It's commendable that this man is openly sharing his past criminal life, including the crimes he committed and his prison activities. Many people are reluctant to discuss their past so candidly. It's also notable that he communicates his experiences using appropriate language, avoiding slang or swearing. This suggests he has a deep understanding of his past mistakes and is dedicated to guiding the younger generation away from the same errors he made in his youth.
@danandlaura7073 ай бұрын
❤❤❤❤
@Alex-mh7ql2 ай бұрын
He's bragging you div
@Outofthebox5182 ай бұрын
Not true
@TaiChiRehab2 ай бұрын
Are you saying a Bull Shi%er doesnt use appropriate language, avoids slang or swearing??
@superwario2741Ай бұрын
Ummm no. He's a murderer.
@lazzala49763 ай бұрын
I was in woodhill with this bruva in 2010 and he is the exact same he spoke wise facts to me and was trying to talk the youngers on the wing about change and positivity bless up mr smith more life 👏👏👊
@DonHavjuan4 ай бұрын
These instructional videos are great.
@cconnon19124 ай бұрын
The policeman writing and adding to his book is amazing. Both of these men are an example of class. Society should take more time to learn by observation.
@trivial504 ай бұрын
His regret is staying in prison not killing two innocent people. What a terrible person.
@InsertCleverUsername4 ай бұрын
@@trivial50 At the end he literally said he regretted the shooting and is amazed the victims later met with him and forgave him. I can't fault anyone who has been to prison and regretted it, better than them going to prison and not caring only to inflict more terrible behaviour on others once they get out.
@joanne99164 ай бұрын
@@trivial50 He wounded them, so different story.
@DailyCorvid10 күн бұрын
Three guesses what religion spawned this shameless murdering psychopath.
@adamdudley87364 ай бұрын
That is insane to ban books
@DavidKArrrrgh4 ай бұрын
It’s also untrue
@ethanpen34704 ай бұрын
It is insane to shoot people. To deal drugs.
@Glavrrr4 ай бұрын
@@DavidKArrrrgh ?
@bleedingpepper4 ай бұрын
@@DavidKArrrrgh The story is more nuanced than this. The ban was on prisoners receiving books from the outside from say, family and friends. Prisoners were expected to earn the right to acquire money through prison jobs and good behaviour which could be used to buy books. The other issue is that prison libraries were subject to massive cuts just like all public services, so what prisoners had access to were much more limited (apparently prison libraries are directly funded by the Local Authority where the prison is located). The High Court eventually ruled that this was unlawful, so it was reversed. This all happened around 10 years ago.
@adamdudley87364 ай бұрын
@@bleedingpepper I see. Interesting. I have been through the prison system in Texas but never the UK or anywhere like that. That’s basically one of the only freedoms you really have left, is being able to go to the “library” or have your peeps send you any book that you want to read
@Dustinwhy84 ай бұрын
Honest. Flawed. Amazing story teller. Excellent watch.
@darrengeorge13964 ай бұрын
💯
@nadk88863 ай бұрын
Yes I agree. I wish this interview was longer
@YourLoyalHighness874 ай бұрын
18:30 the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever heard is taking books away from anyone. In prison or not.
@charlescook76634 ай бұрын
@YourLoyalHighness87 they never emptied the prison libraries, they stopped books being sent in by family or friends, reason being the pages were being soaked with various drugs.
@YourLoyalHighness874 ай бұрын
@@charlescook7663 oh. Well the clarification is very important lol thank you. THAT makes a ton of sense!
@random-person14 ай бұрын
@charlescook7663 Actually, that's not strictly true either. They did ban books from being sent in, but only to those known for doing drugs, either inside or on civvy. They randomly tested books, mags, and whatever else came in paper. But to be fair, you can tell if a piece of paper has been dried. Eventually, the prison service allowed you to have up to £300 in your personal account. Then you got your own stuff out of the argos catalogue right to your cell door.
@charlescook76633 ай бұрын
@@random-person1 I've been through the system, banning books was a home office desion, it was a blanket ban, it never targeted known drug users, if you've done any bird you would know that drug use in prison is rampant, don't want to burst your bubble fella, just get your facts right.
