mrs tolley.....if you need help with pearlene brown..you have my assitance.....ive worked with her in the past...and she is everything ive read on this site....if you call corporate ill be more than glad to help...plus i know a great person who'd be perfect for the managemnt job...ty and god bless
I am not sure I want Wild One 69 cooking my hamburger. But here is the number for you.....
(you are probably Miss Pearline yourself)If not, you best find a Waffle House. It's better to be smothered, covered, diced, chunked, peppered and scattered than some of those cook revenge tricks that I have read about.
The myth of "one phone call" when you're arrested is not true. You are allowed to make reasonable necessary attempts at booking to let someone know your wherabouts, and even in the cells, there are phones that you can call out collect.
do these inmates have clean under or shirts to wear or do have buy there item from gift shops to buy ith their moneydo they onlt a tv screeen to talk to there parents or her/his. family to see you
Hope the jailer is OK, the inmate.... aw, I don't really care.
On a side note, I find the Sheila Tolley bashing to be tiresome. It reminds me of children in the schoolyard who follow the class bully and turn against one student just because others do.
Think with your own minds, people. Don't follow the crowd and become part of the "herd mentality".
Unless you know Ms. Tolley personally, and she flattened your tires or beat you up outside the convenience store and you're holding a grudge, there's really no reason to attack her everytime she posts something. We all have a right in this country to express our opinion.
Actually, I doubt Ms. Tolley needs me to stick up for her; she appears able to handle any arrows shot her way.
apparently you've never heard of the Patriot Act...it allows the arrest of anyone, for anything, tag it terroism and your butt is gone with no lawyer, no jury, no judge...just cuz they said...you don't get no stinkin' phone call either...thank you George Bush.
Actually it is a conservative viewpoint to want to keep civil rights, not progressive. It's called habeus corpus and has been around since before US became a country.
You may not be an idiot, but you certainly show your ignorance.
How many Americans know what the Federal Coordinating Council for Comparative Effectiveness Research is? A 15 member rationing board has already been appointed by Barry Soetoro.
They will be using a formula to determine if someone will get medical care : (Cost of the Treatment ) / (# of Years Patient will benefit from treatment) = Treatment Ratio. This will determine whether you can or can't be treated.
A multi billion dollar center in Washington DC will determine treatment at the time and place of care. Coming to a doctor's office near you on 1/1/2013.
Physicians will also face penalties if they violate this. $100K for the first offense, with eventual jailing of the physician.
Awwww....I am a paleo conservative. Your language speaks as though you are a big fan of that girly man, Glen Beck...a conservative masquerader duping the hypnotized television watchers.
I pride myself in only bashing people who deserve it. Such as, people who do not vote, should not complain about elected officials, people who do not respect all branches of the military and their sacrifices, should move to another country. People who deal in and sell illegal drugs should be locked away. People who abuse and molest children should be killed immediately after trial...no appeals. For they have caused the cycle of child abuse to "more than likely" be carried to another generation.
They need to put a rush on it, I am mighty old. Tell them to bring a comfortable wheel chair, a laptop, a bag of marijuana (everyone says I should try that before I die.) And please, please do not forget my centerfold of Simon Cowell. When I look at him, it makes me want to put my teeth in and smile pretty. He loves me in my mind. Do you think he will visit me on visiting day and bring me a pack of marijuana cigarettes if I like them? Will you visit me?
Any knowledge that is acquired from being incarcerated. I will ask you, should any questions arise. I like answers from people with first hand knowledge.
All prisoners should wear React belt( or maybe an electronic dog training collar). Then if they get out of hand. Its as simple as using a remote control to quell the disturbance.
"They" have actually tossed this idea around for airline passengers...to put bracelets on them..."just in case."
Why dehumanize I ask? When we dehumanize others, the only thing we accomplish is dehumanizing ourselves.
Abu Graib is a perfect example. As an aside, funny how it was just grunts punished for that fiasco...no Majors, Colnels, Generals...just grunts.
These people are being punished for breaking the law. They are still human. No one should have the power to take that from them.
I know, I'll be labeled a bleeding heart liberal.
Then I'll make a comment about something else and be labeled a Nazi right winger....and so it goes.
