablosingman4304Right. 16 years for robbery is insanely excessive
@wadthecrap26 күн бұрын
What a respectful empathetic interviewer.. Really brought the humanity out of each interviewee
@inkdemon64mclemore57Ай бұрын
I absolutely love the interviewer.. He's so respectful to these women. He shows empathy and has a decorum that's peaceful. ❤
@sharrablackfire733729 күн бұрын
I hate the comments in here talking about how fake some of these women are and how they're nothing but users. The stigma and projection that people put on these women is why recidivism is so high. If you treat someone like they are a criminal and scum, then they never get the opportunities to be something more. It's shameful how many people in here have said Addie giggles because she's a sociopath. People are only too ready to dehumanize others instead of recognizing the many factors that would put us all in that same boat if we had grown up the way they had
@inkdemon64mclemore5729 күн бұрын
@sharrablackfire7337 I couldn't agree with you more. Granted that some are just born bad. But like you said, life amd it's situations make us into who we are. And when a life is just too much for one mind to handle, it breaks, and chaos happens. Addie was just a nervous giggler, nothing more. Some just don't hold empathy. So they judge while sitting on their self-made pedestal.
@sharrablackfire733729 күн бұрын
@@inkdemon64mclemore57 Exactly! And she still freely admitted that what she did was wrong, that it wasn't worth it, and that she's going to keep her life on the straight and narrow once she's out so she can focus on her children. Sociopaths don't admit to wrongdoing. They don't own their actions and recognize the harm it causes to others. Addie was just a kid when she committed that robbery, and if her own family hadn't been one where her parents and grandparents were felons, she would have had the safety net and upbringing that would have prevented her from needing to steal for basic survival. Her environmental factors of no car of her own, no positive influences, no guidance on how to navigate life correctly were all contributing factors. She was definitely not one of those people who are born bad. I would not have been half as composed as her if someone started recording me for a youtube video with this kind of reach and told me that 2.55 million people would be watching whatever I say and judging me
@amandapittar939820 күн бұрын
That’s our Trevor. He was a BBC newsreader for YEARs. I used to love listening to his delivery of the news. Mellifluous. That was what it was.
@DopaminedotSeek3rcolonthree11 күн бұрын
This is some raw stuff. Like, I could taste gristle with this. Trevor has remarkable talent for this.
@anarizmooreАй бұрын
A1 reporter! This man is one of the most classy, dignified, empathetic journalists!❤
@David-jl1pk27 күн бұрын
Excellent documentary. Unlike most of documentaries about prison this one avoids sensationalism and the interviewer is very professional.
@Jaggerbush25 күн бұрын
I disagree. He's all, 'you're so young... look at you... I can't imagine you're violent" 10:00
@kshono44625 күн бұрын
Look at you, you are so young ? When did he say that. 10:46 is what I can see, what he said.
@abletesfamichael657625 күн бұрын
@@Jaggerbush He never said that. Seems like you struggle with listening comprehension.
@hildahilpert501825 күн бұрын
Had no idea that the US jails more women in the world than any other country.That tells me a lot about our country,s culture. You expect this of men, but not women.
@NJGIRL2224 күн бұрын
Sir Trevor is intelligent, dignified and unafraid. I admire his interviewing style. He lets people speak and tell their stories but also calls out people on their crimes.
@soniasias622611 күн бұрын
Prisons are for profit. 110 years and she did not pull the trigger. That's crazy.
@ggeorge41445 күн бұрын
No she stabbed them to death. What difference does that make?
@Yudinaru26 күн бұрын
I love the fact that these officers are acting so shocked that they’re coworker would do such a thing, but yet thiis guy was bringing contraband for all these years, and somehow they turned a blind eye to that! They are just embarrassed!
