That was a master manipulator… took him months to groom her and she didn’t even realize what what going on even tho she knew he was a known manipulator and with all her training. Even in this bit… she still couldn’t admit that she was being manipulated.
I REALLY appreciate the honesty and openness of the prison guards and I agree that sometimes the worse thing that can happen to us can turn out to be the best when we shift up onto a higher level in life. I'm writing a book about a man's life in prison, so this is a fascinating look into what it's like to be a prison officer.
I’ve not long been out. I spent 12 months in 4 prisons and 2 female officers got caught with an inmate. One got caught bringing stuff in. I also met a few great officers and staff members that helped me with my addiction problems and gave me good advice for when I out.
@@imogensharma Thank you, your comment means a lot. Since I wrote this comment 6 months ago my life has gotten so much better. My tag is off my ankle and I’ve got a brick laying job and earning decent money now. Also got a really loving decent girlfriend now which has made a huge difference. I just work and spend time with her. I’ve learned what people think are the little things that they take for granted and don’t even think about are actually the most important things in your life and make you most happy.
@rdizzy1 the same way. There are no perfect candidates for a job like this. And even still you may think you're ready but you have to go through it to see you're actually not.
She sounds like she ABSOLUTELY was manipulated by this inmate. Right from the beginning I was thinking she sounded too "Workable" for someone. Right from the start of her story you could tell she effectively was groomed/ easily led on by this person. Bit pathetic to fall for some "Bad boy" like a silly teenager when you're a prison guard- I'm curious what his crimes were now.
It's easy to say, "i wouldn't have brought contraband in" but i don't know, if i was working in a prison, who knows how you would react given the same situation, how many didn't get caught, i admire there honesty in front of a camera, lee seemed genuinely upset, brave stuff.
Agree lees a scumbag still drinking and sniffing the weekends I no 2 inmates who got badly scared from the gear he brought in that’s the impact this does wen corrupt inmates bring gear in lee can justify it all he wants he cud have left and got another job
I can elaborate a bit, as I also work in prison. The basic understanding between officers is anyone who brings anything in for the inmates is a piece of shit. The ONLY thing an inmate can do for you is get you fired. They are master manipulators and have NOTHING to lose and everything to gain. It's so ridiculously easy to just tell them no and move on
I wonder how many are intimidated on the job. If you've not been brought up around those people you don't understand the mind games, manipulation and possibly get hooked by the attitude they aren't that bad. I had a friend do time really nice guy but he was one of scotlands most well known football hooligans. Come out and went to america for boxing, come home and opened a gym keeping kids off the street. Not long ago he had a pussy come up and shoot him in the back, he died. Past caught up sadly
Either way i don't think i could handle working in a prison. Obviously these two screwed up, but massive respect to anyone who has the balls to do that job properly.
@@pablodavies414 hey nice to see and hear you tell your story, I left in 03 so was much different when I was in, the officers were actually in control 😀
Amazing how you never know the outcome of a situation. inmates are great at the manipulation game. But great video! I am a retired Correction Officer form California.
Bianca shows how easy it is to be manipulated. Either that or she's lying about her background before life in the prison service. Lee, you really have to wonder why you would take anything in after seeing the spread in the paper... but he also highlights how easy it is to get the job. The selection process for prison officers needs to reflect the fact that people doing that job should not have particular character types, and that needs to be selected for during screening. Seems obvious they are not doing that. Bianca for sure immediately came across as someone that may get manipulated easily before she said anything about her crime. This story also shows the normalisation of criminal activity when it surrounds you all the time. If that is normal for everyone around you, it becomes more difficult to see the right path.
@@pablodavies414 Thank you for telling your story. I'm 3 years in myself, and as kind as I am to them, they know my boundaries. I'm not saying this to put you down. Its important to know how easy these things can start, and you speaking up will help other Officers. So thank you for being willing to share your story.
Being a prison guard may be the toughest job in the world. On a daily basis, you are outnumbered and your life is in danger. Considering how our governments spend lavishly on so many things, the money is there for higher prison guard salaries, but there is no desire to do so. Also countries like Portugal have shown the benefits of drug decriminalization, which results in fewer prisoners.
I’d have to argue the proposition that a prison guard being the toughest job, even in the system, let alone the world. For 15 years, I ran community service programs, where I was alone, and often uncontactable, with 8 offenders. Admittedly, most were low level, but due to community service often being a component of probation, I had to accommodate violent offenders, mafiosi, bikies, and seriously connected drug runners. And of course, countless meth/amphetamines of all concoctions, users, people with numerous mental health issues, and any possible permutation of the above. And during my time in this position, I had a number of occasions that might otherwise have ended very differently, but for either my ability to appear confident in potentially dangerous situations, and/or dumb luck, I managed to avoid serious consequences to all the violence I encountered. Unfortunately, I was absolutely no match for the politics of the Department.