@random-person13 ай бұрын
@charlescook7663 I was in during the 80s and 90s when you didn't even have a sink in your pad, let alone a toilet, so I think I should know my facts. When the ban came in, they targeted the druggies of all known. That didn't work, so within 2 months, they shut the lot down. I was inside at the time, mate, just about to be ghosted because I was personal friends with one of the gov grades up to Shrewsbury one wing! Turned out okay though cuz I got sudbury country club and working on the gardens.
@Hhbb.94 ай бұрын
Ive read his book it was quite interesting, I met him in HMP Pentonville he was a very respectful person. Love that hes doing good for himself.
@Outofthebox5184 ай бұрын
Thanks brother blessings
@ytsm4 ай бұрын
@@Outofthebox518That was fascinating to watch and you're clearly an intelligent guy, so it's great that you've turned your life around and are helping others. I wish you well.
@adamsharrocks82123 ай бұрын
The two Police Officers 'got shot'. Amazing use of passive voice there.
@finncullen12 күн бұрын
I read a newspaper article once about a guy who had laid in wait to attack a young woman and ended up blinding her with a knife. The newspaper article was written entirely like this and included the phrase "during the scuffle she lost an eye". Bloody careless of her, eh? She shouldn't have been scuffling. I thought at the time that "During the unprovoked assault he gouged out her eye" would be a better way of phrasing it, but then again I'm not a newspaper editor.
@aaronafful-dd5dbСағат бұрын
Poetic justice
@SidneyDaniellson3 ай бұрын
That’s amazing, the officer forgiving you and adding a part of the book. You’re a real inspiration. The roads been tough but it was onto a greater road. May the Most High continue to bless you bro
@soberhippie4 ай бұрын
It's weird that the police moves the prisoners around all the prisons, so that they get to know each other, network, come up with more ideas
@geordieal91874 ай бұрын
I think it’s done to stop over familiarity and potential for people to dominate or run wings and the like
@123benley4 ай бұрын
Prison is a training ground as it is between inmates. You can learn alsorts.
@nailbakiev89143 ай бұрын
British prisoners are moved between prisons to manage overcrowding and ensure security. Without these moves, some prisons might become too full, and it could be harder to maintain order.
@aaronafful-dd5db59 минут бұрын
Is it the police that move anyone around the prisons? Is that the job of the police? And is it so ideas can whatever be exchanged of learned ?
@VictorRamirez-up5th4 ай бұрын
This man is the real life Dushane
@poopinlumpy4 ай бұрын
Who is Dushane?
@bobmiah4 ай бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂
@lorrainearmitage43313 ай бұрын
we're is sully
@JAMESLOONEY-kd1nuАй бұрын
Who calls their child dushane😅 probably tiana who lives on the 20th floor of a block in Croydon
@JAMESLOONEY-kd1nuАй бұрын
@@lorrainearmitage4331looking for mulder
@ChromaticsMusic3 ай бұрын
Best Episode Ive seen of “How Crime Works”
@TheJohnskinner3 ай бұрын
The power of forgiveness is a wonderful thing. God bless you brother
@jokipls4 ай бұрын
Subcontracting hits is a wild concept to me.
@geordieal91874 ай бұрын
What a great insight delivered by a man who speaks so well and has become a real asset to society in passing down his story to the younger generation. Well done- and the copper must be a very good man 👌👍
@Coffee_Caffeine4 ай бұрын
It’s soo interesting to watch these type of videos and see what actually happens.
@andrewadams40584 ай бұрын
Respect brother Leroy your as real as it gets and having spent many years in dispersal up and down the country with you and all these years later still checking on eachother is amazing your an inspiration and tell it how it is see you soon family Your Geordie pal Andy
@geordieal91874 ай бұрын
Yes Andy Adam’s I hear is doing well after he served a long sentence from being in his early 20’s - 17 years which transpired was a wrongful conviction…
@andrewadams40584 ай бұрын
@@geordieal9187 thankyou people are fitted up and made to fight for they're life despite no evidence just the use of informants professional liars paid and given new identities no forensics no eye witnesses no gun in my case and many others like Warren Slaney ,Kev Lane Mickey Steele to name a few the British justice system is Tottenham to the core they are the real gangsters the biggest firm FREE WARREN SLANEY
@andrewadams40582 ай бұрын
@@geordieal9187 hello sorry for delay in getting back to you were we in the jail together what part of the north east are you based
@MCS2104Ай бұрын
Same guy slagging Wozza off soon shut his mouth when I put it up to him.