@cathyhunter126325 күн бұрын
There is more drugs in prison than on the street
@brittneyconstable1577Ай бұрын
I was housed with Sarah and Mrs. Darby at Rockville. Now, Mrs Darby was a little old murdering sweetie. She was in my cell. Also on my block was Sarah. I didn’t find her to be manipulative. Intelligent and well spoken, yes. I have a feeling correctional officers feel less intelligent than someone they assume would be “less than” relative to them. I liked her. And she had good taste in music. I hope I never see them again.
@jaymejohnson2375Ай бұрын
What was ms darby in for
@sullysullivan4044Ай бұрын
Did being incarcerated change you in anyway? I studied the correctional system when i worked towards a degree, and the rate of repeat was insanity, like a 75% recidivism rate. I hope you were or are able to stay out and do great things. Much respect to serve time and come out on the other side... would love to hear your status or thoughts
@laritidomaАй бұрын
I hope the best for you in the future. Blessings.
@TristanSpow29 күн бұрын
That’s exactly how you are being manipulated, ironically enough
@faeezparkar973128 күн бұрын
Why was ms. Darby in there? 20 years is a really long time!
@Hassan-Sas25 күн бұрын
This interviewer is truly the GOAT of documentaries! He deserves an Emmy for his powerful insights into the consequences of deviating from societal norms. Thank you sir for shedding light on these important issues!
@Nefsz20 күн бұрын
Bruh get some nice dress first get mirror
@michaeljuma0072 күн бұрын
When wisdom meets professionalism art is displayed. The interviewer provides an atmosphere necessary to facilitate decent conversations giving the viewer an understanding as to why the detainees are currently where they are.
@stefmms6280Ай бұрын
I wish Trevor would do every interview. He is incredibly good.
@Mina.15Ай бұрын
He does he has his own KZbin channel
@user-wickedflower26 күн бұрын
Sir Trevor 😊
@lanep4322Ай бұрын
Sir Trevor is a class act and a very intelligent and thoughtful documentary interviewer.
@tlwest21Ай бұрын
English seems to be classier than folks in the U.S.
@bobedwards745528 күн бұрын
Meh
@deborathcoka6956Ай бұрын
This man is so respectfully honest. I love it! He was patient and a gentleman
@Idontreadreplies10 күн бұрын
These are the best prison docs. Need more of these. Lockups early 2000s were good but you can’t find them anywhere.
@andrewdulaney146323 күн бұрын
I did 5 years in my late 20s. Im now 40 years old and married with teenagers! Prison literally saved my life. However, that's not always the case for everyone. I was a drug dealer and drug addict. I sold pains pills and dope for about 10 years. When i finally went to prison for drug and gun charges, i knew that part of my life was over. I was tired and unhappy with my daily life. I always wanted to change and get sober. i guess i just wasn't ready. If someone you love is struggling with drugs, you must take extreme measures to help that person. I'd rather visit a loved one in prison than visit a loved one at the cemetery
@joycekennedy525222 күн бұрын
What extreme measures can I take to help my son.....hope you don't mind me asking ..
@Bren-dl6sb15 күн бұрын
@@joycekennedy5252PRAY FOR HIM🎉
@lalakuma9Ай бұрын
I was rather surprised that Sarah comes across as very normal, even gentle in her mannerism. It makes perfect sense that she's great at manipulating people.
@marixsadelfi3683Ай бұрын
Well the prosecutor says he thinks she deserves to be freed. Admits he even messed up.
@Angie-if9wxАй бұрын
I was in there with Sarah and idk if any of you have seen the movie or read to book. I think she has everything to do with killing her roommates. Yes, she’s a great manipulator. She wasn’t in isolation in 2018:2019 when I was there. She was in general population and worked for the law library. CRAZY
@IM.GАй бұрын
That’s how the usually are. The fool people that way
@Tmc513Ай бұрын
@@Angie-if9wxwhat’s the books name please?
@kiwigirlNZАй бұрын
@@Tmc513Girl Wanted: The chase for Sarah Pender. Author Steve Miller
@SFouremanАй бұрын
I'm rather shocked how this particular facility looks like our public schools.
