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120 Hours Behind Bars - Season 1 - Episode 05: Virginia Beach Correctional
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00:15Go ahead and view your pockets right here.
00:18Anything else in your pockets?
00:21Marina?
00:22Yeah.
00:22Got you.
00:23Go ahead and send that line.
00:25Got you down, ma'am.
00:26We are in the Virginia Beach Correctional Center's Sallyport.
00:29This is where inmates turn themselves in for the Weekender program.
00:35Remember, no jewelry, earrings, rings, all that.
00:39Most people, when they're sentenced to jail, you stay in jail and you're here for the remaining of your sentence.
00:45So if you have a week, you're a week.
00:47Three months, you're staying three months.
00:49For the Weekender program, they do their sentencing just the weekends.
00:55Cargo pants.
00:57Maybe not wear these next weekend.
01:02We're not going to have murderers on the program.
01:04We're not going to have people who have done a violent crime.
01:08But like DWIs, DUIs, probation violation.
01:13Those are the most popular ones.
01:14What's this like for me?
01:16What is the point of this program?
01:17It's to help the offenders to continue their life outside of their sentencing.
01:24If they have medical issues, job, kids, families, all that other stuff, coming into jail is huge.
01:31And this program is a privilege and it can be taken away from them.
01:35They have rules and regulations just like the inmates in the jail that stay with us.
01:39And they have to abide by them.
01:41If they do not abide by them, they go straight time.
01:45We're missing two.
01:47They know they're supposed to turn themselves in.
01:49And if we don't get a phone call or a court order by Monday morning, then they'll get a warrant
01:53after the rest.
01:54So rules are very clear.
01:56Close the outgoing valley port doors.
02:07There are over 3,000 jails in the U.S.
02:11Detaining over half a million.
02:13Each one, a world of its own.
02:16Running a jail is tough.
02:19Surviving inside is tougher.
02:22Let's go, let's go.
02:24For 120 hours, five days, our cameras are inside.
02:29Capturing the officers, inmates, and moments that define life behind bars.
02:37I'll be home soon.
02:49My name is Rocky Holcomb.
02:51I'm sheriff of the city of Virginia Beach.
02:54The largest city in the Commonwealth.
02:56We have over 460,000 residents.
02:59And we swell to about 14.5 million visitors every year to our oceanfront.
03:05We host the largest boardwalk.
03:07We think it's the best boardwalk on the East Coast.
03:10But we have about three miles of boardwalk.
03:12It's just beautiful here in Virginia Beach.
03:17The city's high tourism numbers and active beach nightlife create a spike in alcohol and drug-related crimes.
03:24With over 6,000 DUIs and public intoxications and over 1,000 drug arrests each year.
03:38Can I get you to slide over here for me a little bit? So you're not sitting in your vomit?
03:42Or do you want me to put this right here?
03:43We operate three buildings here. Under roof, we have 1,100 prisoners right now.
03:51Help! Help!
03:53As you go through our three buildings, you can see the philosophy of corrections changing.
03:57In building A, which is our oldest building, it's more locked down cells.
04:02This is the old one.
04:04This is the old side.
04:05And then, building B, we're getting away from the individual cells.
04:10And now we're getting more into a dormitory room.
04:12This dormitory has 12 beds in it.
04:15Tops and bottoms.
04:17And sometimes we'll sprinkle some folks on the floor if we have to.
04:20But you put 12 people in this room.
04:22There's one table.
04:23There's one toilet.
04:24There's one shower.
04:25You gotta learn to get along.
04:28And now in our newest jail, we're into a big whole area that houses 52 people.
04:34The large number of folks that come here just want to do their time and go home.
04:38But there are some folks that come here for the fairest behavior and want to continue that behavior.
04:44This jail!
04:47These people!
04:49They're there.
04:52Did you used to work the line here?
04:54Yeah. Oh, yeah. Yep.
04:57I started as a deputy recruit in 1991 here at the Virginia Beach Sheriff's Office.
05:02And I've been here ever since then.
