Any NTers ever been to PRISON? Vol. thankful for freedom

I got fam on both sides of the fam who have done prison.

Only thing one of my cousins ever told me he said "Rikers isn't as bad as you think. That gay stuff don't go down how people think."
 
 
They put the homosexuals and transgenders together in a unit.. They all raped each other like crazy, had to separate them.
brain-freeze-o.gif
 
 
I got a couple boys in prison that said they'd rather be there than jail. My homie did a bunch of fed time in North Dakota and he said it was dope. :lol: he loved all the sports leagues now his daughters are masters at handball.

I'm good though. Not about that life.
 
I worked in Santa Ana county jail in southern California (OC) as an RN. Lotta crazy stuff...

They tazed one guy and the tazer prongs are like a fishhook, had to pry them out with tweezers.

They put the homosexuals and transgenders together in a unit.. They all raped each other like crazy, had to separate them.

Prisoners will retaliate if they really don't like their care by going on hunger strike, not eating anything.

Tons of transgender reassignment surgeries, using tax payer dollars to pay for it. Roughly 40% of the surgeries get reversed, using taxpayer dollars. If they're not reversed, taxpayer dollars to pay for the constant hormone therapy.

They really do sweeps of hookers/drug addicts/illegal immigrants.

Lot more people do Meth than you think

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/22/u...gnment-surgery-policy-for-prisoners.html?_r=0

California Is First State to Adopt Sex Reassignment Surgery Policy for Prisoners

By RICHARD PÉREZ-PEÑA OCT. 21, 2015

California has become the first state with a policy of providing sex reassignment surgery for some prison inmates, adopting a set of specific guidelines on what services it will provide to transgender prisoners, state officials and advocates for transgender people said.
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The policy, which took effect this week, grew out of a pair of successful lawsuits filed by inmates. In one, a federal court in April ordered the state to provide surgery to a prisoner, which transgender advocates hailed as a landmark victory, but the inmate was paroled while that ruling was on appeal, making the point moot.
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For Ashley Diamond, imprisonment was traumatic, and her parole plan mandates a return to the conservative Southern hometown where she had repeatedly tangled with the law.

Then, after years of fighting such requests, the state settled the other case in August, agreeing to surgery for Shiloh Quine, a convicted murderer formerly known as Rodney J. Quine, who is serving a life sentence. California’s prisons already provided hormone therapy to transgender inmates, but experts said the Quine settlement was the first time any state had agreed to taxpayer-funded surgical reassignment for an inmate.

The new guidelines grew out of that settlement.

“California has set a model for the country,” said Kris Hayashi, executive director of the Transgender Law Center, a San Francisco-based group that represented the inmates in both cases. “This is care that, for too long, people have been denied simply because of who they are. It’s especially important because transgender people are incarcerated at six times the rate of the general population.”

Under the new policy, the state will cover mastectomies as well as operations to remove and reconstruct reproductive organs. But it will not cover services the state considers cosmetic, including breast implants or procedures or drugs for hair removal or hair growth.

A review committee of doctors and psychologists will decide whether to allow surgery, based on a prisoner’s physical and mental condition. And a request will be granted only if an inmate has more than two years left to serve before parole is expected; “has continuously manifested a desire to live and be accepted” with a particular sexual identity, including a desire for surgery, for two years; and has lived as a member of that sex, with hormone therapy, for a year.

“They’re pretty conservative criteria — the inmate doesn’t just request surgery and then get it,” said Joyce Hayhoe, legislative and communications director for the independent agency that oversees prison medical care.

The agency, California Correctional Health Care Services, is run by a court-appointed receiver who reports to a federal judge, under a 2002 court finding that medical services in the state’s prisons were inadequate. The new policy was drafted by that agency and the state Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation, which still controls prison mental health care.

It is not clear how many people will take advantage of the new policy. Most transgender people opt not to have surgery, while many others have breast surgery but not genital operations.

Out of 125,000 inmates in the California system, 400 are being treated for gender dysphoria, the condition of not identifying as the sex indicated by bodily organs, Ms. Hayhoe said. She said that gender reassignment operations and related care for one inmate could cost $50,000 to $100,000, compared with $500 to $3,000 a year for hormone therapy alone.