Well Said, It may sound tempting, but the truth is after you do such a thing you are forced to live a lie. You don't belong in any camp, the stress you would place yourself under, not to mention the guilt, not to mention the hypocrisy... All the best deanheathcote5562
I find it so weird; I would think they would be the last people to break the law. There are no people ever who the treat of going to jail would feel as real as to a prison guard. Why would they even risk it, when they know what it is like?
I can understand having sympathy for an inmate who really needs something for their emotional survival, but I've always been a straight shooter/law-abiding citizen and would never risk myself for an inmate. Your family are the only people worth risking jail for(not even yourself). It has to be a selfless decision to do something wrong for others and not for your own personal gain.
My mother's ex-boyfriend got 5 years for this, ended up doing 2 1/2 years and was on house arrest after. He wasn't a prison guard but the main supervisor for the workshop. It was godsent at the time because he was an alcoholic, abusive piece of shit and did other things I wouldn't dare to mention here. But anyway, I was made aware of the whole situation by him when he was well into it and I was mortified. I actually saw a bag of goods he just brought home and amongst the regular cellphones, weed and hash, I kid you not, were bottles of L'Oreal shampoo and conditioner lol.
@@JBLancs Nope, I've seen them and it was just shampoo and conditionner lmao but you have to remember these are considered luxuries inside so while it doesn't make a lot of sense to the outside world, it does in prison.
I have empathy with PO’s & the poor training/salary and support they receive (I am really supportive of prison reform) but I struggle to have sympathy with people in positions of power who have utilised that for their own gain.
Being a C/O alone, yet in your twenties brings a lot of conversation that needs to be spoke upon more. Never been to a prison, inside a prison yet alone around 3,000+ inmates. The Texas prisons here in the US are packed full of men and women. I worked in a maximum security prison in Beaumont, Tx. Looking back, those 6 weeks of training really made me have to be a man and also the bigger person. First day of otjt I seen men who physically looked like women, talked like women. Men who needed mental help and not to be locked up and raped. As a correctional officer you’re always outnumbered, and in the back of your mind you know you could die. Yet if you mess up due to lack of training and experience you’re then placed on probation. Resulting in hourly and wages cut, all of the good officers get punished by rank by being put on the worst pods possible. Then those slipping shit in are always the ones with their feet kicked up eating free world food.. ranking officers sleep at work, how the fuck I don’t know but I didn’t trust many co-workers with nothing!
I mean if they’re trans that’s fine. But they shouldn’t be with the women either because they can then rape them. Inmates have become pregnant from stuff like that.
@@pri.sci.lla. you’re correct, they shouldn’t be placed with women. I was just saying as someone who hadn’t been inside a prison it was just a new environment to adapt to seeing everything that goes on.
It must be hard to get honest people who are willing to do that job. I think the only thing that would deter me from accepting bribes in there for smuggling would be the possibilty of being caught and prosecuted. There's no way I wouldn't feel underpaid after a bad day doing that shit
It was her character outside of what she did. Never got into trouble. Seems kind and compassionate. Not every crime, even some of the bigger ones, deserve a sentence. If she ended up in prison, she very well may have never started a business.
It may not sound bad, but the amount of danger they put others in, is indescribable. Once you reach that point (90% of the time) they can get you to bring in anything. Those inmates own you. Any slip up, and they are ratting you out. So it goes from gum to guns. Or knives. Or tools for escape. Or even actual help escaping. It sounds silly, but look at what these two faced when they got caught? Years of their life, being on the OTHER side. That'd be scary af. So it starts small, and can quickly grow big. Hope that makes sense, and I'm not saying these 2 would have done that or anything.
Corruption is rife and once Prison Officers decide to snuggle drugs, phones, or other contraband, they are owned by the inmates. I have little sympathy for Prison Officers who get convicted for corrupt practices. They should receive the severest of penalties!