05:04Advanced through the ranks.
05:05And I'm the first person to become sheriff that actually started at the sheriff's office.
05:11There's no deputy here that's doing a job that I haven't done.
05:16So that goes a long way.
05:19I'll tell you how bad it is.
05:20I'm starting to see the grandchildren of folks that were here locked up in 1991 when I started.
05:26And it is frustrating.
05:27It's sad.
05:28It's almost like they get caught in a cycle and it's hard to get out of that cycle.
05:35And we want to make sure that we can help break it the best way we can.
05:39Yeah, I've been here three years.
05:40Get treated like a ****, bro.
05:42I swear to God, bro.
05:44We understand that over 85% of these offenders are coming back to our community.
05:48And we need to make sure that we can prepare them for a soft landing when they come back to
05:52our community and then we'll come back here.
05:54Hey, Sheriff.
05:55How you doing?
05:56I'm good.
05:57Over the last year, Sheriff Holcomb has championed multiple programs helping offenders transition back into society.
06:05From positive re-entry and modified incarceration to educational.
06:10One of the things that I do here is I push our programs very hard.
06:14If you come to my correctional center and you don't have a GED, then you better give me a good
06:19reason why you're not getting one.
06:21Because we offer GED classes year round.
06:25And so we make sure that we get folks the education, the training they need so they can get back
06:29out in the community.
06:33Virginia Beach Correctional Center houses pretrial detainees, misdemeanor inmates serving up to one year,
06:40and more serious offenders for violent crimes and felonies awaiting transfer to state prisons.
06:47Classification is extremely important because we try to keep people that don't fit together away from each other.
06:55Certain gang members, certain subsets, they may have beef on the streets, co-defendants that shouldn't be housed together.
07:02So when they come in through the intake process, we do initial screening.
07:06We ask them about 20 questions and then we go through their criminal history, their mental health, medical, a lot
07:12of different things, factors go into that.
07:15And then from the intake, we actually assign them a spot.
07:19And then throughout the time that they're here, they may be moved around.
07:25You have to do a lot of background research before you move somebody into another housing unit,
07:30because you don't want to move them into a worse situation.
07:32And of course, you're not going to know every circumstance.
07:35So if we get it wrong, things happen, but we try to minimize that the best we can.
07:43Minimize company, that's our overall goal.
07:58Man, this is our first weekend.
08:01One of the missing weekenders finally arrives at the Sallieport Gate.
08:05Deputies Ashley Sanchez and Doris Dix go to receive her.
08:09This is taff's watching the gate.
08:10Oh!
08:13Just go ahead, put your stuff on that table, and then hands up on the wall.
08:19I'm going to pat down.
08:25I got a D.I.
08:27I got the minimum legal sentence in Virginia, which is 10 days jail time.
08:37In Virginia, 10 days is the minimum sentence for a second DUI within the last 5 to 10 years.
08:44Take one step back.
08:46This is Sarah's first night in jail.
08:48I'm going to go through here. I'm going to go to the left in the picture.
08:54I would rather do a few days at a time instead of being in straight. I don't know. I've never
08:59been in jail before, so...
09:01Go ahead and step to your left. Back up up against that wall on the foot print for us.
09:05What do you do on the outside?
09:07I do social media management for my job.
09:11All right. Brush your hair behind your shoulders for me, please.
09:15Look right here between the camera.
09:17Turn just your head to the right. Look at the numbers on that door.
09:20It's a new experience for me.
09:23I'm a little sad and scared, honestly.
09:33All right. Ready?
09:37All right. Let me go ahead and get you a part of medical.
09:42Holy s***.
09:47They don't tell you anything to expect.
09:50You have to figure it out by asking around, I guess.
09:54I don't know if people are going to be nice in here or how uncomfortable the situation is going to
10:00be, being trapped somewhere. That's not my home.
10:04I am not breathing out. I am a lawyer.
10:07I am not breathing out.
10:08I am not breathing out.
10:09The dentist is going to get you to dress up. Are they ready?