@cmoore77804 ай бұрын
Thank you for this video and sir. Thank you for writing this book. I just ordered it. You’re very well spoken and seem to know what you’re talking about.
@3BK235Y4 ай бұрын
When a crininal talks about crime he knows what he is talking about.
@videocomments86964 ай бұрын
Wow. Absolutely amazing interview. Well done and god speed.
@sunflowerbadger2 ай бұрын
Amazing story. So much respect for what you're doing now. ❤
@houhou84899 күн бұрын
Great interview. Thanks 🎉
@simonspoke4 ай бұрын
Would be interesting to know how first-time offenders are treated and what their experience is like in UK prisons from cat A-D.
@DionysusOsiris404 ай бұрын
In my experience, first time offenders are generally treated better by the staff & system, although not necessarily by other prisoners. Most notably, people are paired up with those deemed similar, so a 1st timer convicted of a non-violent offence would expect to share a cell with another non-violent newbie rather than a rowdy career criminal. Beyond that, provided you behave, are respectful towards staff, maintain hygiene and seek out legitimate opportunities, you will fare better than ~80% of other prisoners regardless of criminal record (nonces and grasses excluded). Things like your offence, length of your sentence, and how you navigate jail ‘politics’, also play a big role with the more charismatic, long termers getting more favours in general.
@simonspoke4 ай бұрын
@@DionysusOsiris40 Thank for the info. Would be great to see a range of people telling their experiences on camera though.
@simonspoke4 ай бұрын
@@skitzykitten6659 I guess the idea they have is prison is about punishment, not a place to feel comfortable. 🤷
@markbaker44254 ай бұрын
Everyone i know who went to prison said it was boring asf and everyone left you alone if you werent in a gsng or a nonce.
@smith27814 ай бұрын
Unfortunately I’ve had that experience I started off in a young offenders which was a Cat A and it was brutal. This was in the year 2000, the staff were nasty a lot of them were ex military they were hard but fair. The others though just got off on making your life miserable. One officer said he’ll break my jaw because I asked him on my first morning for stuff to clean my cell with. If you got on their nerves they would put you in a cell with a violent offender and then place bets. They did it to one guy who kept kicking off because he wanted to go back to a jail up north. The guy was a known racist so they put an Asian lad in the cell with him to wind him up. He ended up beating him to ☠️ the night before he was due to get released. I ended going to court and going to another young offenders which wasn’t as bad but you still had to fight to prove yourself. I then turned 21 and went to an adult cat B prison. It was like night and day the adults were much more laid back and people looked out for me because I was young. You had tv and kettles in the cell which made such a difference. I only see 3 fights the whole time I was there. But hangings were quite common though the guy in the cell next to me did it one night and we got interviewed the next morning on what we heard and how he was the last time we see him etc. The cat c I was in the violence was more frequent and there were a lot more drugs in there. Most people did just weed which chilled everyone out, but the smack heads caused the most issues by stealing so they got dealt with for that. The D cat I went to was a godsend. I did a plumbing course in there and had all the help and support I needed for when I got out. I’ve been a plumber ever since and I’m married now with 2 kids my son starts university next month so I’m very proud of that. If people got the opportunity and support I did in a D cat then a lot more people would turn their lives around. But I’ve heard prison is very different now. I’ve heard it’s full of spice which has caused no end of problems. Most of the staff are female which has caused corruption and affairs etc. Plus budget cuts means that people are locked in their cells for 23 hours a day. I know this is a long reply but I’ve barely scratched the surface.
@KlashnekoffTV4 ай бұрын
Powerful interview!