I think this is so so tragic! The inmates are in prison because they broke the law the wardens are also sort of serving a sentence too because they have to look after them yet at the same time they could too be placed in great danger! To me it's like a horrific and I mean a horrific catch 22! I know I could never ever work in a prison never! Yes of course there are bad wardens but here's to all the good ones thank you 👏. peace and love 💛
Don't keep things on your shoulders. If you slip up, tell your OIC. Be respectful too. It won't work 100% of the time, but I promise it will make your life easier. Starting off, you aren't shit to any of them. Some have seen hundreds of CO's come and go. Keep a level head, you aren't there to punish them. Be as consistent as possible, with everyone. Be fair. Be firm. Hope you are still at it man! I wrote that forgetting that it was a few months ago, but it's still important to hear. Hopefully you heard that in training of course lol
Quite annoying that 10mins in, her story gets cut to another subject...I wish you had let her finish or is there an extended version where she finishes her story of manipulation?
@@pablodavies414 No, when he started the job he was straight, right? Then he became bent, right? It's not as though he is in a gang and has then intentionally become a prison officer in order to smuggle things in and to abuse power, etc.
@@kali_pow3389 this is correct however the role played to get caught was transporting items into jail or use to the correct terminology conveying articles into prison
@@pablodavies414 Smuggling items more like, not transporting. He is bent and abused his power to smuggle items in for inmates, not transport items in for inmates.
@@kali_pow3389 OK 👍 whatever you say . I'm nit sure I deny your above statement and I say as much in any if my interviews so you are preaching to the converted as they say
They both should have got both three times worse prison sentence to show any one in future who wants to smuggle in drugs or phones etc that you shouldn't do it
I don't think you have any idea what working in a prison is like. Have you ever had to tell a pregnant woman, no, you can't go to the ER to make sure your baby is safe? Have you ever told a person who's been rapped, that yes, they have to move back to the same place their rapist lives? Have you ever watched someone you know take their last breath, and then go on about your day like nothing happened? Have you ever walked into a room with 100+ enemies and then start telling them what to do? A prison sentence isn't going to stop this from happening. I'm not being a jerk, there are just thousands of moments on any given shift, that acting human could lead you down this path. Those up there are just a few examples. What about someone who just lost a kid inside? You cant comfort them in anyway outside of talking. If you hug them in the moment before you think, boom, they could own you. You can't hug inmates, and they know that. So even though you were human, they can later ask a "favor" "Hey, CO, you remember that time you hugged me? I'll keep quite if you bring in some gum." It could be even simpler than that. What's really needed is a strong team that is open and honest. Not to mention, you need a damn team to begin with. Too many times, we only had one officer on the floor of 400 inmates. Can't have a team when no one wants to risk their physical and mental health for low pay. Can't pay them more, because people don't give a shit about inmates or the folks who warden them. Your best defense is telling your Officer in charge that you slipped. Put it in writing and you are usually good, as long as you didn't do something really bad to start with, but even then, you are only risking your job in most cases. Ffs we are here because of the fact that we are so quick to throw someone away.
I used to tell most of the new officers I encountered that they’re basically riding bird with man. They might have the keys but it effect them very similarly, the idiots 😅
Served in the Royal Marines my best mate left before me I grew up with this lad born two days apart lived on the same street grew up as brothers anyway he left the marines and went into the prison service believe me when I say he was the toughest man I knew mentally he was unbreakable he pulled me out of so many dangerous situations that my stupid arse got us in both in Afghan and civvie street growing up he spent a year as a screw and then hanged himself he told me about certain things about his job and it sounded like hell me and his family believe him becoming a PO directly caused that tragic event too happen
Where were you based when you served ? What unit ? and what year did you go out to afghan and with what unit ? and where were you based out of when you were over in afghan ? asking as a former bootneck myself
No ones is getting the most important thing garry saying For most teams to get different ownership in a club from british people which makes sense Same as most lLa laiga clubs does !!
A lot of self righteous comments here, some from ex people in the job. I don’t know the ladies story but Lee made a mistake - no one’s perfect, he never killed anyone. No one’s perfect in this life, just try n keep your side of the street clean, and if someone makes a mistake that’s on them. Like I said no one’s perfect in this life, all we can do is try n be better. I personally think Lee seems like a decent fella who who screwed up but is actually not a bad fella at heart. I think he more than paid for his mistakes like I say keep your side of the street clean I don’t think you need to go running him down over that
Eh, I wouldn't say 100% of the time. I've seen just as many women burn out then men. Just as many nasty power trippers too. However, our a good chunk of our best officers in my prison are Women. No doubt about that at all. In fact, both our Cpt.'s are women!
@@hollenfeuer1 tbf i have never met a wrong'un prison staff in all my time of being naughty. always had respect for each of them as they showed me respect everytime. i just seem to get along with females more than males i guess lol one exception being the prison dentist at reading way back lol he was a monster haha
Why can some people her a story and think its nothing but excuses and "playing the victim" especially when nothing of the sort happened. You heard exactly what EVERY officer lives daily. Not the corruption of course, but we go through more then you could ever imagine.