10:11Okay. Thank you.
10:12You're welcome.
10:20Next, she'll be interviewed by our classification.
10:23We'll determine her housing.
10:25Class 7.
10:28and then we'll just strip her in so do a strip search and get her dressed in a jumpsuit
10:36and then bring her upstairs once we have our housing we do see a lot of first-timers some
10:42of them are nervous some of them just kind of accept it but generally they are nervous
10:48she'll still be experiencing everything as normal as if she wasn't a weekender so
10:53she'll still be housed with other inmates that potentially aren't weekenders yeah so she's
11:00right in the mix with everybody
11:03Sarah will spend the next 48 hours with 30 female inmates in general population
11:25Sergeant Joseph McBride leads his team of deputies in their daily morning cell inspections and head
11:30count every day at 8 o'clock we do a physical head count everything good make sure everybody's who
11:40they are where they're supposed to be where they're assigned I've never seen this kind of a digital head
11:47count before explaining your system here it's called a RF ID scanner basically when they come in intake
11:53they're assigned an ID card when they're assigned to a block or a cell you scan ID and it shows
12:00you where
12:00they're supposed to be all right don't appreciate everybody so this floor we have we have program
12:07blocks there's gd blocks and then most of your a-wing guys your max guys your heavy crime a lot
12:16of these
12:16guys just waiting to go up the road they're already sentenced so they're waiting to go do their doc time
12:22while 69 percent of the jail's detainees are pre-trial the remaining 31 percent have already been
12:29sentenced some will serve their time here while others are awaiting transfer to prison
12:44when you walk into those cells I mean you guys are kind of surrounded by all these guys like what
12:47does
12:48that say like tell me about how you move through if the doors open there's always something at the
12:52door that way there's no breach and you know whoever's at the door that there are eyes so but
12:58you know you got to know your surroundings keep your head on a swivel and you got to trust your
13:01training
13:03all right gentlemen once Mr. Smith gets through y'all good for today nice easy day right so
13:09now now hey hey you do you we do us right all right I've been here uh nine years and
13:20we see them
13:21some days more than we see our family so I mean it's not that we're being friendly it's just they're
13:26human beings I was always raised I show respect and respect's given so you know I treat everybody
13:35with the same respect as they give me is this door different yeah this is the the trustee pod you
13:57got to be you got to be in population for 30 days before you look at your application and then
14:02they'll
14:03bring you either the trustee pod or the workforce pod qualified inmates can apply for the trustee
14:08program where they are assigned a job and work inside the jail for special privileges
14:16and population you barely get fed over there being over here we get plenty of food the phones stay
14:22on all night all day it's just I mean overall better it's a little more freedom for us being in
14:27a jail
14:28what's the trade-off what do you have to do for those privileges oh we got to work okay the
14:34floor
14:34crew floor cleaners uh laundry crew kitchen crews one such trustee Patrick Lynch works as a tray
14:46stacker in the Virginia Beach Correctional Center's kitchen a job only nonviolent inmates are able to
14:52apply for we get here about 4 30 in the morning and probably get out of here around 2 if
14:57everyone's
14:57working together we got a pretty good crew here so it's like try to bang it out get out of
15:01here quick
15:03I tell people I run the largest restaurant in the city of Virginia Beach I feed over 3,500 meals
15:10a day
15:10and so as we're serving that many meals let's allow these trustees to get some training and some
15:17certification on this so that when they get out they can get a job in the food service industry or
15:21the
15:22hospitality industry something like that so we work hard to make sure they get a certificate when
15:25they leave Sam hey I'm certified in this business some of the privileges trustees are given include
15:33receiving 10 coffee servings and one e-cigarette a week they also have the possibility of earning good
15:40time time shaved off their sentences I'm here on a violation I was in a toxic relationship with my
15:53girlfriend at the time so I moved from that address and it's simple thing violates my probation is this
16:02your first time in Virginia Beach yeah 40 years old I've probably been in this jail about seven or
16:07eight times thank you sir on record you would see a couple possession charges early on in the beginning
