In Florida, inmates serving life without parole are assigned permanent inmate numbers that remain with them until death, and they are required to work in prison labor programs, often performing agricultural tasks like farming for minimal compensation, which raises questions about the system's purpose and treatment of incarcerated individuals.
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Julio Foolio Trial Ends | What You Thought PatreonAdded:
Who would hold your foot in your wrench?
Oh, [ __ ] No, that's the Um The dude that died, right? When I see you, remember? And And Flo went to the grave site. It was Oh.
Finally caught that and burnt him.
So, the killers So, the killers on trial and they basically are being sentenced to life or death. Jesus. And then like they're reading the guy like basically they're talking to the wardens of the jail and they're like, "Nah, he's a healthy young man. We're going to get the most out of him in the prison system."
>> Woah.
>> [laughter] >> I didn't hear that. Jesus.
>> [laughter] >> Nah, he's healthy. He has some solid years left for Yes. Yes. Say death.
Jesus. Nah, we got Say death.
We are about to wild out in this prison I hate to You got to You got to wild out when you They going to catch mad homies.
Just so they just kill you already. Yo, said we got time for something. Well, no, let's wait. We got work for him to do. That is crazy. But what is he doing in there? What No, he walked through the whole process. They said that he'll be assigned a number. His number will be 1 2 3 and that'll be his number for the rest of his life. When he dies, his number will still be 1 2 3.
>> like some weird Django [ __ ] Like, what are What are they doing with him? work abilities, things like that. Do you think that the prison would benefit from him in a work capacity if he were sentenced to life without parole? I say yes with my experience, not only just in classification, but as former warden and even as a jail administrator. He's someone that's young.
Um he's healthy.
Um in reality, we need that labor. We need that um sweat equity. And we would put him out there to work because we do have an aging prison population, jail administration. We have that. So, we put these young individuals to work and get some sweat equity out of them since they are young and actually can do the work.
And then we talk about life without parole and death row, but for our jurors' education, in Florida, what does a life sentence without parole mean?
A life sentence in the Florida Department of Corrections means from the minute they're brought in, they're assigned an inmate number.
He will be assigned an inmate number and when he dies and leaves in a body bag, he will still have that inmate number. An inmate serving life will never ever get out. There is no parole in the state of Florida and they're not ever allowed outside the razor wire and the fence of the secure facility.
>> like he looks scared straight.
So, the only way that an inmate serving life without parole would leave is when they die by natural causes.
That's the game you play, right? So, you got to got to show that so the kids see it. Got to know.
>> He was the one who was chasing the car, shooting the car.
>> Yeah, but I mean, that's what is necessary for the kids to see. That's what happens. That's real. The real life. That's the real life. That's what happens.
Sweat equity we need for that young man.
Like, if that don't deter you from maybe I don't need to shoot this cuz we just I just disagree with you.
I don't feel like what you said deserves for you to die or me to die or for either one of us to go sit over there for the sweat equity this fat old freak talking about. What work are they putting them to? I don't know. I think down south They actually have like day laborers in the right? So, now they go out and farm and do [ __ ] like that in the field, real talk. Oh, like like slaves. I don't know if it's slaves, man. I don't think anything similar to slavery but slavery.
But, it's um It's working for for pennies.
Literally.
Like outside Like look up on that that that that camp that Boosie was in in Louisiana.
>> Like, if you work for a year, you could you could buy like a a bottle of water.
>> of a decent bottle of water.
Oodles and noodles don't come in a bottle like Reggie. This is This is It doesn't. Like it's like the the container. Oh.
No? He said it comes in a bottle.
It comes in a container.
>> Look up that Louisiana prison that Boosie was A bottle is crazy. If you eating noodles out of a bottle >> That's what I You was eating >> it's literally a cup of noodles, right?
It comes Oh no, we don't eat those. I eat oodles and noodles like the pack. I don't eat the cup [ __ ] That shit's trash, but live. I I'm not eating eating >> Angola Angola Oh, Angola What So what do they do as far as to answer Reggie's question?