@OctochinchillyАй бұрын
Same design principle. It’s so that everyone has the perception of being watched. It’s called the Panopticon.
@blthtmАй бұрын
My husband always called school "prison" and our girls completely agreed. It's a sad thought, but it's true.
@relativeusАй бұрын
@@blthtm I really do wish our schools could embrace a more naturalistic environment in general and become indistinguishable from prison.
@daynasafranek7807Ай бұрын
If I were in prison, I would find the school design much more calming. It’s a lot quieter.
@blthtmАй бұрын
@@relativeus Maybe one day our grandchildren can enjoy that kind of school experience.
@kingayy926717 күн бұрын
34:55 "so you've left me bread and rice." I really like this interviewer. He seemed a bit unsure of how to react when Paula got emotional, but he was very kind to and respectful of the women he spoke to.
@MariahSharma-eg9uu21 күн бұрын
You can definitely tell these women have had counselors and therapists to talk to. These clips show how much effort and support these women have gotten. I have so much respect. 💕
@sarahjane74408 күн бұрын
Or are you being manipulated? 🤔
@cjemm92208 күн бұрын
Yeah I had no support and during that time I missed funerals of family members which sucked a lot but no therapy or anything
@corinnegermanotta35908 күн бұрын
I kind of doubt it
@bobbiebrown493Ай бұрын
That lady guard was wrong saying that the inmate preyed on the officer. How about the officer TOOK FULL ADVANTAGE of an inmate. He was an authority figure, he took advantage of his position, and thats that🤦🏽♀️😑
@shadelingsАй бұрын
Absolutely!!! I was looking for this comment. That female guard had a lot of nerve to lay full blame on the inmate, knowing full well the kind of power imbalance that exists between inmates and guards fundamentally.
@Katie-hj5ebАй бұрын
Just another day in law enforcement corruption...
@davenporttyroneАй бұрын
They used each other.
@bobbiebrown493Ай бұрын
@@davenporttyrone i totally get what youre saying BUT. When you're in a position of AUTHORITY, then thats a whole different ball game. When someone HAS AUTHORITY OVER YOU, its not "fair game"; the person thats in the higher position has power over you. And the person in authority in this specific situation is also being paid with TAX PAYERS' money... he took FULL advantage. Her, being in prison, has no expectation from us the ppl. She's a prisoner so clearly she's not following the law, hence we shouldnt be surprised if she took advantage of this opportunity. Like come on
@abigailh7715Ай бұрын
@@bobbiebrown493right she was an innocent babe. Not all a scheming dreg
@matthewblikken5805Ай бұрын
Addie is so adorable, soft-spoken, and seemingly innocent...I know that worked to her advantage in those robberies, in getting people to trust her and believe she was not a threat!
@tlwest21Ай бұрын
Men are so stupid over a sweet soft spoken women and those are ALWAYS the ones you shouldn't trust 😂
@thesun-N-moon8885Ай бұрын
Just goes to show she is the same person as who went into jail … like she said “I’m very capable”…. Never once saying that is who she was before…
@krielkipАй бұрын
@@thesun-N-moon8885 Yes! Her laughter also could come across as 'adorable' but it was a big red flag to me.
@secondhandstylin608Ай бұрын
She’s terrifying
@Remoteguru1Ай бұрын
@@thesun-N-moon8885 i noticed that
@vickileatherwood476513 сағат бұрын
I love watching these, makes me realize how grateful I am to be in the free world, I hope this makes people realize that crime doesn't pay.
@Vexorgthedestroyer25 күн бұрын
I wish public hospitals in South Africa looked even remotely like this prison in Indiana. Eye opening interviews from a true gentleman and professional.
@akaims1738Ай бұрын
“Keep ur head up” from ur own daughter 😢,that’s heart wrenching God please give grace to these mothers and help them transform for themselves and their children 🙏
@kaniahankston431027 күн бұрын
This interview was years ago and I hope Addie is free and doing great in life! I hope she got lots of time to spend with her children. Just because you have done something you weren’t proud of in your past doesn’t mean you don’t deserve a second chance to better your life. ❤️
@RobinRockefeller23 күн бұрын
Someone looked her up and she is okay. She had another child and is a grandmother now. But she is still out. So good for her.
