 Just to just to back up ten days after my arrest the person who actually did it confessed to it He went to the officers and he confessed to it and told him and told him why yeah, they said that um They had reason to believe they never they never presented these reasons, but they had Reason to believe that he was compensated for his confession Yeah, we on boss talk one-on-one Okay, in fact just it just to back up Ten days after my arrest the person who actually did it confessed to it He went to the officers and he confessed to it and told me and told him why yeah, they said that um They had reason to believe they never they never presented these reasons, but they had Reason to believe that he was compensated for his confession By me by me and no limit It's like what can you and me and my lawyer our argument was What can you pay a man? To go spend the rest of his life in prison. That doesn't even make any sense. We're not talking about this is my weed or this is my Stolen goods. I'm you know, that's for me. That's not for them. No We're talking about a person who confessed to killing an individual So what did he say as the reason why he confessed? He said the guy broke a bottle and rushed him with the bottle and he said he shot him So he's looking at self-defense and that was part of the reason they said that he was lying There their their argument was that he's not only trying to get me off. He's trying to get it right and I was like I Have never heard of anything like this before and He confessed three times My detectors they didn't try to do a lie detector They probably did but they also did a test on my hands for gunpowder residue and Found none. It found none and the test kind of came up missing Okay You you you get convicted you now you say the anger is not really just there But then you get to go you go to Angola. What do you go to prison? Well, I went to I spent most of my time at Elaine hunt Okay, but when I left the Paris jail, they sent me up north to Concordia parish Facility and then I stayed there for two years left there went to Fort Wade which is further up north and I did like two weeks there because I had to go through Processing and then they sent me to a place called Winfield I did two and a half years at Winfield and then I was sent back down south to Elaine hunt And that's where I spent like 15 years I think I went to Angola for a week to get my two pulled Wow, and I just I just tried my best to make The best of my time in prison I tried not to wallow in the sorrow of what happens and I think I I think You know a lot of it has to do with just my upbringing. I just was never With my parents didn't raise us to be victims We know and and it's painful as the situation was for me I always try to see the good in it or Try to see if not the good in it see a light at the end of the tunnel And then there were people around me who were in situations that I felt were far more worse than mine like there was a guy who I Was um incarcerated with that hunt He had been locked up 46 years For a rape that he didn't commit. He's out now. He was um, they found DNA evidence to let him out and You know, it's this man is in his 60s Wow But in the case like that and they found DNA evidence and to let him go. He did he go back into the city? well If I am not mistaken and don't quote me on this Louisiana has like a $200,000 or something cap on what you can get for wrongful convictions That's it. That's it. They make sure that you you can't really get nothing and Unfortunately, the people that wrongfully convict you are not held accountable Do was this before to see murder thing? Yeah, we on boss talk one on one