@GeteP2 ай бұрын
This was brilliant thank you. Pete 🏴
@rationalreasoning56124 ай бұрын
This was brief, but I really enjoyed the listen/view. Love to hear a redemptive arc like this. I wish him and the policeman well.
@pierregodeau42862 ай бұрын
Well spoken chap. Nice video.
@alexbrooks22354 ай бұрын
You and the police officer story was awesome man - and agree spice is just ruining people.
@Djupadalar3 ай бұрын
Muslim gangs are HUGE in UK prisons . Not sure why he lied about that one.
@skindred18883 ай бұрын
Christian gangs are even bigger😂
@nitrolz89932 ай бұрын
You’re mixing things up. Muslims will help eachother because that is brotherhood in Islam, does not make it a gang. There may be Muslim men in gangs, but there’s not “Muslim gangs” do u know how silly that sounds
@Djupadalar2 ай бұрын
@@nitrolz8993 There most definitely is. You don’t know what you’re on about
@DailyCorvid10 күн бұрын
Muslims are 90% of the prison population, never trust a word said by any one of them,
@BaldMancTwat8 күн бұрын
@@nitrolz8993 He literally said that if you're not religious in prison then it will be much harder for you, that implies that many people inside prison are essentially forced to convert to whatever religion they need to in order to live well.
@LetsAvYa..4 ай бұрын
When he said that rapist guy got shipped off the wing before they found out. I had that same in YOI in with some guy who nonsed his little sisiter. Everyone found out but by the time association hit, the guy had already been ghosted off the wing...
@the_birthday_skeleton4 ай бұрын
Can we get like an orderly or maybe even a former patient/inmate from a UK Criminal Psychiatric Hospital like broadmoor or some other such institution? Thanks, really liked this one. As a British citizen I’m very interested in how UK Institutions such a prisons and psychiatric facilities are run. Keep up the great content 👍
@1888-til-infinity4 ай бұрын
Those prisons are designed to turn them into loonies and crackheads unfortunately
@Lucy-ek6ne4 ай бұрын
Look up Ben hatchet he was in broadmoor psychiatric hospital.
@the_birthday_skeleton4 ай бұрын
@@Lucy-ek6ne cheers mate
@onlythereal51244 ай бұрын
I worked at rampton…
@zappa-happy4 ай бұрын
Awesome interview full of common sense and insight. Thank you :))
@nailbakiev89143 ай бұрын
The British government banned books in prisons to stop prisoners from getting illegal items hidden in books. If they hadn’t banned books, there was a concern that contraband could have continued to enter prisons more easily.
@vanwilljamz3 ай бұрын
Didn’t quite work that and there’s an easy solution. Check the books before they are given over.
@DailyCorvid10 күн бұрын
@@vanwilljamz They don't read them anyway
@michaelstevens294516 күн бұрын
Yeah I enjoyed this one , I think he gave a great perspective on the UK prison system and thew his own experiences, detailed areas that needed attention , I also liked how his story came full circle with the police officer that he shot meeting him and them forgiving each other , you could actually see what that ment to him 😉 Great little show 👍
@TheBigste788 күн бұрын
Well done mate
@aaronafful-dd5dbСағат бұрын
Wow. Very interesting and touching and raw.
@TheStowAway5944 ай бұрын
"my family abandoned me" nah you abandoned them by doing whatever you wanted, which put them all at risk, held back their careers, and I'm sure the police had them under surveillance trying to find you. And then you expect them to put money on your books? Yeah I don't think so. Anyway Happy to see you are getting your life together, and that cop is amazing.
@wingerding4 ай бұрын
How do you know he held back their careers?
@LeonMortgageАй бұрын
@@wingerdingbecause that's what being a criminal does to your family
@NtandokaziDlamini-ey9jj4 ай бұрын
Can you guys invite a member of The Numbers Prison Gang from South Africa.
@the_birthday_skeleton4 ай бұрын
That would be a wiiiiild one! Yes I second the notion in the ocean 🌊
@joshgee87144 ай бұрын
" I look him in the eye and I f..K him"
@am-13874 ай бұрын
Very nice story, I am glad he has changed his life around.
