You are here: Home » Society » Recidivism in Jails and Prisons

Recidivism in Jails and Prisons

A journey into the mind of a man on death row, how he got there, and the vicious cycle of recidivism.

Education requires dedication, commitment and the will to succeed. Amazingly, one could say the same thing about crime; therefore, one would need the dedication to chance arrest and go to jail, the commitment to chance conviction and go to prison, and having the will to succeed with the crime so one doesn’t have to go to jail or prison.

By twenty-two, Johnny had racked up convictions for drugs, assault, robbery, and burglary. He had already spent ten of those years incarcerated in one form or another, and was now on the streets once again. His stubbornness and his unwillingness to conform to prison rules negated his chances to learn a trade while incarcerated. He was now a hardened criminal, and relegated to the same dismal existence he had seen so many times before. But what was he to do? Johnny, the ex-con, found work as a day-to-day laborer and he soon discovered that digging ditches for minimum wage was not to his liking. He decided that he needed to make one more score, a score that would help him get on his feet so he can try to go straight and fly right.

“This is a hold up; everyone get down on the floor!” Johnny barked. His crime partner Raul, leapt over the bank counter and scooped the money out of the cash drawer. Johnny saw movement out of the corner of his eye. He saw a shiny object emerge from a man’s pocket. “Put your hands on your head. Do it now!” Johnny screamed. The man continued his movements, and then it happened.

The long walk down the narrow corridor to the execution chamber was surreal, and Johnny was thinking his last thoughts as a mortal on earth. He wished he never hooked up with that gang of losers. He wished he listened to his mother and went to school so he could go to college and leave the projects behind. He wished he had a life, with a job and a family of his own; but what he really wished most of all was that he didn’t pull the trigger.

While walking down the hallway to deaths door, he imagined he saw the man from the bank. He saw an old man lying on his side. He had a book of Braille in one dead hand, and a silver money clip wrapped around five one dollar bills in his other. It was more bad luck for Johnny; the man was deaf.

The youth of America should always remember what a great country we live in. Even if they come from a broken home, live in an impoverished area, or make mistakes along the way, they can still choose their own destiny with a good educational foundation. There are over two million men and women incarcerated in the United States today. It does not matter if they are of any particular race, class or gender. If kids obeyed their parents or guardians, and stayed in school, the cycle of recidivism would stop and the executioner would be out of a job.

6
Liked it
User Comments
  1. John King

    On November 11, 2007 at 7:44 am


    maybe people will think long and hard on this one

  2. Lee Altman

    On January 9, 2009 at 9:57 am


    great work. Let the trueth be told.

Post Comment
Powered by Powered by Triond