@sierrabrown33254 күн бұрын
making that GROWN man a victim in the story is crazy. He knew damn well what he was doing, he’s not an oblivious child.
@skepticalmechanic24 күн бұрын
The reason I never stole anything or ever did anything to get in trouble… was when I was 8 years old I took a field trip to a prison and it scared me to death! I am 65 and still remember it like it was yesterday!
@Debbie-DidIt23 күн бұрын
Scared straight programs in the 80's work. Our school participated they sent the rebels to the scariest prisons and it was eye opening.
@donychicago21 күн бұрын
LOL. It you were sent to a prison in Africa you would be a hundred times more traumatized! 😂😂 At least your prisons are clean. You can't begin to imagine in which conditions prisoners are kept in my country. Some animals live better lives. 😂
@cathyhogue369320 күн бұрын
I remember our high school field trip to the jail. When I saw a drinking fountain on the top of a toilet in the middle of a room, that was it....
@skepticalmechanic20 күн бұрын
@@Debbie-DidIt Worked for me!
@DianaPrince77720 күн бұрын
Not trying to sound rude here but, where do y'all live where your schools thought it was a good idea to take children to prisons/jails as a field trip?
@Voyager23B27 күн бұрын
Trevor McDonald is an amazing interviewer! May he continue to live a long life!
@bell-collector577223 күн бұрын
I love the mutual respect that the interviewer and the ladies had with each other regardless of their stories.
@rebeccasnell295312 күн бұрын
Brilliant interviewer. This was one the best doccos I've ever seen.
@purpledragonfly411 күн бұрын
You an aussie?
@MacktheKnife-r1gАй бұрын
I really enjoy and appreciate Trevor McDonald's interviews. He treats women who probably deserve little respect with objectivity and empathy. As a result, he gets a better interview than other people who might approach these inmates with a confrontational agenda.
@Ayesha______24 күн бұрын
Every human deserves a certain level of respect. Be careful
It's laughable how the corrections facility put the blame on the inmate in order to save embarrassment for their unprofessional male officer. HE is the authority figure. It's illegal for him to even engage in such acts with a prisoner because prisoners can't give consent by law. They never should have hired him. If you aren't strong enough to effectively manage a bunch of women who are desperate to get out of prison, go work at Wendy's.
@tashah4058Ай бұрын
To me, it's the equivalent of when an adult preys on a teen and society places the blame on the the teen for being "too fast." It's like.. wow, this ADULT could NEVER resist this literal child. 🫢🙄
@jammie2475Ай бұрын
@@tashah4058 exactly! It’s very common. Men want to be seen as strong and “built for leadership” but all of a sudden they can turn into teenage boys incapable of emotional intelligence if they get “seduced.” Get real.
@KatB7927 күн бұрын
Well said 💯
@flapkatt609426 күн бұрын
He served 7 years.
@gloriabebop531326 күн бұрын
Good work at Wendy's 😂
@7741nhsqАй бұрын
You are absolutely one of my favorite people. I don't know if I call this a documentary. I called it masterful work. His play of words is just amazing and informative
@ShayMince13 күн бұрын
I love this documentary. So respectful and insightful.
@szhhh132618 күн бұрын
At 12:03, when she says "just momma leaving", her facial expression, the way she breathes inwardly, and her tone of voice together express an ever so slight sense of frustration. It's chilling, because it is here when one can see a true juxtaposition of her amiable side and her violent side, a juxtaposition that was completely absent in earlier parts of her interview.
@ellabose100522 күн бұрын
16 years for armed robbery is wild. I feel like child predators get less than that.