I know Sheila personally and I can tell you that she is very intelligent and insightful. FYI....some of her comments are made to screw with the ignorant people on this site and others are to simply voice her opinion. And before you post something stupid, her opinion is usually 'right on the money'. In fact, the majority of the time she is only pointing out the obvious. I suppose you are on of those "I want change" people. Do you want to change the 'Freedom of speech' too? If so, please stop posting and we can start the change with you.
I've said it before and I'll say it again..."shut up" is not an argument to someone else's comment, it is merely proof of your lack of knowledge and inability to form a valid argument to someone else's opinion. This is a forum for opinions so if you don't like it.....go find "change". Maybe you should start with changing the sites you read. Oh, I hear that the manager of the h.h. shorted a cook some hours on the paycheck issued last week. Was that you? You should spend less time blogging and more time insuring that the employees get paid for the time they work. Don't blame this one the cook either because I was there....maybe I was a customer OR maybe I work for you. Hum, let the paranoia begin...haha
Noun 1. jailor - someone who guards prisoners
gaoler, jailer, prison guard, screw, turnkey
keeper - someone in charge of other people; "am I my brother's keeper?"
law officer, lawman, peace officer - an officer of the law
Definition of JAILER
1: a keeper of a jail
2: one that restricts another's liberty as if by imprisonment
Variants of JAILER
jail·er also jail·or
Jailor fired, denied bond in murder case
Posted: Sep 30, 2010 7:19 PM EDT
Updated: Oct 03, 2010 7:41 AM EDT
Click image to enlarge
By Dal Cannady - bio | email
HINESVILLE, GA (WTOC) - Kenneth Lumpkin faced a magistrate judge Thursday morning at the Liberty County Jail, where he worked for 14 years. Lumpkin is charged with the murder of 42-year-old Lori Arrowood, who disappeared from her home Saturday night.
Sealed Bid – Jailor Uniforms” and delivered to the Gordon County Administration at. 201 N. Wall Street, Calhoun, Georgia no later than 2:00 p.m. on ...
Pearlene, did I touch a nerve. If you don't pay people for hours worked, you can and should be prosecuted. BTW, pointing out illegal activity is my business. And you say you are the manager, so is it not in your job description to watch over your employees? You might want to pull out the dictionary and look up the word manager. Just saying!
that react belt dont work on everyone. Ask someone about Napolean Harris. This is by far the most dangerous individual in the state of Ga. He would eat Brian Nichols for breakfast.
Ron, Please go work at Jackson. Get a chance to see "first hand" these poor misguided souls that you are referring to. Then tell us again that we should not dehumanize them.(if that is possible) There is a percentage of inmates that barely qualify to be called Human. For these inmates crime is a way of life and they do not care who they hurt.
11.3 What Napolean Harris needs is lock down 24 hrs a day. With only the bare minimum amount of food. No radio, no books, no pen or paper. Just a cold jail cell, blanket, and a bread/water diet. Slim him down to a manageable 120 lbs and break him mentally. After a couple months he'll be the best "jackman" you ever seen.
You put words in my mouth. Never did I call these people "poor misguided souls" as you infer.
I agree there are very bad people out there and incarcerated.
Yes, prisoners (and non prisoners) often equate a calm demeanor with weakness. This is a big mistake.
I have a lot of experience in a psychiatric lock down unit in another state as an employee so I know what I say to be truth.
As a rule, and there are exceptions, the louder the prisoner, the more obnoxious, the less physical danger those around said prisoner are. It is the quiet people who pose the most risk. The same goes for the law abiding.
I am not advocating being a wuss, not defending oneself, whether it be at a prison, psych unit or walking down the street.
What I said, or tried to imply is that there is a line that can be tempting to cross and some will. All you have to do is google, "The Stanford Experiment" and read. What you will see is a clinical study on what happens to good people who are put in a very bad or even evil situation.
Though it is just a movie, The Green Mile is an excellent character study of how good people react in a terrible situation. Was the Tom Hanks or David Morse characters wimps? Nope. They chose not to dehumanize and despised those who did.
Again, the result of one dehumanizing another is that both become dehumanized.
That comment really took me back to my grade school years. Wow, 'whats matter afraid' and 'I dare you'. Really? Do you still say 'Na na na na boo boo' too? I hope you grow up soon because I've found that people who resort to elementary type behavior don't make it far in life. Oh wait, 'You are the manager' at the h.h. You are lucky to have that job so if I were you, I'd take more pride in it and be a great deal more respectful.
