Hard Time: A Look At The Law Inside The Walls Podcast Por Jake Welder and Jonathan Bates arte de portada

Hard Time: A Look At The Law Inside The Walls

Hard Time: A Look At The Law Inside The Walls

De: Jake Welder and Jonathan Bates
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To get ALL the NEW episodes, become a paid subscriber with this link: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hardtime/subscribe Thinking about a career in corrections? Thinking about committing a crime? Correctional Sergeants Jake Welder and Jonathan Bates talk about life and the law behind bars, showcasing the challenges facing America's Forgotten Cop-- the correctional officer. The first responders on beats made up exclusively of our communities' most dangerous people. Take a look inside a perimeter that news media, police officers and just about anyone else never sees.Jake Welder and Jonathan Bates Crímenes Reales
Episodios
  • 170: Well, Shit: Louisiana 10 Escape
    May 23 2025

    Ten inmates escaped f rom the Orleans Parish Sheriff's Office law enforcement center. They ripped out the toilet with some help from a maintenance guy afraid of taking a shank, and ran across the interstate to freedom. 5 have since been recaptured but everyone in the jail looks like a big jabroni and only big goddamned terrible embarrassing things like this drive any changes in corrections. Oh yeah, most of them were murderers. Hard time for COs these days.


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    57 m
  • 169. Mega Jail: Is It America's Answer?
    May 17 2025

    Nayib Bukele scares the left. He cleaned up the murder capital of the world-- El Salvador-- and he did it with a tough on crime approach that would that would shock our 8th Amendment. He's a Trump acolyte to boot. Does his record of success down south have something to teach us about restoring law and order here? Or do his detractors make a good point about power run amok? They say he imprisoned millions, he says he freed millions more from being victims of crime.

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    1 h y 10 m
  • 168. Lobotomies for Criminals: Worse Than Death?
    May 9 2025

    Today we look at Rickey Ray Rector, who killed people. Then, refusing to go to jail, he stove his own brain in with a .38. He survived of course. His lawyer said he was like a 4 year old. Bill Clinton, trying to look tough on crime in 1992, put him death as the governor of Arkansas. Erstwhile in interwar Switzerland, a boy born wrong was beyond control to the shame of his family. Institutionalized from age 8, by the time he was 21 he committed one of the most savage crimes against a child. The answer: a double lobotomy. Is it proper care for the hopelessly deranged? Or just a way to make them more manageable?

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    1 h y 1 m
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