@GeorgeButterworth-e7q3 ай бұрын
The power of education to transform the individual is evident in this young man. You can tell that to be forgiven means so much to him.
@grumsta4 ай бұрын
This is a great series. Do one on darknet/online drug markets/dealers.
@kokop11074 ай бұрын
Yeah there's this channel called DoingFedTime, he was caught and sentenced so might be interesting to see him here
@geordieal91874 ай бұрын
I looked on the dark web the other day and all of the drug selling sites have been shut down, all the big ones are gone !!!
@andrewadams40582 ай бұрын
@@geordieal9187 bro if you are based in newcastle I'd like to hook up with you to ask you something I wont be offended if you say no but something you mentioned caught my attention
@JohnHausser4 ай бұрын
🇨🇦 prisons edition would be fun to watch 😂
@ExtraThiccc4 ай бұрын
The unlicensed maple syrup trade in those prisons is prolly wild
@jodycarter73084 ай бұрын
Pretty much the same. Google millhaven mafia, or warden, hank neufeld.
@lolsuuu34 ай бұрын
@@jodycarter7308 nah there are no canadian bad ppl these guys are fake canadians (obv a joke but idk there are some weird ppl on yt that cant comprehand jokes)
@ravikhan7324 ай бұрын
They be screaming free friend free guy free buddy
@thumperrabbit68484 ай бұрын
Prison in Canada is a joke ..
@heistrawberry75784 ай бұрын
Amazing story. Glad he made a positive change with his partner.
@olliec13194 ай бұрын
He's a thoughtful and articulate guy. I just wonder what he could have become if he wasn't into drug dealing and robberies in his youth.
@plugk35573 ай бұрын
Its all about environment and having a good father figure. If your born in a bad environment and dont have a father, no matter how smart you are more than likely you will fall to the same fate.
@mbpaintballa4 ай бұрын
his regret is the loss of his time..... not the harm he caused
@bleedingpepper4 ай бұрын
If you watch the whole video you'll see that he does feel guilt about shooting the officer. 19:07
@mbpaintballa4 ай бұрын
@@bleedingpepper again he feels guilt about getting caught
@bleedingpepper4 ай бұрын
@@mbpaintballa No, once again, you need to watch the video. I even included a timestamp for you so you have the opportunity to learn rather than make stuff up.
@mbpaintballa4 ай бұрын
@@bleedingpepper his own words man..... He only "cares" because he has caught.
@bleedingpepper4 ай бұрын
@@mbpaintballa Again, if you bothered to watch the whole video you'll see that he is trying to make a life for himself outside of crime, and does alot of youth work. But hey, don't let reality convince you from your own words.
@spanishmontana61214 ай бұрын
From Faithless Insomnia to prison
@lorrainearmitage43313 ай бұрын
🤣🤣🤣🤣I can't get no sleep
@LOCATION_REDACTEDАй бұрын
There’s only so much play the BBC can fit into a gritty drama.
@sarahb.16024 ай бұрын
Super interesting video. Side note: thank you for not having the whirring sounds during the section title bits anymore. ❤
@MattWalkerLoth4 ай бұрын
“Done just enough to survive” this guy is an alternate reality. Did he not say that he was selling drugs, earning a few hundred pound a week in jail, and he sold a phone for a Rolex. Who needs a few hundred a week in jail to survive when your 3 meals a day are free? Who needs a Rolex?
@MattWalkerLoth4 ай бұрын
& he calls himself a Muslim lol but smokes and sells drugs, does all the other horrible things like killing but is a Muslim hahahaha sure
@Outofthebox5184 ай бұрын
Prison food is not nice so if you can cook your own that’s what your gonna want to do has for Rolex you don’t need it but I like them and I was real anoth to be able to wear it in there with out it getting robbed from me that was my reality back the brother yr if you read my book it will give you more insight blessings
@LOCATION_REDACTEDАй бұрын
They’re not in prison for their understanding of situations.