16:13and then you'd see about 15 grand larcenies my life spiraled out of control to addiction and I was
16:19making $30 an hour working for my family's HVAC company and pretty soon it got to the point where
16:25your family doesn't want you around you're stealing from your friends you're not who you're you're not
16:30who you were but if I had my record sitting in front I'm not that guy I'm not that guy
16:36anymore
16:41no I'm not gonna do it actually have two trustees that come down for each floor
16:44they're gonna grab the carts take them to the individual pods and pass them out to general population
16:52well see everybody in population only gets one burger one slice of cheese you're not getting
16:58commissary people aren't sending you food in here you're gonna lose some pounds in here but since
17:04I'm a trustee I get to be a fat boy when you're basically getting as much as you want as
17:09much as I
17:10want until we run out and extra cheese sauce man can't do that upstairs we good hustled there we
17:22busted ass knocked that out pretty quick inmate Lynch will go to court in three days he faces up to
17:30six
17:30years in prison for violating his probation
17:43don't come to Virginia Beach jail try not to go to any try to do better we're trying to do
17:49better
17:50the statistic wise of you coming back here is 86 percent of people will be back yes it's a revolving
17:57door come on vacation leave on probation come back for a violation how was your first job
18:07um well they just throw you in there and they don't tell you like they don't show you around
18:12they don't say this is your bathroom they don't say like nothing it's just the girls kind of showing
18:16you around what to do and set your bed up and how to tie your sheets and whatever they've been
18:21doing
18:21forever long lights out at 11 but then 3 a.m they're waking you up for breakfast so not really
18:29very much sleep as you can imagine already being in jail so no no it wasn't what i expected i
18:39guess
18:40i imagine it being a little bit more spacious like individual cells um no just more space between
18:48there's um there's no eating space the food gets brought to the pod and there's only two tables that
18:54can sit six people and there's 32 people in there you don't have a cafeteria so you have to
18:59find a spot or take it to your bed which isn't an ideal eating situation up inside your living
19:06situation yeah you don't have much more on this where's your head space um i have about another day
19:16and a half before i get up um but this is only my first weekend i'll have three or four
19:21more
19:22after this they did spray um i'm ready to go
19:30no it doesn't it doesn't feel good being in here no i'm getting out tomorrow
19:37of the 1100 detainees in virginia beach around 150 of them are female facing a wide range of charges
19:45from simple misdemeanors to more serious felonies awaiting transfer to prison
19:51i've been coming to this jail for 15 years and it's the same thing it's like they lock you in
19:56a
19:56cage the vents have black mold and you sit right on a top bunk and breathe it in every night
20:02how are you gonna say that it's healthy for us to be in here they give the smallest block
20:10that has six beds in it 30 women and then they get mad when we're too loud they get mad
20:17if we fight
20:18and then they if we do something wrong they cut off your tv their phones tablets so then we're just
20:23sitting there staring at each other arguing and again over something but if you gave us some more
20:27options what's wrong with going out to the wreck yard for 15 minutes a day you get to go nowhere
20:32nowhere in our church the library nowhere it's crazy the library cart has not been back to see us
20:39in two months so the books are falling apart missing pages
20:46what have we done i mean nothing we sat around trying to read the same three pages in this book
20:51but you can't really read when there's so much chatter going on honestly
21:01don't come back
21:14everybody step in
21:23inmates in the trustee pod are locked down for razor pass
21:28okay downstairs we got 275
21:33only inmates on the list are given a razor which is collected immediately after being used
21:41it was just you right thank you yeah
21:48passing out the razors they have to be locked down just because of the potential for danger when
21:53they have razors i mean the razors can be used as a weapon potentially you're welcome they could
22:01also potentially use it against us god willing that doesn't happen but that is the reason why they
22:07have to be remained locked down while they have their razors and once they're done we'll collect
22:14them we'll inspect them to make sure that all the pieces are there and then they can be let back
