 Tell her what's poppin We are on twitch. We are not live particularly like comment subscribe turn on your post notification bells Man, let's continue to grow the family from Chicago to the UK Oh This page you ask what's this man? This is where we put all the live stuff So when I go on YouTube live or I go on twitch live and you may have missed some of the reactions that be on there They're here if they're not already uploaded on the main channel They're here And these shorts are the little stories that be in between sometimes Funny stuff man funny stuff man. This link to this is down in the description man So first responders if you in here or anybody that's in here Man, go hit that go like go go go. You know I'm saying And don't forget that this page is not ran by me. It's a ran by well, it's Mine, of course, it's ran by me, but like I don't upload I don't make any of this stuff is and somebody else has done this from the UK. So Support your people Don't forget we do got the patreon The link to this is down in the description Let's get to this man. This is part two. I'm only doing part two because I did part one So 34 years on death row in prison This is part two to that one Don't forget we got the discord as well link down in the description. I'm more famous than Jesus Christ. Oh, this is a recap Man, yeah, yeah, this story was crazy. If y'all ain't watching this up here somewhere. Oh Wait Let me move this cuz I was gonna read it, but Nah Let's the chat. Why is the chat down here? Okay? Anyway Just a recap He took a plea deal to save his wife and his wife was sentenced to his wife was sentenced to murder charges He was served 34 years in prison for a murder which he denies to this day I don't know. No. No, that's not the full story. The wife. He took the plea deal for left him For another man that she had met Now now that's important to what's going on. I don't know why they didn't tell us that but she took a plea deal for his wife And while she was in a holding cell in prison with other prisoners, she met a girl and she The girl put her on to her her brother and she left this man that took a plea deal for her as soon as she was free for her brother Crazy, that's the craziest part All right, now we can go We arrived there on a gray school bus type thing modified school bus called the gray goose And the Folsom looks like a castle and has Big turret right there at the front gate and it's uh, it's got a big stone Gateway coming in and big iron gates that slam behind you and just reverberate through the bus You know and it really does they tell you it's the end of the line And it really does feel like that you can you can feel the misery in the place you can feel Um the hate in the place you can feel all these different emotions And uh, none of them are joy and happiness those don't come into play We come off the bus the bus drops us off backs up and goes out We're standing there in line at the receiving every uh lease unit And we have a sergeant. He's walking out in front there and he says, uh, I want to welcome you all to Folsom State Prison. It's the second oldest prison. It was built in 1880 And he's talking he's giving us this entry welcome spiel One of the people that had come up with us was uh, a very young kid uh, real long hair and stuff and While he was at vacaville, which had a very large Gay population what they would call be cat bees, which were the affeminates and he's got pain in nails and You know makeup on he's standing between Infeminates I never heard me and this other guy And as the sergeants walking back and forth Suddenly the gate behind him Coming out of five building slams open and out comes running this little mexican guy running for his life And just seconds behind this is great big mexican guy with a big old knife in his hand about an 18 inch blade And The small guy turns and looks at us for a moment and runs into the corner of the yard fence Bounces off and the big guy gets there and stabs him up. Now. We have gunners on the yard They have shotguns and they have pistols None of them were able to react fast enough to stop that guy from stabbing this kid Yep, but he stabs him up throws the knife down and waits all these guards run out and guff him up and uh The sergeant without breaking Stride goes and as you notice here at Folsom State Prison We have unscheduled extra curriculum activities happening at any given moment And the sergeant goes you two pick your girl for an up and bring her inside You could have three stabbings During your yard time before they'd finally close the yard and make you go back to yourselves Because they would just One stab it ain't enough you need three to close up shut the yard they'd put everybody on the ground Come out pick up the body take the body away and resume yard But after the third time they go that's enough. Okay, everybody go back to yourselves play times over violence was such A normal thing that you if it didn't happen for a period of time you started getting nervous because that meant something was brewing But you'd have you'd be trying to eat chow and we had metal serving trays where our food came out And uh at that time they gave you metal forks and metal spoons Which of course people turned into stabby instruments But what would they do with the trays they'd sharpen the tray on the concrete floor And then they'd fling it across the room and it would hit you and it could peel a person's scalp right off their head Weight piles you go out to the weight pile You better be really cautious about who you're working around and working out with Because nobody would think something about picking a 40 pound dumbbell up and smashing your skull With it or smashing your kneecaps with it. I was there About nine months before I got transferred to San Quentin and funny enough one of the people You were from bad prison the worst to work the California prison was the state's death row prison that was there that I knew I had known when I was a kid on the streets And his name was Doug Stankiewicz and I knew him. I knew him and his family. They were mono Indians I knew his brother Johnny in 1972 in 1976 the california supreme courts throughout the death penalty When they reinstated it in 77 The very first person to go back to death go to death row was Doug Stankiewicz you know, it's one of these things where You're on