@user-NazSheker4 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your experience with us ❤
@kidblack074 ай бұрын
GREAT INTERVIEW
@PoppyOak4 ай бұрын
It’s telling how he only expressed regret for what he lost by his criminal acts and none for his victims like the two police officers he shot. He’s not sorry he was bad, he’s only sorry he got caught. Terrible person.
@davidhamilton64284 ай бұрын
Stop watching after I read your comment. Your were correct. He didn't show any remorse. Scumbag.
@Patrick-oe1jj4 ай бұрын
A high rate of Islamic conversation is happening in prison. Both for positive and negative reasons
@TheTyke4 ай бұрын
There is no positive reason to convert to that.
@dapopo12494 ай бұрын
@@TheTykedevoting ones life to god is a negative, ill be sure to pass that on to the 7 billion other theists on earth
@aleksiwilson22957 күн бұрын
yeah they force people to convert and extort and beat those who dont
@menow79034 ай бұрын
'A big chunk of my life has just gone'. And there you have it. I hope that God comes into your life.
@notmenotme6144 ай бұрын
I wonder how many prison officers are responsible for the contraband been smuggled in?
@geordieal91874 ай бұрын
I’d estimate that 90% of drugs come into prisons with prison officers- I hear 500 quid a week some are supposedly getting
@BaldMancTwat8 күн бұрын
Sell a box of ciggarettes for £1000 you'd be silly not to.
@minionofgozer74143 ай бұрын
I enjoyed this guys story, very much a case of misplaced youth and deep regret. The fact the police officer he shot is now a friend of his, and a writing and speaking partner is incredible. Inspiring really 🤷♂️
@_athlander4 ай бұрын
He dominated them with THE ESSENCE OF WING CHUNNNN!!!!
@sonykusumasmoro68114 ай бұрын
next episode: Kazuya Mishima
@mikitz4 ай бұрын
Sounds like being a 'hit middle man' is a great way of making money without doing anything illegal in jail.
@wingerding4 ай бұрын
Lol it’s very illegal, it’s conspiracy to commit murder. Life sentence.
@TheMrE19744 ай бұрын
does he look like he made money inside?
@abz420821 күн бұрын
@@TheMrE1974stop it😂
@RaHorakthi334 ай бұрын
bro, imagine becoming friend with the guy that tried to kill you 😂
@doyadirty38044 ай бұрын
Thats how gangsters make friends.. go jail get in beef come out rate eachother for being on it… its actually lame.. its the whole notion of you and the enemy are way more alike than you’d think.. all it takes is conversation instead of confrontation
@jhonviel73814 ай бұрын
if only women could understand that.
@mikitz4 ай бұрын
It's more common than you'd think, even if you're not in jail.
@yiweilee27154 ай бұрын
He's inspiring! glad he changed for the better and is inspiring youngsters now!
@K61r2 ай бұрын
The tape noise haunts my nightmares
@joshuaheathcote21167 күн бұрын
Was a criminal in a country where help is offered to people in difficult situation. Gets sent to jail. Acts the victim. Amazing how many criminals are just victims of the system.
@someonesomeone2511 күн бұрын
Ive never understood why the state wants this stuff inside prisons. It could easily be stopped. No gangs, drugs, violence, etc. Yet it is permitted. I can only conclude it is a choice.
@DZ604 ай бұрын
God Bless this man 🙏
@gerry23454 ай бұрын
i like this vid. Good insight and interesting.. More stories from prisoners that have learned the lessons.
@redbullvodka56963 ай бұрын
Good watch 👍
@Behind-the-bars-tv4 ай бұрын
Good interview Leroy, enjoyed that. Will have to do another interview on my channel. 💯💯
@charlesgore58272 ай бұрын
This is one thing that is so messed up with crime and criminals. Quite often these people are bloody well intelligent and could of given so much to their family, friends and community. However, it is said thst everyone deserves a 2nd chance, im not sure that i agree, but here is an example of how a second chance can turn into something life changing, and had he not lived the life that he had, he would not be able to educate and inform those who think crime is the smartest or only move to make...
