This video exposes how systemic corruption turns guards into the primary catalysts for the very violence they are supposed to prevent. It is a damning look at a system that prioritizes exploitation over rehabilitation.
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Prison guard played with that pack ...an the Lil homie snappedAñadido:
What's up, foundation? What's up, foundation? What's up, foundation?
Finish me, your big partner. Tony Tony Tony, man. God been working on me, man, since I was born.
And don't forget, man. And don't forget, man. Don't forget, I represent Jesus Christ. I represent Jesus Christ.
What's up, Foundation?
What's up, YouTube? Man, it's me, your big partner, Tony. I'm back again. Back again. Back again. Well, We going back into the prison, y'all. We going back into the prison.
Let me tell y'all something.
You got a lot of police that play games.
They let the authority go to their heads, y'all. They they they they forget that just because you got a prison number that you more than just that prison number. They forget that you still a man just because you have a prison number and you locked up. They think that they better than you. Yeah. And a a lot of a lot of them think they better than y'all, Mike. Treat you like dirt, treat you like crap, run over you, dog you out, play games. You know what I'm saying? Now, you got a lot of police that's working in these prisons.
They in it for the money. Not. And when I say they in it for the money, not just for that uh prison check that they get every two weeks or once a month. No, they in it for the money they can get out of the inmates to a horse, a mute. They toting, y'all. You know what I'm saying? A lot of people wonder how all the dope the the the the the guns, the the the the the uh cell phones, all all the illegal stuff, contraband, they wonder how it get into the prison. The police.
The police. The police brings 80% of it in themselves.
Yeah, that's what they do. That's what they do, y'all. And they get paid well.
They make a lot of money doing it. And it goes from the lowest level as far as a kitchen steward, the the free world kitchen lady. It goes the the the free world dude working in the laundry running the laundry. It goes from that low level from them all the way up the top. all the way to the top of the chain. Dang there to the warden sometimes. Depending on what prison, depending on what state you in, all of them want a piece of the pie. All of them trying to get something, but all of them don't play fair. Some of them play games. Some of them play games and do silly stuff. They play silly games.
And then they wonder why when they play them silly games with the wrong person, they get silly prizes.
I'm going to tell you a story about when the police played silly games, they got a silly prize. But the prize wasn't so silly cuz he got towed completely out the frame. You know, man, we going back, y'all. Back Alabama back security prison, man. Now, here it is.
It's hard for a lot of these dudes to get money, man. If you don't have Alabama prisons don't pay you for doing nothing. You don't get money for working in the laundry, working in the kitchen, working in in all this and that. You know, they got one or two jobs, depending on what prison you in. You might get a couple of pennies for working out there in industry. One or two jobs. And that's not in every prison. That's only in one or two prisons in the whole state, man.
You know, so here it is. If you ain't got nobody on the street that's looking out for you, giving you nothing, it get hard. It get hard. It get real hard, man. I'm telling you. I I seen it.
That's why a lot of the stuff that go on in the Alabama prison system, it goes on cuz dudes be want to smoke, cigarettes, drink coffee, um, all type of stuff.
Whatever. Got drug habits, whatever they doing. Whatever they doing, that's what they want to do.
I used to trip on some of them cats.
Even in when I was in California prison, I used to trip on them dudes that was going through it when they couldn't have coffee or to or or tobacco. Now, that that was one thing about me. I ain't never smoked. I ain't never smoked. I ain't never smoked nothing. I smoke weed when I was younger, but I don't, you know, I ain't never smoked no cigarettes, nothing like that. I never drank coffee. It It's nasty, horrible. I told y'all hundreds of stories about, you know what I'm saying, me not letting dudes in my cell because they smoke cigarettes. I can't take the smell, you know, hurt my throat. But I've seen dudes trip out, go crazy when they having a nick attack. Now nick attack means um you know when you smoke cigarettes so long and now you been put in the hole or put in lockup cold turkey and you ain't get no tobacco, you start nicking. It's cuz you you missing that nicotine. And I've seen dudes beat the door, go crazy, fight the police, all type of wild stuff. But anyway, that's neither here nor there. So, with dudes not being able to get a lot of money in there, anytime you get your hands on a little bit of something, it's very, very crucial. It's very important. You know what I'm saying? It means a lot. So, now here it is. We was going through a time one time where dudes in the system um was beating the IRS.