the upper yard and they bring somebody out death row to take somewhere to medical or something And they yell everybody face the wall dead man walking and you hear the guards saying this And I always wondered How'd that make the guy they're walking this field because I knew every time I'd hear I shuddered Because you know, you're telling the guy, you know, you're a dead man but With california unlike florida and texas If you get the death penalty, you're far more likely to die of old age You know, then you are to be put to death because Hey, siri Does florida have the death penalty The death penalty information center the u.s supreme court has ruled florida's death penalty practice unconstitutional, no room on this time Yes, they do wow Gotta stay out of trouble out here, man Doug Stankiewicz still alive today, even though they have put people to death Did you get into any like physical altercations In jail and what would they kind of be about and over? Well at Folsom when I first went there I got into a beef with the Aryan brotherhood they They always say that they did they'd formed up to protect whites from the blacks and the Hispanics But what I saw was that they generally victimized the whites you know And uh, but it all came down to power drugs you know And because I didn't want to be a part of their thing, um They didn't appreciate the fact that I told them. Yeah, I don't need you Initially, I was called in to go into the boxing ring because the idea was if you went into a fight ring the guards Would not you wouldn't get written up no matter what happened in the ring The first guy they sent against me was a much larger man than me. The problem was he underestimated me and I ended up putting him down and Then that made it even worse because how they're like women women, you know Now we need to know about him and it became that kind of thing And uh, but it wasn't until I actually got to San Quentin that They had sent these guys just tried to stab me up but I got word I had taped up national geographic magazines around my arms and and Had telephone books made into a stab vest under my jacket And but even at that One of the guys had a knife big enough and strong enough that even when he did It still went through through the magazines to stab me about an inch into my arm. I got this One of them got slashed across faced by one of the other guys knives trying to get me You know And I ended up breaking one of their arms and we ended up getting this call education over with And I was able to get away without being caught They had injuries so they of course got taken to medical But the thing is they can't tell because to tell means that they're going to get You know pced up you know protective custody because you can't you don't tell My thing was is that I'm not going to slap fight with you. You trying to come over here and cause me a problem I'm going to try to hurt you and I'm going to try to make sure you know you got hurt So you won't want to come back again and that's why it worked out. That's how jail is Either be eight Especially when they on you already you got to set that example is what I'm hearing is from him Most of the prisons I was at with the exception of a cup very few couple There were sabbots all the time even at dvi There were cell killings Two guys be dual vocational institution to sell one guy got not the other guy Kill him then then go to breakfast come back and tell the cop. Hey, you got to get that body out of my cell It's stinking And that's the first time the cop knows there's somebody dead in that cell Jamie was a prison was in prison with Infamous american criminal including trials manson leader of the manson family cult who led members of the cults and nine people He was also in prison with cereal. Dang come on out. Oh He's also in prison with the serial killer ed keppner who murdered 10 people including his own Oh, y'all could have read that yourself. My bad. I wouldn't be to be honest like ed kemper And I don't know a lot of people know who he is when I first saw him walk into the room He was he was given as part of our orientation the second day. I was in prison He was like six foot six six foot seven three hundred pounds And he walked in the room and the first my first thought was like if I ever had to fight this man I'd have to try to kill him because I mean this guy would could this guy was just y'all he He has that kind of weird ominous presence that he's a danger just in his way walking in pounds Yo, and he spoke to us in a very monotone thing and one of the things that got me was when he was talking to us I think I seen a a movie that had him in there for like not a movie like a tv show It was called inside man of the tv show on netflix. I think that's what it's called He goes Every man must have a moral compass. You must not deviate from your moral compass and I'm looking at the guy going and You did what? You know, I mean You know, where's the moral compass here? But luckily with my situation with him I only had a couple of minor dealings with him there and then when I went to work in the hospital He came in one time and I had to get him into a room to be to be seen and He worked in a prison hospital as a nursing assistant and after having to go Would you come here with me and uh and go over there and sit down over there And having him just stare at me with this like dead pan eyes You know, there was like he wasn't and he didn't engage him verbally. He just looked at me. You know, I was like, oh But charlie manson a whole different character I was there about a week and a guy goes. Hey, you want to meet charlie manson? No charlie manson. He goes. Yeah, he's here. He works as a gardener in the catholic chapel garden So he took me over to see him And I saw him from the door. I didn't go actually go in and meet him at that moment And quite honestly, I was disappointed and here's this little tiny man Beard hair just And I kept thinking the way everybody talked about charlie. He would be a larger man and he wasn't But my first uh actual interaction with him He was at the canteen line and he would have rocks that he had painted He goes you want to buy one of my rocks No, I don't want to buy it when you're rocks what you don't want to buy one of my rocks and he goes Don't you know who I am? I'm charles Manson I'm more famous than jesus