Sorry Ron, didn't intend to put words in your mouth. I'm just use to that "poor lost soul" mentality some (liberals) use.
Let's just say 25% of prisoners can not be reformed to live in our society. These are the worst of the worst. So why not lock this 25% up, without any of the rights guaranteed under the Constitution? Why not experiment? If it can benefit the very society that the inmate has damaged? Consider it partial restitution.
Stanford Experiment? Was that where the inmates were given LSD? Keeping one inmate up for 45 days? Etc.. Etc..
First, the prison population has already surrendered the majority of their rights granted in the constitution by being found guilty. Once released, they still don't have their 2nd Ammendment rights.
The 25 percent you speak of will never have their rights anyway.
We should never....EVER...deviate or experiment away from our great constitution. It is the one great thing that gives us, the people, our freedoms.
The experiment you speak of is not the Stanford Experiment but I do believe you are speaking of MKULTRA...that did major experiments with LSD, mind control....much like the Manchurian candidate.
See a georgia Law book for correct legal spelling of a Jailer.
Entailed in Georgia law, Sheriffs are authorized to have "Jailers", but nowhere in the code section does it mention authority for any "jailors", thus, there are no legal "jailors" in Georgia, regardless of how some ignorant court reporter or newsman decides to spell it.
Go research the Georgia law for yourself, I learned this in Forsyth while at GPSTC, whats your credibility, besides google?
At approximately 11:00 AM Saturday morning a Hall County Jailor was assaulted by an inmate while transferring him to a disciplinary cell at the Hall County Jail.
Tort Liability in Georgia for the Criminal Acts of Another: 63 Georgia courts have recognized this duty in the jailor-prisoner relationship to hold a jailor liable for failing to aid a prisoner in certain kinds of ...
Habeas corpus; extradition. Cobb Superior Court. Before Judge Ravan.
This is an appeal from the judgment of the trial court granting appellee's petition for habeas corpus in an extradition proceeding.
In October, 1977, the Governor of the State of Alabama presented a writ of extradition to the Governor of Georgia requesting the immediate extradition of J. B. Stoner. Appellants, the sheriff and chief jailor of Cobb County through the Attorney General of the State of Georgia, now appeal.
The pertinent language of OCGA 36-1-21 is set forth in Division 1. OCGA 15-16-23 provides in pertinent part that "[s]heriffs are authorized in their discretion to appoint one or more deputies." As the parties correctly note, deeply embedded in our case law is the notion that the sheriff alone has the authority and power to appoint and fire deputies. " 'Deputy sheriffs and deputy jailors are employees of the sheriff, whom the sheriffs alone are entitled to appoint or discharge. Board of Commissioners of Richmond County v. Whittle, 180 Ga. 166 (178 SE 534) [(1935)].
The tenure in employment of a deputy jailor or deputy sheriff is dependent, not alone upon the will of the sheriff whose employee he is and who may discharge him when he chooses, but also upon the re-election of the sheriff. Thus it is impossible for deputies to calculate with any degree of certainty when their employment will terminate. . . . [D]eputies perform duties of the sheriff, which ceases when the sheriff leaves office. . . .' " Employees Retirement System v. Lewis, 109 Ga. App. 476, 480-481 (136 SE2d 518) (1964).
HOWARD et al. v. CITY OF COLUMBUS et al.
HOWARD et al. v. CHASE.
A99A0680.
A99A1258.
(239 Ga. App. 399)
(521 SE2d 51)
(1999)
ELDRIDGE, Judge.
Wrongful death, etc. Muscogee Superior Court. Before Judge Langford, Senior Judge
...At other times, when the cellmates told the jailors that Howard was seriously sick or had fainted, the jailors did not even look at him or do anything to determine if he was sick. Howard lost considerable weight, i.e., 30 to 40 pounds, and had a shrunken face, indicating to a lay person that he was profoundly sick and had a serious medical need....
see also Brown v. Hughes, 894 F2d 1533, 1537 (11th Cir. 1990). "If [jailors] delay or deny access to medical care . . ., the [E]ighth [A]mendment is violated. . . . [A] refusal to provide essential care violates the [E]ighth [A]mendment." Rogers v. Evans, supra at 1058.
"an Eighth Amendment claimant need not show that a [jailor] acted or failed to act believing that harm actually would befall an inmate; it is enough that the official acted or failed to act despite his knowledge of a substantial risk of serious harm." Farmer v. Brennan, supra at 842.