@ibrahimabubakar418521 күн бұрын
Yes it’s
@loelds481713 күн бұрын
She wasn’t even armed. It’s so unfair honestly. I think people like her should be rehabilitated and given a second chance at life. She seems kind and remorseful.
@mrs.garcia697813 күн бұрын
They do get less time but both should get more time imo
@yasminaunicorn373512 күн бұрын
Armed robbery should be 25 years minimum
@westcoastbred774510 күн бұрын
Different states, Different fates
@DimiandelleАй бұрын
I just love how he interviews ppl. His calm nice and shows respect
@Nefsz20 күн бұрын
That’s how a normal interview is Ur stupid
@constitutionalUSA11 күн бұрын
Sir Trevor is exactly what a Gentleman is.
@gymclasshero88Ай бұрын
Wish Trevor would do a whole series around the country like this both the episodes of seen have been amazing quality
@NH-tb2smАй бұрын
He said he regrets doing this particular documentary.
@gymclasshero88Ай бұрын
@@NH-tb2sm why?
@NH-tb2smАй бұрын
@@gymclasshero88 he said it still haunts him years later.
@squishroll218326 күн бұрын
@@NH-tb2sm why? Is there a particular reason for that?
@leaholiver740423 күн бұрын
Incredible empathy and intelligence form the interviewer. He is exceptional.
@BdaBarbieАй бұрын
I’m a mental health provider and I empathize with those women. Wishing them well and sending positive vibes their way…
@michaelleeannspringer324713 күн бұрын
What about their victims? Some seem to forget about the victims, whose lives are forever changed.
@BdaBarbie13 күн бұрын
@ I would never ever forget victims or survivors. As I’m a survivor myself. And I don’t condone abuse or violence in any way. BUT that doesn’t mean the perpetrators doesn’t deserve to be forgiven, rehabilitated or simply shown grace. Justice was served and they’re doing the time for the crime but theyre still human and should still be treated as such. No need for me to judge them … God will handle that for us. Sending positive vibes your way as well ✨ ✨ ✨
@melisentiapheiffer30342 күн бұрын
I can see the interviewer wants to hug her, but is not allowed to because of prison rules. He is such a nice man ❤
@toknowhealthiswealthАй бұрын
I would love to see an update on these ladies! This was a fantastic episode!
@jcspider7259Ай бұрын
This is a 2013 production so I wonder how they're all doing now (2024). Trevor Mcdonald is exceptional in his ability to conduct these interviews in such a calm and respectful manner.
@bdlimea7018Ай бұрын
I thought i had seen this before
@lindseygreen3394Ай бұрын
Sarah that escaped is still there, but a prosecutor thinks she should be let free
@betsybauer7340Ай бұрын
Oh poor him .. give me a f-ing break 🙄she’s the criminal he’s the professional guard. Completely sexist
@narnian19Ай бұрын
The one who had a 16 year sentence most likely got out in 2022.
@LiLaLizzy826 күн бұрын
Yeah I think it is a re-upload.
@scottosenbrock962226 күн бұрын
This guy is a fantastic interviewer- one of the best I’ve ever seen.
@ivaberry202014 сағат бұрын
Thanks for sharing Only Human Love and Light always Iva 💯 ❤🎉
@JenniferAlexander-m4pАй бұрын
Addy's eye contact is on point, so many people struggle with this skill
@JustasandwitchАй бұрын
She’s a psychopath that’s how
@sweetxharmonyАй бұрын
She reminds me of Gypsy rose
@gail956626 күн бұрын
@@sweetxharmonyshes a sociopath, eye contact is part of the personality.
@anniestumpy991825 күн бұрын
Why are neurotypicals so obsessed with eye contact?