22:18out razors
22:19a couple more and we're done
22:28like these little cheap razors i mean i've seen people grab them
22:32and slice someone across the face they call it a buck 20 and basically if someone stealing from them or
22:38they have a problem with them on the street it could be gang related they'll walk up to the person
22:44and
22:45slice them when they least expect it and then they have a nice 120 stitches scar on their face and
22:50that's why they call it that
22:51being in a setting like this even though we're trustees we're still criminals
22:55right
23:01yeah i'm just making sure the blade is still there and still intact
23:06with all razors accounted for and inspected the deputies are able to unlock the cell doors
23:11and let the trustees back out into the day room
23:15this is our life
23:26whoo
23:27hey this is our way this is our real life
23:30shelter
23:32back up let's go
23:35sarah has completed the first weekend of her court-ordered 10 days in jail
23:40she is being released for the week
23:43i asked her it first
23:46i just want to see the phone
23:47it's too small
23:49when you leave they want all your stuff that that you don't need anymore so they you know and they
23:54ask you
23:55that since from the beginning they're like can i get this when you leave can i get that when you
23:59leave
24:04they came in there with a new sheet so they wanted to trade out the sheets and they wanted my
24:08socks
24:09they wanted my undershirt
24:10all right come on
24:11so
24:13they stripped me
24:16i'll meet your mom
24:17all right
24:19got it back
24:20you have your ID card
24:21you have your ID card
24:21you have your ID card
24:25everyone was really nice
24:26uh i think that was probably the most surprising part
24:29out to the left
24:32i think the hardest part of it for me was like the cleanliness and personal space
24:40not so much the food the food was really bad but i feel like i could get
24:45get by a couple days not eating as much but i definitely think you could kind of relate it to
24:51like a little bit of a
24:53scared straight situation
24:55place your mat
24:56right here on this back to your left
24:59i mean i don't think anybody wants to do jail time but just really getting a taste of it
25:04um i cannot imagine it being longer than it was
25:09all right cut this way to the right
25:13it's very strange for me being someone that's only here for a couple days versus seeing the people that are
25:18going to be in here for a long time
25:19go around the corner and get dressed
25:21my main thing right now is getting my things back getting to my cell phone and
25:25getting home and showering before i can even process anything else
25:34sarah will return to jail again in five days for her weekend sentence
25:41if she fails to check in
25:43a warrant will be issued for her arrest
25:56so this is how we have it um set up
25:58okay there's a mix of boxes and mail throughout
26:03with a large amount of drug arrests in virginia beach keeping narcotics and other contraband out of the jail is
26:10a constant struggle
26:10we have three canines that are active and one of them is trained to detect fentanyl
26:17dog
26:18and so what can happen is there can be some drugs that come in the mail like on the sticker
26:23on the stamp
26:24and so we're always checking that to make sure it doesn't get in the facility
26:30canine apollo he screens the mail and packages for narcotics
26:35we've seen all kinds anything they could they think they can get in they will mail in
26:44and here's the deal we have to be right every single time
26:50the bad guys only have to be right once because if we allow a piece of contraband into the facility
26:55it could be debbie
27:01after we've run the mail and we know it's clear we'll plant a training aid just for fun
27:05to keep him engaged
27:11and then once he locates it ultimately he'll sit
27:17and i'll pay him his little reward and then we play
27:27apollo very much loves the job he gets very excited to come to work
27:31come on come on come on all right let's roll
27:43hop it
27:46all right gentlemen shakedowns
27:49sergeant hauck is leading his team of deputies in a random shakedown of c unit
27:55we do shakedowns randomly daily weekly we're always looking to do a shake
28:01because we have to get contraband out of the facility as quickly as they think they can get
28:05it in here it's a cat and mouse game
28:07activity
28:10virginia beach correctional center is one of just a few jails across the country to deploy
28:15body-worn cameras on its deputies documenting every interaction to protect staff inmates and the
28:22integrity of the jail
28:27inmates are systematically brought out of their cells and padded down thoroughly for contraband