"in Seay v. Cleveland, supra, based upon Gilbert v. Richardson, supra, is to be treated as an incorrect statement of the law by the dissent and accorded no force and effect? If the statement of the Supreme Court is a correct statement of law, then supervision in a personal capacity is not discretionary but ministerial. The dissent relies upon cases dealing with supervision of law enforcement personnel as a discretionary rather than a ministerial act; such authority does not deal with jailors, who lack peace officer certification, nor medical personnel."
MERRITT v. ATHENS CLARKE COUNTY, GEORGIA.
A98A1424.
(233 Ga. App. 203)
(504 SE2d 41)
(1998)
"...There was no evidence that Dr. Moye communicated such information in writing or by telephone to either the sheriff, head jailor, Dr. Clark, or any official for Athens Clarke County."
Therefore, the alleged violation of the Eighth Amendment turns upon whether there has been a subjective deliberate indifference displayed by a jailor/prison official by act or failure to act, pursuant to the policy, toward the plaintiff. Wilson v. Seiter, 501 U. S. 294, 296-299 (111 SC 2321, 115 LE2d 271) (1991); Hardin v. Hayes, supra at 939.
I would like to kindly suggest that you please seek out factual information, from an Actual Georgia Law source, not some google search that will lead you to various websites with irrelevant information. I have done the work for you, please see O.C.G.A. § 15-16-24, O.C.G.A. § 42-4-1, and O.C.G.A. § 42-4-2. These Ga. Code sections are the legal standard that states the Fact that Georgia law granting authority to Sheriffs and penal institutions relates to "Jailers", but there is no mention in the code granting any authority for "Jailors".
Thus, a "Jailor" would have no legal authority in Georgia, as there is none in the official code granting this authority, regardless of mention by news outlets and court reporters who spell it out of compliance with georgia law.
please be aware that the english language is fluid and develops due to the commonality of it's usage (ie: ain't). Please also see that the Superior Courts in many counties and the GA Court of Appeals recognizes the alternate spelling. The OCGA is not the only authority. Just trying to help you out so you don't look ingnorant or country when you meet someone with knowledge about this and you try to argue this point with smug certainty.
The Stanford Experiment...a bunch of college kids role playing. What exactly did it prove? When the guards had no rules, no ramifications for there actions. The prisoners... Not true sociopaths. Not true violent offenders....only actors. So the whole experiment was flawed.
Oh, the 25%...still receive medical,3 meals a day, access to law libraries, mail, store,dental. And can still commit crime against our society. So much of crime on the street is run from prison cells. And our liberal courts(and opinions like yours) make it impossible to stop. Until we take away ALL RIGHTS from this portion of the inmate population, the cycle will continue.
The OCGA is the standard for Georgia law, regardless of any "alternate spellings" or definitions given by an english dictionary, court reporter, newspaper quote, Sheriff's secretary, etc., and the accurate legal spelling remains intact within the code sections as stated.
Fact, Georgia law grants authority for "Jailers", but not "jailors".
Google/yahoo searcher you are, Legal scholar you aren't.
P.O.S.T. Council also issues Specialty Certifications to officers and other agency staff. Specialty certifications issued by P.O.S.T. include:
RADAR
LASER
VASCAR
Field Training Officer
Identification Technician
Chaplain
Departmental Training Officer
Jailor
Instructors
Career Development Certifications
Arson Investigator
Senior Deputy
Each Specialty Certification has established certification and training requirements that must be met. Some Specialty Certifications have recertification requirements that must be completed to maintain certification in that area.
Dear Anonymous, Insults are not necessary unless you feel you are losing an argument. The internet is just as valid a resource as a law library in these current times if you know which sites are credible.
You may want to use your scholarly skills to check the GA General Assembly Website:
(4) 'Warden or superintendent' shall mean the commissioner or any warden, superintendent, sheriff, chief jailor, or other person who is responsible for the overall management and operation of a place of incarceration.
Now think outside the box of the GPSTC and consider that language is more broad than your small experience there. If you still stubbornly cling to your arguement after given the facts, then your pride prevents you from learning. Also, we can agree to disagree.