@patrickbyrne50704 ай бұрын
Harry shotta got new ting
@alicjaborzyszkowska70904 ай бұрын
What a great insight! This is perhaps a naive question to ask but I am wondering...since there is so much security in all these prisons and the guards must know that the dealing etc is going on...why wouldn't they do the ultimate clearing of the prisons of all drugs, weapons etc? Sure, the inmates are armed in many instances but in the end, they are inmates so they are the ones being controlled. Is it about corruption? What makes it beneficial/ profitable for the prison authorities to keep the situation as is with all the internal crime? In the world we live in now, especially in the West, how difficult can it be to detect that someone has a phone on them? Or weed/ other substances/ Airports seem to have better security than many prisons. Just some random thoughts that have been on my mind.
@afootballballshorts91964 ай бұрын
The guards bring in the drugs sometimes I’ll be real
@alexandra38214 ай бұрын
He seems like a pretty chill dude, just made some really bad choices in the past. Great that he was able to find himself and the right path at the end!
@chrisnielsen52874 ай бұрын
Some??? My guy made bad choices every day by the sounds of it
@AkinolaWilliams4 ай бұрын
Chill until he needs money immediately. His type doesn’t delay gratification
@aleksandergjengst7824 ай бұрын
Well done walking the line after u got out man👍🔥🔥
@JourneyoftheReverted4 ай бұрын
When I was inside, my first words were I am not going to die without God. The second thing I said was I will run this prison. And thats what happened. No drugs Held my own Coached Boxing Was on the Governing committee Put my feet up and just chilled.
@ants_in_my_eyes_Wilson4 ай бұрын
Wow. My brother's been in federal prison for several years now here in the United States. They make him squat and cough any time he wants to go to the bathroom during visits. As well as before and after. So dehumanizing...
@cjaquino284 ай бұрын
Mixed feelings, really. On one hand, yes, the prison system in the US leaves much to be desired, and it is known for its corruption and the poor treatment of inmates. On the other hand, actions have consequences; on a human level, your brother doesn't deserve to be humiliated so, but (assuming he's been proven guilty of whatever charges he got) he's reaping the seeds he planted earlier in life. I know it is infuriating; I had close relatives go to prison and I live in a developing country, so our prison system is way, way worse than the US. Yet, I still abide by what I said earlier: actions have consequences.
@trippiechris18524 ай бұрын
@@cjaquino28reaping the seeds would be jail time. That is the punishment. Guards don’t get to be a judge yet they are and that’s called corruption.
@cjaquino284 ай бұрын
@@trippiechris1852 I agree. Jail time SHOULD be punishment enough, but the reality of the matter is that it is not the case. As I said, on a human level, no one should be humiliated and dehumanized. If I go to prison after being found guilty of some charges, I reaped the consequences of the actions I made that got me in locked up in the first place. Had I not made the choice of committing a crime, I wouldn't be sent to jail and suffer the mistreatment characteristic of prisons. I am not saying that OP's brother (or any other inmate) deserve to be dehumanized, because no one does. I am merely stating that had they not committed a crime, they wouldn't have been in that situation to begin with. Actions -> Consequences.
@NineInchTyrone4 ай бұрын
Orifices are used for drugs and weapons
@charlessaints4 ай бұрын
they sent me to the SHU for 3 months for farting when the CO made me cough after my visit it was worth it
@Madeinhaitii4 ай бұрын
Cheeked it?!? The crease of what?!? 😅
@nickelmouse4514 ай бұрын
He must have a very strange arsehole
@Lucy-ek6ne4 ай бұрын
🍑 😂
@Fireclaws104 ай бұрын
You did way more than was necessary in prison. You did many acts of violence just to get money for drugs. You’re very lucky that policeman lived and forgave you. You talk a lot about yourself feeling bad and your own remorse - your victims who suffered debilitating injuries at your hands, what about them?