@doryy936023 күн бұрын
@@anniestumpy9918cause it’s a sign someone is being shifty or something is wrong If a neurotypical person can’t look at me in the eyes something is wrong I struggle to keep eye contact when lying or hiding something for example Eye contact is valuable piece of non verbal communication It can converse intentions, respect, emotions, if you are paying attention if you are interested in the conversation If you aren’t doing eye contact It can converse that you aren’t interested, it can be interpreted that you don’t respect the person talking to you, it can mean that you feel ashamed when talking about something and can’t look the person in the eye If you are a neurotypical it’s just a valuable part of communication And when someone doesn’t do it or does it way too much it signals a bit of an alarm
@Annejali25 күн бұрын
42:16 if this woman is given 110 years in prison because she owned the gun someone else used to kill two people, then Diddy needs to get life in prison
@Schimmelschwanz21 күн бұрын
It wasn't only because she owned the gun, but she also helped disposing of the bodies and planning the murder. She wouldn't be in this situation without credible evidence against her.
@OUTDOORS5516 күн бұрын
Except thats not what happened 😂 She bought the murder weapon for her bf who then used it to murder the victims. She then helped him conceal the murders.
@westcoastbred774510 күн бұрын
😂😂😂😂
@AdrianStalker8 күн бұрын
You can't be that stupid
@poorthing23 күн бұрын
I live in Indiana & never knew this facility existed. As a woman, this was an eye-opener. Why aren't long-term inmates given 'lessons' on technology & what to expect when they are released? How can they succeed? It's like turning loose a toddler in downtown Chicago.
@SgtTom18 күн бұрын
It’s not a school. It’s a prison after all.
@EliteCannagivers16 күн бұрын
They don’t want them to succeed and want them to come back. These prisons are owned by corporations. Prison is a for profit business in USA.
@PsychForCinema15 күн бұрын
That's because Prison is a labor camp. Probation is designed to rearrest you, the system is not designed to rehabilitate, America holds the world's largest prison population, and it has a lot to do with generational and racial oppression. There's a 5-minute video on my channel if you want to know more.
@rebeccasnell295312 күн бұрын
@@PsychForCinemado inmates have access to psychotherapy so that they can get help for their messed up mentalities?
@316LVM7 күн бұрын
Because prisons aren't about rehabilitation. It's a punitive system. However, this wasn't always the case. When prisons for women were first started - it was about rehabilitation. Women were taught skills to help them find employment. Prisons were like a big dormitory - there was interaction with other inmates, children were allowed to stay with their mothers and so on. Over the years, it's changed.
@mz-ck9pw3 күн бұрын
I just love this Gentleman‘s respectful interview style.
@kristeng7040Ай бұрын
Wow the part when he prayed with them over their meal was beautiful. This was great.
@mustwereallydothisАй бұрын
"She preyed on him." LOL That poor, innocent little boy. What did she do? Show him a bit of ankle? How could he have ever been expected to resist?
@AlohaKudlaАй бұрын
People do crazy stuff when they are emotionally unstable. I interned in a law firm and had to sit in a client interview to record information when lawyer was interviewing the client. Client was 5"2 petite lady, but she was accused of stabbing her bf. So I had gone to her mother home to get some affidavit signed. Not only mom and sister refused, they wanted her to go to prison. Turns out this innocent looking lady had physically abused the sister and even knocked out mom! So do not judge book by its cover. Evil comes in every form.
@Kat-tr2igАй бұрын
I'm tired of men being washed of all responsibility and accountability, while women are always made out to be the villains. He knew EXACTLY what he was getting into.
@AlohaKudlaАй бұрын
@@Kat-tr2ig How misandrist of you! "men being washed of all responsibility" that statement would have been true few decades ago, but in 2024 it sounds like coming from a bitter hateful person.
@marixsadelfi3683Ай бұрын
@@Kat-tr2igDEFINITELY
@jammie2475Ай бұрын
@@Kat-tr2ig Exactly. If you're that weak of a man, you don't need to be in a jail full of women who are desperate to get out.
@jadelynn1703Ай бұрын
She didn't even escape the prison, she was let out by a staff member.
@curtconn8149Ай бұрын
It is escape. She left the prison without a legal release. Thus he helped her escape and served prison time himself. It is always suggested you do research or know the meaning of a word or term before posting a comment.