Also, please see the Official Code of GA, section 42-5-18, maybe share this with your instructor at the Center:
TITLE 42. PENAL INSTITUTIONS
CHAPTER 5. CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS OF STATE AND COUNTIES
ARTICLE 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS
O.C.G.A. § 42-5-18 (2010)
§ 42-5-18. Items prohibited for possession by inmates; warden's authorization; penalty
(a) As used in this Code section, the term:
(1) "Inmate" means a prisoner, detainee, criminal suspect, immigration detainee, or other person held, incarcerated, or detained in a place of incarceration.
(2) "Place of incarceration" means any prison, probation detention center, jail, or institution, including any state, federal, local, or privately operated facility, used for the purpose of incarcerating criminals or detainees.
(3) "Telecommunications device" means a device, an apparatus associated with a device, or a component of a device that enables, or may be used to enable, communication with a person outside a place of incarceration, including a telephone, cellular telephone, personal digital assistant, transmitting radio, or computer connected or capable of being connected to a computer network, by wireless or other technology, or otherwise capable of communicating with a person or device outside of a place of incarceration.
(4) "Warden or superintendent" shall mean the commissioner or any warden, superintendent, sheriff, chief jailor, or other person who is responsible for the overall management and operation of a place of incarceration.
The GA General Assembly passes the laws that are placed in the OCGA (in other words it "trumps" the OCGA) Also the Jailor form of the spelling is found in the Code in the section pertaining to correctional institutions
You must be the knucklehead that misspelled the Pike county Sheriffs Jailer badges a few years ago, trying to save face. Everyone they came into contact with said "your badge is misspelled"
Oh well, you guys and gals argue it out, this is lame.
Get off this and worry about important stuff. Why is READ now used as a noun? Why do we need both words, flammable and inflammable when they have the same definition?
It is a person of poor imagination who can only think of one way to spell a word.
Pearline, seriously, you need to clean up your act a "tad" if you seriously work with the public. I do not believe your limited vocabulary is going to touch that of C.O.C. She is at the finish line before you find your way out of the stall.
REIDSVILLE -- A Georgia State Prison guard died two weeks after being pummeled by a maximum-security inmate -- the first time a Georgia inmate has killed a prison employee in more than a decade, officials said.
Prison guard James Henderson Jr., 41, had been in intensive care since the attack late May 20. Prison officials said inmate Napoleon Harris repeatedly punched and kicked Henderson in a cell block.
Harris had been serving time for a 1993 armed robbery in Cook County.
The Georgia Bureau of Investigation is investigating the attack. It was unclear what additional charges would be filed against Harris or when the charges might be filed, GBI spokesman John Bankhead said Tuesday.
Harris assaulted Henderson when the guard told him to go into his cell for the night, at about 11:30 p.m., the Department of Corrections said. An officer who rushed to help was also attacked and briefly hospitalized, officials said.
Henderson died Monday at a Savannah hospital. It was the first time a state prison employee had died at the hands of an inmate since 1991, when a convicted murderer stabbed a kitchen worker to death.
Henderson "was a good man and an experienced officer who died while protecting the public from Georgia's worst criminals," Commissioner Jim Wetherington said. "We grieve for James and his family."
Harris has a history of violence, prison files show.
He was originally set to be released in 2008, but three years had been added to his sentence for attacks on other guards. His most recent citation came in January, for throwing an unknown liquid on an officer.
The Tattnall County prison is maximum-security, housing the most aggressive men in the Georgia prison system.
Harris was apparently allowed to roam about his block as a dorm orderly, responsible for keeping common areas neat and clean. Corrections spokesman Scott Stallings said he did not know why.
"Those are some legitimate questions the commissioner wants answers to," Stallings said.
Henderson, who had served eight years in as a prison officer and lived in Vidalia, is survived by his parents and a 10-year-old daughter. Funeral arrangements were incomplete Tuesday.
He needs lock down 24-7 in a cold cell with only a thin blanket and 3 of the barest meals a day. No grievance procedures, no ACLU, no phone, no TV, no radio, no medical, no dental, no liberal judges crying inhuman treatment. Penitentiary comes from the word Penance. Prisoners were locked up with only the barest of essentials and their crime to ponder and pray over.
Spelling Bee, hell. Kids only know acronyms now.
Why did you ignore my question in my blog about flammable vs. inflammable? Too illiterate or ignorant to answer?
(you are probably Miss Pearline yourself)If not, you best find a Waffle House. It's better to be smothered, covered, diced, chunked, peppered and scattered than some of those cook revenge tricks that I have read about.