Somehow some of them oldheads, them slickers, they start getting them income tax forms or whatever them type of forms they was getting and they start working it. They start working, you know, putting in dudes was getting, you know, income tax checks in prison. long as you had a address for it to go to and somehow some way to cash it. If it's a will, there's a way. Y'all know how. And they was working it, man. I'm talking about dudes was getting paid off this mess. You know what I'm saying? And they always kept it 1,500 or less where you was getting 1,500 or less back. Now, on the streets, 1,500 back on the income tax, you know, it ain't nothing, you know. But now, when you in prison and don't have nothing, $1,500 is a lot. It means something. You your head could get took completely off your shoulders and rolled down the tear for $1,500, man. So, here it is. Imagine these cats that's get that's, you know, signing up with with the with the few dudes that knew how to work it. They getting their $1,500 back. They giving them four 500 or 300 or or they paying them to do it and they walking off with the rest. Okay. My si man, he was doing his thug thistle. He signed up for it as well as I did. And when he got his money, he was happy as I don't know what. Now before the money came, it's a waiting process. A couple of weeks or whatever, he used to always sit up and talk about what he was going to do. Man, look, man. Man, I'm f to flip this, man.
I get this money back, man. I'm I'm f to make it work. I'm f to walk it like a dog, homie. Fa to drink it like a Pepsi.
I'm going to make it whoop wham and skip ba bam, you know, I'm f to do it. Okay.
Okay. I'm like, that's right. You know, he had me enthused like, yeah, I'm get down, too. I'm going make mine do something, you know. But anyway, so he settled in on he was going to get him a pack. He was going to get him a pack and he was going to get his money. He was going to get with the police that was toteen. He was gonna get him what he had to give him, get him a little something, man, start flipping it and try to come up, you know, which a lot of people, that's what a lot of people was doing.
So, I'm like, "All right, well, cool."
You know, he like, "Man, tune, you know, you need to get in with me, man." And woo woo woo. I was a little ler about it. Little ler. I figured I say, "You know what?" I told him, I said, "Man, look, I'mma let you go ahead and get down first and do what you got to do, and then if it go right, then I'mma follow suit and we'll rock it like that." that he like I am tell you man it's going to go right man woo woo woo oh boy been told for a minute and you know this police was supposed to be a reliable police you know them police get searched when they come in and they go through a lot of random searches and checks and all that but now he had the female he had two three female officers on his team that when he come in when they scan stuff and this that other when they check when they checking in police they was working with him and they knew when he was bringing something in so they was on on the cameras and on the X-ray machines and on this and that working with him and he knew how to work it cuz he breaking them off too. So boom. So this dude was supposed to be reliable. But now in the last few months he had been getting some bad reports on him, you know, getting some bad reports on him and uh you know that he you know playing games with people money and you know dope coming up shout and you know it ain't looking right, taking too long and you know to to the point to where some people had to get their money sent back. He taking a long time to send their money just you know some weird stuff was coming up on him. I didn't think it was uh cool to fool with this fool, you know. But anyway, homie, you want to really he want to flip something. He want to do something.
Plus, he want to get him a little something in for him to smoke on and all this and that. Whatever. Okay. So, he went in. He went in.
They start doing business. They start talking about it. Win this, win that, win this, win that. So, now here it is.
P. It took up his whole little 1,500.
whatever he had left. He to He He took it all up. He said he was going to get what he was going to get. He bought this, bought that, bought that, bought this, this, that, and the third. Boom.
Gave the police money. Boom.
Everything's in play now. He waiting. He waiting. So, you know, he used to talk about this every night, man. Man. Yeah.
Oh, yeah, man. Man, man. I'mma do this.
I'mma do that. It's going to go like this. It's going to go like that, man.
We I'm f to be balling. Yeah, man. I ain't gonna look back. So, you know, I was enthused. I used to be like, "That's right, homie." You know, yeah, boy. We, you know, it's gonna go down. It's going down.
One week go by.
Don't nothing show.
>> Two weeks go by, don't nothing show. Now he getting a little antsy. You know what I'm saying?
He pulling up on the police like, "Boo."