@tommesiacooper1258Ай бұрын
Same thing 😂 she wasn’t released.
@Kat-tr2igАй бұрын
They keep harping on how cunning and manipulative she is. I don't think she is. I think they're just really stupid and, as she said, they're embarrassed that she outsmarted them, so to save face they're painting her to be this criminal mastermind that no man could ever resist.
@jenniferf5877Ай бұрын
Why does Addie remind me of Gypsy rose? Something pathological about her
@curtconn8149Ай бұрын
@@Kat-tr2ig I watched all the documentaries and video she is in and I saw right through her. She is manipulative in my opinion and really has nothing to do with people being stupid. She was involved in the killings of those two people. She admitted to buying the weapons that were used. She further went on to get into a sexual relationship with a CO and did escape from prison. Thus, breaking another law. She is very conniving. I believe she should serve out the sentence given to her. I feel that if she is release she will attempt to get back at those who she thinks has wrong her. She is that kind of evil person
@nevadag60616 күн бұрын
26:24 man this story after hearing that 85% of the population there is mothers… it’s heartbreaking. “My daughter, she knows everything I’ve told her about it all…” no 9 year old should have to know about any of that 💔
@ToxidyXxNeziАй бұрын
I like how they make her seem like she “preyed” upon this officer who was having problems at home as if she isn’t literally in prison and at a complete disadvantage as far as power dynamics. That officer knew what he was doing. He was taking advantage of the women who would buy contraband and I guarantee she was not the only inmate this officer was sleeping with.
@Darrylizer1Ай бұрын
You must be very young or naive. She saw a weakness and exploited it in order to escape. A very very old tactic and story. She's a double murderer and psychopath. Very dangerous.
@KatB7927 күн бұрын
I agree with the first comment. I've seen men take advantage of female inmates more than once & the screws (Co's)know better, they are given so much info at training. No excuse. Plus he brought contraband into the prison & that wasn't really mentioned except by Sarah. No, I'm not an officer, I was an inmate who learned her lesson. 16yrs clean & haven't been back to jail/prison. You can change if you really want to.
@TSOrr27 күн бұрын
You realize there are some manipulative mfs in prison. They see a weakness and exploit it. Gender doesn't matter.
@Dani-lc9hq24 күн бұрын
@@Darrylizer1He knows that selling drugs and letting inmates out is wrong, he did it anyways. He may have fallen in love with her due to her manipulation but he wasn't under any coersive force or control, he was already on a criminal path and was going to make money off this. The reason she was able to manipulate him is because he seemed to have little integrity or values in the first place.
@marypenebaker898Ай бұрын
The woman who committed strong-arm robbery is more dangerous than the escapee. She actually is still putting a monetary value on her crime. 300 wasn't worth it? There are people who were strong-armed. It doesn't matter if they had 300 or 3 Rolex watches... She is a psychopath. She is the one who can manipulate anyone and any situation she is in. She is truly still a very dangerous woman.
@millana100Ай бұрын
She showed no regret and didn't seem to care.
@DanielCapers-bp6fiАй бұрын
but damn she is fine!!!
@luciag.3477Ай бұрын
That is true but she didn’t embarrass the state…the other one did 🤷🏻♀️ that’s the only reason why she’s in solitary she even said it, they said it on the news when they caught her again that they were gonna isolate her….did they all that out of embarrassment
@koolkidangel18Ай бұрын
Exactly. She seems so sweet. But then you have to remember sweet people don't end up in prison
@YouTubeUzernameАй бұрын
She admitted that it was a bad decision, what more is there to say?
@NotFalling4itАй бұрын
Trevor McDonald is by far the best documentary maker and interviewer in the 21st century. People like him are so rare and I wish he was a role model for all black people instead of evil people like Diddy.
@bobedwards745528 күн бұрын
Let’s not get carried away now
@agirlisnoone595326 күн бұрын
How is this getting carried away? So many black Role models are gnarly.