christ And I'm like, you know, okay, and I just ignored him right and again It's one of those things where he was used to being somebody that people don't ignore well I'm working in the clinic and one of the things they would do is always trying to get needles You know and any drugs they could steal from the clinic Well, a lot of times they would go and they'd pressure the young guys who were working there to steal the stuff One day he came in and he goes look. Here's the list of stuff. I need I go. Sorry about your luck He goes no, you don't understand. I want this stuff I don't want to tell you and he's like You got to learn how how to play this I know I don't And so he he gets real frustrated and all of a sudden he just starts screaming at the top of his lungs and He's still jumping up on chairs and jumping off chairs and all his his staffs running towards him And I see some of his other friends come running in they hit one of the med cabinets real quick and grab a bunch of stuff run back out quite honestly Having known Tex Watson And having met charlie manson I've always believed that Tex Watson was really He was the force behind the family Charlie was the head the the the figurehead. He made the great little cartoon character figurehead But Tex Watson was a very calculating man because when I met him it's califering mince colony He was the inmate pastor in the chat in the protestant church He had married a minister's daughter Uh, you know, he he had developed this yoke fellow following of the people You know And and the thing was you got to remember he was the one that told the girls Charlie says we've got to do this. Well, I'm sorry. You've got charlie manson. You got charles. Tex Watson Charlie didn't say which charlie told him He was another guy that was highly intelligent and most of the most of the guys I knew that were serial killers were Just top-notch Intelligence just not necessarily The guy you want to invite home for dinner Right. Can you talk a little bit about the lead up to being released and what happened? I've been denying parole hearings And I kept being denied denied denied And part of their argument was that I would be deported And they thought that well, I would just not be able to fit in over here So I've become a massive criminal over here um 2013 I went to before a parole board and I got found suitable and it went before the governor and the governor was jerry brown Who had been a governor back in the 70s and back then he gave the prisoners bill a right and gave a lot of inmates rights that we didn't they didn't took away later and he said no and uh He didn't give me a reason so we asked and he said because I can and I argued in court that Because I can is not illegal is not a legal Reason, you know, I mean that's just that's like a mean reason So it took me four more years to get found suitable again they uh They tried to fly me home on british airways because it'd be a non-stop But british airway wouldn't let me be shackled So he's brought me on delta and I had waste chains and handcuffs on And we went to the sacramental airport And they uh they threw a sweat shirt over my hands says don't Try not to look out of ordinary. I've got two guys in suits holding my arms And my hands are like this with a sweatshirt over it We landed in Heathrow They had taken All the stuff anything I had at the prison, which was over $2,000. They took from me to pay for my detention I was given a five pound note The walked up to the border people customs man comes out to me Shakes my hand asked me how I'm doing and told him doing well Looks at my documents Says how long you've been gone since 64 years. He goes, why are you back? I said I'm home He goes, yes, you are he goes now just walk right down there to pick up your bags and uh head on out But I yeah, I started my life over here again You know February 13th 2018 with five pounds in my pocket after 64 years bro They was trying to set you up for failure That that's a failure set up And told never to come back to the u.s. But uh quite honestly, I don't have a desire to do that What's been the hardest thing about kind of adjusting to the whole new country and then Keep in mind. He didn't really do the crime that he that that I don't know if y'all watched part one man, but he didn't really even do the crime They just back to freedom. I don't know if I'm ever going to fully be able to Feel like I've you know, I would have been had I grew up over here I don't have mates over here in the in the uk yet. I've been here coming up on five years and I've yet to actually Develop the relationship where I just have some guys I can go out and shoot pool with It's one of these things where things it's hard, bro Like it's hard. Like I just moved to florida, bro. And I don't really got like I got like a couple people but like like coming from chicago to here and like and your Older while you're older It's tough man, because you'd be really wanting to seclude yourself anyway when you get to this age Like you're just trying to work on yourself And you know, you don't go down as much but I'd be having to force myself to go out outside nowadays And meet people but in florida, man, it's like everybody just I feel like everybody is phony. Everybody want to know you for some other reasons and whatnot Everybody want to see what they can get up out of you. You know what I'm saying, so I do I do myself. I go to the gym by myself. I work out by myself Um, I've been to a few pubs where there pool tables. I shoot pool by myself I don't know how I don't know how to explain it, but I can't I don't connect but um That's how I feel like I don't really connect with the florida people, but No, I've been trying man. I don't want to overexert myself But that's a like I'm gonna start going to the gym So I'm pretty sure I can meet people there, man, you know hooping, you know when you hoop and you good People are gonna talk to you. They're gonna they're gonna, you know, like I said, I You know, I've gotten to where I have a contentment and a piece about me that I wish I wasn't sure I'd ever find. I I I have to say my life is good. Um Do I do I not appreciate the fact I'm 68 and getting ready to turn 69? You bet you I I'm a dinosaur I know I'm a dinosaur I'm just trying to be a happy dinosaur And before time T. L. Holy will like comment subscribe and go