770-325-1300
The myth of "one phone call" when you're arrested is not true. You are allowed to make reasonable necessary attempts at booking to let someone know your wherabouts, and even in the cells, there are phones that you can call out collect.
On a side note, I find the Sheila Tolley bashing to be tiresome. It reminds me of children in the schoolyard who follow the class bully and turn against one student just because others do.
Think with your own minds, people. Don't follow the crowd and become part of the "herd mentality".
Unless you know Ms. Tolley personally, and she flattened your tires or beat you up outside the convenience store and you're holding a grudge, there's really no reason to attack her everytime she posts something. We all have a right in this country to express our opinion.
Actually, I doubt Ms. Tolley needs me to stick up for her; she appears able to handle any arrows shot her way.
You need help you progressive liberal idiot!
You may not be an idiot, but you certainly show your ignorance.
How many Americans know what the Federal Coordinating Council for Comparative Effectiveness Research is? A 15 member rationing board has already been appointed by Barry Soetoro.
They will be using a formula to determine if someone will get medical care : (Cost of the Treatment ) / (# of Years Patient will benefit from treatment) = Treatment Ratio. This will determine whether you can or can't be treated.
A multi billion dollar center in Washington DC will determine treatment at the time and place of care. Coming to a doctor's office near you on 1/1/2013.
Physicians will also face penalties if they violate this. $100K for the first offense, with eventual jailing of the physician.
So the answer would be, Nobody.
Hope that makes you feel a little better.
He is an INCARCERATION SPECIALIST and NOT a jayler, jailer or jailor.
This information should answer outstanding questions.
Call N. Alcars
Information Provider
You are alone.
And therefore; in bad company.
Mouse..Mice
Why not
House..Hice
It is a person with a poor imagination who can only think of one way to spell a word.
-Mark Twain-
Why dehumanize I ask? When we dehumanize others, the only thing we accomplish is dehumanizing ourselves.
Abu Graib is a perfect example. As an aside, funny how it was just grunts punished for that fiasco...no Majors, Colnels, Generals...just grunts.
These people are being punished for breaking the law. They are still human. No one should have the power to take that from them.
I know, I'll be labeled a bleeding heart liberal.
Then I'll make a comment about something else and be labeled a Nazi right winger....and so it goes.
gaoler, jailer, prison guard, screw, turnkey
keeper - someone in charge of other people; "am I my brother's keeper?"
law officer, lawman, peace officer - an officer of the law
Definition of JAILER
1: a keeper of a jail
2: one that restricts another's liberty as if by imprisonment
Variants of JAILER
jail·er also jail·or
Posted: Sep 30, 2010 7:19 PM EDT
Updated: Oct 03, 2010 7:41 AM EDT
Click image to enlarge
By Dal Cannady - bio | email
HINESVILLE, GA (WTOC) - Kenneth Lumpkin faced a magistrate judge Thursday morning at the Liberty County Jail, where he worked for 14 years. Lumpkin is charged with the murder of 42-year-old Lori Arrowood, who disappeared from her home Saturday night.
Anyone who thinks that is just a fool.
11.3 What Napolean Harris needs is lock down 24 hrs a day. With only the bare minimum amount of food. No radio, no books, no pen or paper. Just a cold jail cell, blanket, and a bread/water diet. Slim him down to a manageable 120 lbs and break him mentally. After a couple months he'll be the best "jackman" you ever seen.
Georgia Law perscribes Jailers for Sheriffs.
Georgia Law does not perscribe "Jailors".
Research the law sometime, not some liberal wikipedia or snopes.
Fact; there is no legal authority for a "jailor" in Georgia law.
I agree there are very bad people out there and incarcerated.
Yes, prisoners (and non prisoners) often equate a calm demeanor with weakness. This is a big mistake.
I have a lot of experience in a psychiatric lock down unit in another state as an employee so I know what I say to be truth.
As a rule, and there are exceptions, the louder the prisoner, the more obnoxious, the less physical danger those around said prisoner are. It is the quiet people who pose the most risk. The same goes for the law abiding.
I am not advocating being a wuss, not defending oneself, whether it be at a prison, psych unit or walking down the street.
What I said, or tried to imply is that there is a line that can be tempting to cross and some will. All you have to do is google, "The Stanford Experiment" and read. What you will see is a clinical study on what happens to good people who are put in a very bad or even evil situation.