A string of lawsuits around the country has tried to push prison systems into recognizing gender dysphoria as a medical condition requiring particular accommodations, and in one case chronicled in The New York Times, the Justice Department weighed in, siding with the prisoner. Virginia and Georgia have both paroled inmates seeking surgery before their cases could be resolved in the courts.

Whether to provide surgery is not the only issue in such cases, nor is it the most basic. Some states have provided hormone therapy to transgender inmates, but others have not. And some house transgender prisoners according to the sex they identify as or make special arrangements for them, while others do not, which advocates say puts them at grave risk of being victimized.

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I would believe the person who works in the prison over anyone else. You know how hey lie to cover things up out here.

Who would cover this up? And conservatives would have been flipping their **** if they had any evidence of this.

Dude straight up made it up, probably for folk to be outraged.
 
I been in prison since February i was in the Feds in Lompoc it isn't bad never saw any rape a lot of Jared types walking around with there head down thou
 
I got a homie who's locked up in prison right now. For being an accessory to murder, he got a hold of a cell phone and posts pictures of him on Facebook, in his unit where he takes photos you can see guys showering in the background. . He's been in since 05-06.


P.m. Me for pictures
 
I would believe the person who works in the prison over anyone else. You know how hey lie to cover things up out here.

Who would cover this up? And conservatives would have been flipping their **** if they had any evidence of this.

Dude straight up made it up, probably for folk to be outraged.

I understood it wrong maybe. I thought they were turning transformers back to males to avoid disruption which wouldn't surprise me in the least.
 
I work for la county jail and i cant speak on that dude from santa ana but we dont do sex change surgeries.

Although, there is a whole floor dedicated to gay/******s (k6g) population and they do get hormone therapy (pills/injections) that are paid out of our tax dollars :smh:

Not surgeries doe
 
I been in prison since February i was in the Feds in Lompoc it isn't bad never saw any rape a lot of Jared types walking around with there head down thou
fed prison doesn't go hard...

feds send violent offenders to supermax
 
Dade county jail once and tgk twice .....just spent the night all 3 times ...first one in dcj was 7 years ago for xanax bars , last 2 for reckless driving (130 mph+) both times ....stupid i know im more mature now and dont speed and i legit understand that i can hurt myself and even worse others ....dont want to go back , dont have stories luckily i wasnt in there long enough just a lot of us waiting to get booked and then just the waiting game since i knew bail was posted
 
Do we have any ex cons, predicate felons or any other folks who been locked up on here? It's thanksgiving, so i want everyone to be thankful for your freedom. Because someones in jail right now while their family is enjoying life on the outside.

With that being said, any NTers ever been locked up? What were you in for? How long did you serve? What jail/prison did you serve in? How was it?
The answer is obviously no.....NT members aint bout dat life.

We like hanging on the internet and collecting shoes and talking about fashion and other goofy ****.

Aint no OGs, killas, street factors or Freeway Ricks hanging out on a site called Nike Talk....
 
Are we talking about PRISON, like doing a bid or jail?

The county/city jail =/= Prison.

I've been to jail a few times, never in the pen, doe.

Never that.
 
Jeff - "got promoted recently, wife and i moved to a nice house near the city 8)"

Rick - " thats great man....laura and i just moved as well...shes 8 months along...gettin big "

Jeff - " oh WOW is it a boy or a girl??

Rick - " a boy :smokin i told laura hes gonna be an athlete like his old man "

Jeff - " so the kids not yours huh???

Jeff and rick - " hahaha hahaha"

Rick - "still bustin balls like the old days huh?"

Jeff - "you know it brother " ( sips miller light)

Rick - " what about you Tony? What have you been up to the last couple of years? ?"

Tony - " i was locked up in rikers for the last 8 years"

Jeff - "sonofa***** :smokin
 
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Ohhhh jail isn't nothin to play with. Depends where you are and what side you're on. Felony or not. Jail gets sketchy as hell. Especially when you don't know when you're seeing a judge. That is not fun at all.
 
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I did a prison bid back in 06-07, for aggravated battery, it was straight. I was at indian river correctional institute, which is closed down now. A lot of fighting, a lot of pranks being pulled, a bunch of games played and bets being made, drugs being used, but a whole lot of fighting. Like, I made the best of a bad experience, but I wouldn't want to relive it. I can see how dudes become habitual offenders. I ain't going back though....
 
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