28:35come on man put the toothbrush down this is not the time to be brushing your teeth let's go
28:38more than enough time to get ready after each inmate is clear they're moved into the
28:45wreck yard where the entire population will wait while officers begin searching the cells in common
28:52areas we're looking for any contraband that they may have weapons drugs tattoo kits
28:58they like to mess with the e-cigs and use the batteries where they'll heat up water to make ramen
29:05we'll find shanks they'll take something as simple as a pair of eyeglasses they'll sharpen the ends
29:11they become very creative and try to make things that they want or they need
29:16we have tablets in here and they use the headphones and they cooled it together and wrapped it and
29:20created that they make all sorts of interesting things of this nature um yeah scrabble pieces we
29:27don't have the board it's just little pieces of soap they carved out and let dry rolled good and then
29:33write it with an inmate pen they just keep marking over it until it it digs in and creates the
29:38ink
29:38and so why would that be something that has to be taken away while they've turned this into a game
29:44you put this in the bottom of the sock and you swing it around it could also be used as
29:50a weapon
29:56a bunch of salt and pepper
30:04sergeant help
30:05they found something
30:09i don't know but it's powder
30:16where did you find it miss cowboy three four six upper tier it was him doing his bed
30:22sergeant what is that it is a bag of white powdery substance it could be anything from crushed soap
30:28to narcotics but we're gonna have to figure out what exactly this is
30:33all i did really was just flip his bump over
30:37and it was underneath some tissue paper
30:40and it just they're just trying to hide it
30:43for me to overlook you just think it's just tissue instead of me shaking it out but i shook it
30:48out and
30:48it fell out if it's narcotics that's a lot
30:52yes it is but what we'll most likely do from here on is we got to investigate it so we
30:56got to
30:57follow proper procedures miranize them interview them and then um we'll refer to our uh criminal
31:03intelligence unit who handles any criminal investigations um but we'll most likely have
31:07to send it out for testing and confirm whether or not it is a drug of some sort it could
31:11take a month
31:12so it just depends on how busy the lab is all right let's get all the trash out
31:28in the direct observation pod deputy wesley adkins performs round the clock safety checks on high needs
31:38inmates so my job is to keep every inmate safe it doesn't matter if they're a regular person black
31:45white hispanic in this pod we just make sure that they're not trying to commit suicide or hurt themselves
31:58we have guys that you talk to them alcohol some drugs maybe and then you have guys that's actively
32:03trying to harm yourself this guy's like a little bit more like um need direct supervision so right
32:17now in the lower tier we got some acutes some non-acutes what's an acute person that's actively
32:22trying to commit suicide uh self-harmament if you're an acute you're a direct ops so we stand and we
32:29watch
32:30you the whole time direct one-to-one watch we have a individual in the restraint chair
32:37he's on suicide watch he's acute but he's actively trying to hurt himself
32:44and he's been bleeding so we have to you know clean the cell and stuff like that
32:50if you're non-acute needs to be 15 minute checks so basically four checks an hour if they're non-acute
32:57working in here it's not for everybody but it's a part of the deputy duties all right
33:05he's coming soon some people call it the pit of misery so some people some people say hey you
33:11know those are dungeons so they rather not work here if you see yourself on ops report working here
33:16you know you got a night ahead of you because anything can happen here anything what got you in
33:21in this life i mean um i just wanted to be that guy where you know i like i like
33:28my job and i like
33:29people and i don't want people to be scared of law enforcement i want people to be happy to see
33:34in
33:34law enforcement anything happens able to give us information to help solve crimes or whatever the case may
33:44be after a while it becomes it becomes second nature in here you do you hear it and it's not
33:52as
33:52loud as when you first start that's one thing i could say all right it's time for a check
34:14that's court day you got to go down wearing these little plastic shoes so i guess it's it's not a
34:21security risk so no one takes off running on them but you're normally chained up so how are you feeling
34:27oh god i'm scared to death it's sentencing day for inmate lynch he will be taken with a group of
34:36other