The police telling them whatever he telling them. Hey. Yeah. Look, man.
Boom. Now that night, you know, at night he'll come back to the cell and like I'm like, "Boy, what's up, man? What that fool talking about?" Oh, man. He going and you know, yeah, it's going to woo woo woo woo. So, I'm like, "Yeah." All right, homie. You know, boom, boom, boom. Three weeks go by. Still ain't nothing showed up.
Like, man, shoot.
What's up with this fool? I said, "Homie, man, you need to go and get your money back, homie, and try one of the other police cuz man, this clown right here, he playing games.
I ain't going to play no game. Play no game.
Another week go by. That's a whole month now.
Ain't no dope showed up.
>> He end up telling the police, "Hey man, just give me my money back, man." You know, [ __ ] [ __ ] wam wham wham wham w.
So now he telling me at night time that man, police, yeah, he going to get it back and he got to get it this that and the other and boop boop boop wam.
H time goes on. Time goes on now you're in panic mode. I'm in panic mode with him.
I'm like, man, this police tripping, man. Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Yeah, man. That fool. Got to give me this back, that back. D. So then he mess around and hear through the grapevine through another police that this clown, this police here done put in for a transfer. He f to he ain't got but a couple of days left. He f to quit and go work at another prison.
What?
So now when the homie heard that, he heard it from a police that was working that night. The other police didn't come to work till the next morning, but he heard the other police didn't have nothing like two days left. He was le Friday was his last day. This was a Tuesday that he that he got word. Friday was the police last day.
He like, "Okay." Now, he didn't work. He didn't work that when he f when he heard it that Tuesday. Police was off that Tuesday and that Wednesday. He come back to work cuz you know they be two days.
He come back to work that Thursday. Man, the homie had been pacing. He was hot.
He was mad.
So, I'm like, "Man, don't you don't chill, homie. Don't you know don't boo?"
He like, "Man, f that cub, man. Woo woo woo wam.
This what I'm going to do, man. Playing with me, man. Trying to run off with my ends." And I I'm like, "Homie, I hey, I feel you." You know, and I felt him, you know, I felt him. Thursday came that when we I mean, uh, when Wednesday night, the homie was pacing the sale all night. He couldn't wait. Couldn't wait.
He was hot. Thursday came, bang.
The police didn't take count that morning for count. Well, he um was working in another block. He didn't work our block. He was working in another block. So, count, they take count. Boom. Count clear. Um, they finn to have work call, sick call, school call, all that, man. Listen, homie like, I gotta get up out of here.
I got to go. He down the hallway, man, in such and such block. I'm like, what you going to do? He said, man, I'm going to go down there and this, that, and the other. He like, man, police playing with me, man. If he ain't got if he ain't got my dope, homie, I'm taking over.
I'm like, all right.
Now they was doing they was doing some type of uh they was doing work call sick call that um on the hallway. The police was one of the ones on the hallway when they was doing work call sit call doing work call sit call like okay he leave out the block. He leave out the block. You got a bunch of people leaving out the block trying to go to different blocks trying to move around. They call it going on escape. They going on escape. When going on escape means you fa go to this side of the prison, that side, down the hallway to another block.
You fa to get out, get out, try to get something. You going to do whatever you going to do. He seen the police, boy. He run up on him. He like, "Man, what's up, man? Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa." So the police like, "Man, I can't talk right now." He trying to brush him off and sweep it under the rug. Homie wasn't going for it. Hey, man. F that, man. You got that wap [ __ ] It's other police out there though making you know the other police trying to like hey man boom. So then the police snap. He can't take it no more. THE POLICE MAN I AIN'T GOT NOTHING MAN. GET OUT MY FACE. INMATE GET OFF THE HALLWAY.
WHAT?
And they're off.
Man, the homie didn't hesitate.
This police played him like his skin was tender and he had to show the police that he was going to tenderize him.
Man, the homie went up top immediately.
Bam. When he went up top, the police stumbled back. When the police stumbled back, he ran up on them. They got a thing in Alabama called the keg or the rap man. He run up on the police and he wrapped it. Whoop. And he hopped with him. When I seen when he hoped three times, I knew what it was f to be.
The severity of the rap is based off of how if you take that one hop, two hop, or that three hops. If they TAKE THAT THREE HOPS, PARTNER, you f to go on a roller coaster ride. You are going to La La Land.