@melissalongley9114 ай бұрын
Be proud of the person you are today,you're story is harrowing but really inspiring because you turned it all around for good
@Outofthebox5184 ай бұрын
Thanks brother check out my book
@MultiK33M14 ай бұрын
When he said “Out in the streets” I instantly thought of Welcome to Shamrock
@LeoliCat4 ай бұрын
Shamrock?? 🤣
@Jamesshep14 ай бұрын
Lmao wanna try Jamrock
@ThisIsAndrewFuller4 ай бұрын
Where’s shamrock fella 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@stephanehuguenin67754 ай бұрын
@@ThisIsAndrewFuller Ireland, duh 🙃
@sharukhshasaiyad-rt9vo3 ай бұрын
brush attached to blade is really terrifying
@ValQuinn3 ай бұрын
That point about £100 million spent to stop contraband, having absolutely no effect. So many instances like this where UK government spaffed mega cash up the wall, mostly probably gone to their rich party donors and boarding school friends in a consultancy. If they just hired people like this guy who understand the reality it'd get done 10x cheaper, and actually work.
@andrewrichards95134 ай бұрын
Before they put mesh on the windows we'd use ripped up bed sheets to pass drugs around the wings
@St_Ans4 ай бұрын
More on the REAL crime…how does corruption & white collar crime work
@dereck41874 ай бұрын
It will be water right down
@killuminatianonymous55514 ай бұрын
I would love to see these people fresh out, going from seeing no cell phones to all this technology.
@CaptainHi-Top-w5q4 ай бұрын
Unkle thank you for the video
@davidmckitty81294 ай бұрын
Respect leroy .🙏
@FlapJacks74 ай бұрын
Informative to this American. Us jails n prisons are so different yet partially the same. Guess that's life. Thanks for the content
@Jeremy-ql1or4 ай бұрын
Damn...you would not think this dude did 20 for being a hit man if you met him on the street.
@PeteRed-ig3fp4 ай бұрын
Remember that always.
@JohnGalligan-q3s4 ай бұрын
Yes mate , good on you🎉
@slickmix32554 ай бұрын
Great book by the way
@markieffmorris92634 ай бұрын
I continue to be amazed that Magic Johnson doesn’t look like this dude
@andrewdriver33184 ай бұрын
The US has a reputation for our for-profit-prison system, I think other countries use that criticism to distract from their own use. In 2016 the UK and AUS passed the US for percentage of inmates held in for-profit systems after the US Federal prison system banned the practice, but nobody talks about it and most Brits and Australians I've talked to think for-profit-prisons are just a US thing.
@BaldMancTwat8 күн бұрын
If you look at the actual statistics, the US makes far more profit from prisoners than anyone else. Literally, just read the first paragraph of the 13th amendment and you'll see the whole point of prison was to keep slaves.
@RobertK-d6z4 ай бұрын
I think you are very lucky to have getting out and I'm glad to see you have changed your life around instead of wasting it in prison i take my hat off because some in your situation can't seem to turn their lives around and keep getting locked up until their lives are nearly gone and i knew someone like this a man called Anthony BUD Armstrong when he was out i can honestly say I got on with him and liked him and he atleast got to spend his last few years outside but honestly thought he got institutionalised as he definitely could not cope with living a normal life but I also believe he could of been a very successful person if used his head properly R.I.P (BUD) ANTHONY ARMSTRONG
@Slim_45Күн бұрын
“The African crew got that name as they were from Africa” Thanks for insight..I’d have never guessed
@dapopo12494 ай бұрын
Alhamdulillah hopefully this brother is doing better now
@TwoLeftThumbs2 ай бұрын
Chris Grayling made a mess of everything he touched. How that man was allowed to be a cabinet minister defies all logic.
@Metro-K14 ай бұрын
AC are legends
@cconnon19124 ай бұрын
You should do more on white collar crime. Individuals and companies, especially in finance and insurance do really shady things.
@Ricopadilla-ll7wpАй бұрын
This mans was literally Top Boy
@billrowan19574 ай бұрын
" no Muslim gang" 😂😂😂😂😂 surrrre gotcha,,,
@gregfam62504 ай бұрын
How is it that people like this can be out in the open, without being a target of a bunch of family members seeking revenge?
@kieranreid314 ай бұрын
Because he wont live in the same areas
@Outofthebox5184 ай бұрын
I have to know to myself that that can happen and live my life in a way that makes it very hard for anyone to do anything negative to me blessings