Though it is just a movie, The Green Mile is an excellent character study of how good people react in a terrible situation. Was the Tom Hanks or David Morse characters wimps? Nope. They chose not to dehumanize and despised those who did.
Again, the result of one dehumanizing another is that both become dehumanized.
Let's just say 25% of prisoners can not be reformed to live in our society. These are the worst of the worst. So why not lock this 25% up, without any of the rights guaranteed under the Constitution? Why not experiment? If it can benefit the very society that the inmate has damaged? Consider it partial restitution.
Stanford Experiment? Was that where the inmates were given LSD? Keeping one inmate up for 45 days? Etc.. Etc..
The 25 percent you speak of will never have their rights anyway.
We should never....EVER...deviate or experiment away from our great constitution. It is the one great thing that gives us, the people, our freedoms.
The experiment you speak of is not the Stanford Experiment but I do believe you are speaking of MKULTRA...that did major experiments with LSD, mind control....much like the Manchurian candidate.
Entailed in Georgia law, Sheriffs are authorized to have "Jailers", but nowhere in the code section does it mention authority for any "jailors", thus, there are no legal "jailors" in Georgia, regardless of how some ignorant court reporter or newsman decides to spell it.
Go research the Georgia law for yourself, I learned this in Forsyth while at GPSTC, whats your credibility, besides google?
5/25/2009
At approximately 11:00 AM Saturday morning a Hall County Jailor was assaulted by an inmate while transferring him to a disciplinary cell at the Hall County Jail.
6-15-01gc
DEPARTMENT: Jail, Hart County
JOB SUMMARY: This position is responsible for managing and directing the overall operation of the Hart County jail.
MAJOR DUTIES:
The Newnan Police Department consists of two (2) divisions, Investigations and Special Operations and Patrol and Training.
The Investigations and Special Operations Division is headed by Deputy Chief Rodney Riggs. This Division consists of the following units:
Chief Douglas L. (Buster) Meadows
1. Administration
2. Municipal Court
3. Criminal Investigations
4. Traffic Enforcement
5. Bike Patrol
6. Crime Suppression
7. Jailor
8. Parking Enforcement
v.
James R. POWELL, Jailor, Richmond County, Georgia, Appellee.
No. 24981.
United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit.
This is an appeal from the judgment of the trial court granting appellee's petition for habeas corpus in an extradition proceeding.
In October, 1977, the Governor of the State of Alabama presented a writ of extradition to the Governor of Georgia requesting the immediate extradition of J. B. Stoner. Appellants, the sheriff and chief jailor of Cobb County through the Attorney General of the State of Georgia, now appeal.
HOWARD et al. v. CHASE.
A99A0680.
A99A1258.
(239 Ga. App. 399)
(521 SE2d 51)
(1999)
ELDRIDGE, Judge.
Wrongful death, etc. Muscogee Superior Court. Before Judge Langford, Senior Judge
...At other times, when the cellmates told the jailors that Howard was seriously sick or had fainted, the jailors did not even look at him or do anything to determine if he was sick. Howard lost considerable weight, i.e., 30 to 40 pounds, and had a shrunken face, indicating to a lay person that he was profoundly sick and had a serious medical need....
A98A1424.
(233 Ga. App. 203)
(504 SE2d 41)
(1998)
"...There was no evidence that Dr. Moye communicated such information in writing or by telephone to either the sheriff, head jailor, Dr. Clark, or any official for Athens Clarke County."
Thus, a "Jailor" would have no legal authority in Georgia, as there is none in the official code granting this authority, regardless of mention by news outlets and court reporters who spell it out of compliance with georgia law.
Oh, the 25%...still receive medical,3 meals a day, access to law libraries, mail, store,dental. And can still commit crime against our society. So much of crime on the street is run from prison cells. And our liberal courts(and opinions like yours) make it impossible to stop. Until we take away ALL RIGHTS from this portion of the inmate population, the cycle will continue.
Fact, Georgia law grants authority for "Jailers", but not "jailors".
Google/yahoo searcher you are, Legal scholar you aren't.
It is the "Official Code of Georgia"
RADAR
LASER
VASCAR
Field Training Officer
Identification Technician
Chaplain
Departmental Training Officer
Jailor
Instructors
Career Development Certifications
Arson Investigator
Senior Deputy
Each Specialty Certification has established certification and training requirements that must be met. Some Specialty Certifications have recertification requirements that must be completed to maintain certification in that area.