34:36inmates through an underground tunnel to the virginia beach courthouse where he will see a judge about his
34:42case i'm gonna have to hope to god that uh the judge will listen to what i have to say
34:47and versus what
34:48he's reading about my past history on that paper i'm just i'm going to ask him for mercy today not
34:54justice i guarantee you i'm not the guy that i was when i was committing those crimes
35:06i've got a whole life out there i've got a great job waiting for me i'm supposed to get married
35:12i've got
35:13a lot of stuff that i was about to do but that past criminal lifestyle and it followed you followed
35:21you for the rest of your life okay good best case scenario they sentenced me to the community
35:28alternative corrections program ccap worst case scenario i get six years today
35:54the inmates in the trustee pod are on edge as they wait for their friends and cellmates to return
35:59from court when you got a good cooked meal it makes you feel a little bit more like you ain't
36:06in jail
36:08you know we're a little bit more blessed out of the pots we've got a microwave
36:13when you get a bunch of guys and you cook together it just kind of gives it like a family
36:17atmosphere
36:17you know instead of being alone thank you all right now let me show you how we make a grilled
36:27cheese
36:27with a microwave two slices of red mayonnaise i need a mayonnaise ray
36:35so we don't have butter right the kitchen does but i don't i don't work in the kitchen so we
36:41put mayonnaise
36:41on the outside of the bread kind of like butter all right so this is just a regular chip bag
36:50who got brown bag
36:53this one's gonna blow your mind
36:54okay now you wrap it up real tight you know you can't put metal in the microwave now you gotta
37:04put
37:04it in this when you put it in the microwave it don't blow the microwave up
37:11boom
37:14put that on a minute and 15 seconds upon my travels the prisons in virginia
37:21these guys that have been down for life and been doing a lot of time they just find ways to
37:26you
37:26know get through the time or the sense of it guys are really great of it i ran into a
37:31lot of smart
37:32people a lot of things that made me go what the hell all right so here you go here's here's
37:38your grilled
37:40cheese
37:41see that bread toasted real cheese bbcc grilled cheese yes sir take a bite it's hot
37:54good
37:59it's called survival of the fitness man that's how you survive in here bro you know what i'm saying
38:15i'm going to call the family and let them know after sitting in the courthouse bullpen for six hours
38:26inmate lynch finally returns to the trustee pod
38:29you gotta continue to win i got my friends
38:36i got all my buddies
38:38what do you do to you continue all right everybody got continual continuance is for everybody
38:45a continuance is a court-ordered postponement of legal proceedings often due to backlogs and scheduling
39:00conflicts
39:00yeah they continue
39:04inmate lynch calls his girlfriend who was able to meet with his attorney in person today at the courthouse
39:11okay so they're going to get me ccap
39:14community corrections alternative program or ccap is a structured supervision program for qualified
39:20offenders offering job training counseling and educational opportunities oh my god you're awesome
39:27thank god because i was i was pissed
39:30okay
39:37that's awesome
39:42that is that is great news babe thanks
39:46maybe the leaves don't fall and stay shut
39:53you're funny
39:58thank you for supporting your dad thank you for being there i love you
40:05i can't wait for this to be over i just called my girlfriend who was in here in the courtroom
40:10and
40:10she talked to my attorney before she left so basically i got 110 good news so that's when
40:17everything changed over there i just got all happy and i'm like yes i am getting c-capped talk to
40:24my
40:24lord uh okay yes they're giving me the program and i'm getting time served i'm happy i'm happy that now
40:34it's over inmate lynch will go back to court in two weeks where he will officially receive the community
40:40corrections alternative program he will be transferred to a participating virginia department
40:45of corrections facility where he will spend the next five to 12 months completing the program before
40:51he is released and you got my marriage paperwork and so i'm getting jailhouse married not 20 all but
41:00i'm fortunate i'm sorry there's a lot of good guys in here man and people just like everybody else
41:09me i'm trying to take a lesson from all my circumstances because i'm old now i can't
41:13keep doing it but i've got great optimism and great hope for my future so i'm not coming back here
41:22you're always welcome back at the beach
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