What's the like the day labor? The the the actual job they do in there cuz I've seen them [ __ ] tilling the land like >> specifically, what are they doing? It's the same [ __ ] It's the same type of work. They outside tilling land like [ __ ] like on a farm.
>> I feel like Louisiana is probably different like it's state by state.
Whatever they got going on is probably different.
>> Maybe, let's see. See these [ __ ] is harvesting crops, cotton, soybean, sugar cane.
>> 2 cents per hour.
And sugar cane. Mhm?
They going to work a lot of hours. Yeah, but how is that even funny, my [ __ ] Come on, man. And [ __ ] is riding around on horseback with like whips and [ __ ] like >> Yes.
And imagine the [ __ ] that die >> [ __ ] is dead on the horse. Now imagine the [ __ ] that die per day.
That's crazy. [ __ ] is wild. But I I feel like kids cuz like think about it. You 40, you ain't know this happens. I think [ __ ] need to see this.
Yeah, I I I I I I I I I Young [ __ ] need to know that this is a thing, man.
That's what you want to spend your life for, my [ __ ] You hate that [ __ ] that much?
You feel me?
Yeah. I don't hate I don't hate I don't hate a [ __ ] that much. I mean it's a it's a system that's basically built for like cuz we was talking about it earlier. It's a system built to feed people into like this. Like pause. Like they call it like the the the prison blink line for a purp for a reason. Mhm. Like they actually I think they did like a a article where they use standardized standardized testing in schools to determine how many jails to build in a area.
Yeah, it's unfortunate, man, but it's like it's what it is. We have we all have the same decisions to make. So, regardless of your education level Of course, there's no responsibility.
>> then you still got to make some better choices when you grow up, dog.
It's just what it is. [ __ ] robbed the crib. Remember I told you I ain't killing a [ __ ] in there if I get if I can get away with it and keep my family safe I'mma do it just enough to where you live and I live and everybody goes home. You are right. Right? If I have to take a life, I really don't ever want to in my life.
>> Nobody does.
>> But if I have to, I had to, son. I I didn't have a choice. I'm trying to get out of this with both I don't want I hate jail, son. [ __ ] is trash. [ __ ] make it seem like it oh, it's nothing like it's part of your life and then at some point it is. At some point for some certain people for most people there will be a time that you have to spend, but I really enjoy my life now. So, I realized how how almost insane I became at one point to where this was just natural. It was going to become a relative like almost easy thing to do.
Right?
>> I just got to You expected it. Yeah, and it's like it's just a time of your life that you have to go away and you just got to You know what I'm saying? You just got to deal with it.
But um now I realize how that's almost insanity, my [ __ ] To expect that and accept it is is insane. And nah, I'm not doing it. That [ __ ] is trash, my [ __ ] That [ __ ] is whack as a call. Corny way to to live and then you're leaving your loved ones out here to survive on their own. [ __ ] is selfish. So, do what you got to do to stay out. You know what I'm saying? But um Especially when they hit you with a L. Come on, man. Yeah.
I can't even imagine some [ __ ] like that. That don't make sense.
And it's crazy cuz at the time it was like yo, if that was to happen, that's what it was, right? That's [ __ ] insane to think of. I don't even think about that [ __ ] >> [laughter] >> I don't even think about it till you're in court cuz they show all the videos of [ __ ] actually getting the sentencing and then when it hits you when [ __ ] says life and Did you see that that young boy? Yeah.
There was none of that? No, him like I mean [ __ ] was a soldier, you seen him?
Yeah. He was a soldier, he took the time.
They said now you going to you going to you going to sweat. There was another [ __ ] from the same case though that freaked out, started crying. I believe it. I believe it, but some was a soldier. Yeah. What you tell me what you thought, [music] what you thinking, what you thought.
What you thought.
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