You may want to use your scholarly skills to check the GA General Assembly Website:
http://www.legis.state.ga.us/legis/2007_08/versions/sb366_AP_10.htm
Here you will find the alernate spelling used:
(4) 'Warden or superintendent' shall mean the commissioner or any warden, superintendent, sheriff, chief jailor, or other person who is responsible for the overall management and operation of a place of incarceration.
Now think outside the box of the GPSTC and consider that language is more broad than your small experience there. If you still stubbornly cling to your arguement after given the facts, then your pride prevents you from learning. Also, we can agree to disagree.
TITLE 42. PENAL INSTITUTIONS
CHAPTER 5. CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS OF STATE AND COUNTIES
ARTICLE 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS
O.C.G.A. § 42-5-18 (2010)
§ 42-5-18. Items prohibited for possession by inmates; warden's authorization; penalty
(a) As used in this Code section, the term:
(1) "Inmate" means a prisoner, detainee, criminal suspect, immigration detainee, or other person held, incarcerated, or detained in a place of incarceration.
(2) "Place of incarceration" means any prison, probation detention center, jail, or institution, including any state, federal, local, or privately operated facility, used for the purpose of incarcerating criminals or detainees.
(3) "Telecommunications device" means a device, an apparatus associated with a device, or a component of a device that enables, or may be used to enable, communication with a person outside a place of incarceration, including a telephone, cellular telephone, personal digital assistant, transmitting radio, or computer connected or capable of being connected to a computer network, by wireless or other technology, or otherwise capable of communicating with a person or device outside of a place of incarceration.
(4) "Warden or superintendent" shall mean the commissioner or any warden, superintendent, sheriff, chief jailor, or other person who is responsible for the overall management and operation of a place of incarceration.
Code section: 42-5-18.
Copyright 2010 by The State of Georgia
All rights reserved.
*** Current Through the 2010 Regular Session ***
*** Annotations Current Through August 20, 2010 ***
TITLE 42. PENAL INSTITUTIONS
CHAPTER 5. CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS OF STATE AND COUNTIES
ARTICLE 1. GENERAL PROVISIONS
O.C.G.A. § 42-5-18 (2010)
Do you say "Jail-or" or "jail-er"?
I always heard it "Jail-er", like "Trailer"
Oh well, you guys and gals argue it out, this is lame.
It is a person of poor imagination who can only think of one way to spell a word.
-Mark Twain-
Prison guard James Henderson Jr., 41, had been in intensive care since the attack late May 20. Prison officials said inmate Napoleon Harris repeatedly punched and kicked Henderson in a cell block.
Harris had been serving time for a 1993 armed robbery in Cook County.
The Georgia Bureau of Investigation is investigating the attack. It was unclear what additional charges would be filed against Harris or when the charges might be filed, GBI spokesman John Bankhead said Tuesday.
Harris assaulted Henderson when the guard told him to go into his cell for the night, at about 11:30 p.m., the Department of Corrections said. An officer who rushed to help was also attacked and briefly hospitalized, officials said.
Henderson died Monday at a Savannah hospital. It was the first time a state prison employee had died at the hands of an inmate since 1991, when a convicted murderer stabbed a kitchen worker to death.
Henderson "was a good man and an experienced officer who died while protecting the public from Georgia's worst criminals," Commissioner Jim Wetherington said. "We grieve for James and his family."
Harris has a history of violence, prison files show.
He was originally set to be released in 2008, but three years had been added to his sentence for attacks on other guards. His most recent citation came in January, for throwing an unknown liquid on an officer.
The Tattnall County prison is maximum-security, housing the most aggressive men in the Georgia prison system.
Harris was apparently allowed to roam about his block as a dorm orderly, responsible for keeping common areas neat and clean. Corrections spokesman Scott Stallings said he did not know why.
"Those are some legitimate questions the commissioner wants answers to," Stallings said.
Henderson, who had served eight years in as a prison officer and lived in Vidalia, is survived by his parents and a 10-year-old daughter. Funeral arrangements were incomplete Tuesday.
You now have illiterate fans all over!
Why did you ignore my question in my blog about flammable vs. inflammable? Too illiterate or ignorant to answer?