The other police on the hallway was way down the other end. He didn't even really know what was going on yet, man.
Oh boy. And they got they wrap him and they hook him. They call they hook that leg. It's some stuff they do in Alabama.
I really don't know how to do it, but I've seen it so many times. It looked like some karate, but they hooked him with their hand and then they wrap that leg around them called the wrap. Mount Mig's rap or the keg, whatever you want to call it, man. And you hop and they went with And he went with it.
Boom. Man, when that police hit the dirt, it it was a timber and he went to putting them hands on it.
Boy, this cast itch so bad. But anyway, he went to putting them poles on his jaw.
Police act like he tried to fight back.
Everybody looking. Now the other police at the end now he done caught wind of it cuz everybody like he see the police getting drugged. He come running down there. He come running down there.
He body tackled. He body tackled the little homie.
When he body tackled him, he body tackled to knock him up off of. You know how them referees when you see them in the ring in the in the um in them cage matches in the ring when they've been done knock somebody down and the dude beating on them and the referee got to come in and body block him out the way to stop him from beating on him. That's how he kind of did it. He body blocked him out the way. The homie slid to the side. Police really didn't want no funk.
He just wanted to get him off the police from beating him. knocked the homie off of him and kind of leaned back and looked kind of like blocking but get in between him and the police on the ground cuz the police on the ground was beat to sleep you know the homie got up and teed up like yo what's up what's up what's up what's up he start coming at the other police other police immediately coming with that mace he blinded him with science y'all blinded with science like The song used to go, they blinded him with science.
When they hit him with the mace, he ran and grabbed him and tackled him to the ground. He didn't start beating on him or none of that. But when he tackled him to the ground, he blowing whistle.
He hitting codes. Police coming. Get out. Get out OF THE WAY. GET OUT THE WAY. GET OUT THE WAY. GET out the way.
People getting out the way, getting up on the wall. Boom. They didn't even whoop the little homie or nothing like that. They cuffed him up. The infirmary was right there. Infirmary was right there right down there by two block.
When they got him, they, you know, they got to take him in infirmary because they got to rinse his eyes. They took him in there. They got the other police up off the ground. He drunk, stumbling, you know, beat all the way up. They got to take him in infirmary cuz he messed up too. So now everybody like, "Man, what?" Dudes talking about it, talking about it. So now they like, "Clear the hallway. Clear the hallway. Clear the hallway. Catch a block. Catch a block." I'm still down there by my block. I'm watching them. I go on in the block. Soon, you know me.
Soon as I get in the block, I go to tell the homies, man, s just he just wham like what what what? So, you know, later on when we did come out again, I'm telling the homies. I'm like, man, gave the one time all that money, man. Bring a bring a pack in. Police playing games.
Didn't bring his pack in, man. He wasn't going for it. He put them poles on his jaws. You know what I'm saying? He put him in the blender so he'll know he was a member, you know. So look, they were like, "Dang, typical day in prison. Beat the police up. Oh well, he go to lock up program as usual." But now them and the police Friday he end up leaving going to another prison. But boy, he went to another prison with black eyes, busted nose, lumps on his head, whatever all he had. He took that to the other prison with him. But sometime them pillow police will play games, man. I have seen it a lot of times over and over and over. Play them silly games, you get them silly prizes, Mike. Anyway, and then like, man, that was the homie last, man. You playing with a dude who ain't got nothing.
And that was his last. He was dependent on that one to try to, you know, try to come up out the dirt. That's his last, man. And here it is. Now you done took it. Oh, man. and he didn't have no choice but to attack.
And that's what he did, y'all. So, well, another day at the funny farm, y'all.
So, for you youngsters that want to come to prison, this type of stuff you going to be around when you think it's smooth and easy when you hear them lies that your homies in prison call to the street and go to tell you about how much they balling and what all they got and how much money they in there making and that. They ain't telling you that side of the story though. They tell you they in there balling, making money, selling dope, but they not telling you that side of the story. See, it's another side to it, man. So, anyway, in the meantime between time, man, tell the people that you love you love him. I'm your big partner, Tony. Mike, I represent Jesus Christ, y'all. I'm out. Peace.
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