@@JymVer How many folks have you watched die? Cut to ribbons? Hanging off a 2nd story balcony? Been outnumbered sometimes hundreds to one? Been in a room by yourself, with multiple uncuffed murderers? I bet you work at a god damn McDonalds 🤣 🤣
Most of the long-term prisoners and prisoners that work in the prison gymnasium use steroids. You also got drug addicts that have just got to prison start a three month course of roids to get them up to speed and bulk them up because they come in to prison like skeletons .
Thanks to Lee and Bianca for taking part!
You can follow them here:
Janka (Bianca) - instagram.com/p1protection/
Lee - instagram.com/leepablo1980new/
That was a master manipulator… took him months to groom her and she didn’t even realize what what going on even tho she knew he was a known manipulator and with all her training. Even in this bit… she still couldn’t admit that she was being manipulated.
So many corrupted prison officers in England the things I've seen in those horrible places still give me nightmares and flashbacks.
Go on
Yeah please go on.
😒
In the states too
@@wkatc007 I'm not surprised
I REALLY appreciate the honesty and openness of the prison guards and I agree that sometimes the worse thing that can happen to us can turn out to be the best when we shift up onto a higher level in life. I'm writing a book about a man's life in prison, so this is a fascinating look into what it's like to be a prison officer.
Thankyou and good luck with the book ❤ lee
I’ve not long been out. I spent 12 months in 4 prisons and 2 female officers got caught with an inmate. One got caught bringing stuff in.
I also met a few great officers and staff members that helped me with my addiction problems and gave me good advice for when I out.
Good luck turning your life around mate - it's not going to be easy but don't give up. It's so awesome that you're on the right path.
@@imogensharma Thank you, your comment means a lot. Since I wrote this comment 6 months ago my life has gotten so much better. My tag is off my ankle and I’ve got a brick laying job and earning decent money now. Also got a really loving decent girlfriend now which has made a huge difference. I just work and spend time with her. I’ve learned what people think are the little things that they take for granted and don’t even think about are actually the most important things in your life and make you most happy.
@@smith2781 That brought a tear to my eye. You're a hero mate, good on you.
It’s guards like this who make it difficult for the ones doing the right thing. If you can’t say no , don’t do the job
If everyone felt this way, there wouldn't be enough guards to even hold the prisoners. It is a ridiculous pipe dream sentiment.
@rdizzy1 the same way. There are no perfect candidates for a job like this. And even still you may think you're ready but you have to go through it to see you're actually not.
Great to hear their stories and having it framed the way it was. What impact would have made when they interviewed two wardens that weren't corrupt?
She sounds like she ABSOLUTELY was manipulated by this inmate. Right from the beginning I was thinking she sounded too "Workable" for someone. Right from the start of her story you could tell she effectively was groomed/ easily led on by this person. Bit pathetic to fall for some "Bad boy" like a silly teenager when you're a prison guard- I'm curious what his crimes were now.
It's easy to say, "i wouldn't have brought contraband in" but i don't know, if i was working in a prison, who knows how you would react given the same situation, how many didn't get caught, i admire there honesty in front of a camera, lee seemed genuinely upset, brave stuff.
Cheers bud . Happy new year
So interesting seeing this from their perspective. I actually feel sorry for them when I wouldn’t think I would.
It's a tough gig for anyone who isn't cut out for it . I wasn't x
Yeah I feel same jane
You shouldn’t feel sorry for these corrupt pieces of trash. They’re WEAK and deserve to be in jail with all the other criminals:
Having worked in many prisons, I can't stress how easy it is NOT to do this. I have no sympathy for corrupt officers
Agree lees a scumbag still drinking and sniffing the weekends I no 2 inmates who got badly scared from the gear he brought in that’s the impact this does wen corrupt inmates bring gear in lee can justify it all he wants he cud have left and got another job
Can you elaborate? Interested to see how its approached...
How did not having sympathy help in your job?
I can elaborate a bit, as I also work in prison. The basic understanding between officers is anyone who brings anything in for the inmates is a piece of shit. The ONLY thing an inmate can do for you is get you fired. They are master manipulators and have NOTHING to lose and everything to gain. It's so ridiculously easy to just tell them no and move on
I wonder how many are intimidated on the job.
If you've not been brought up around those people you don't understand the mind games, manipulation and possibly get hooked by the attitude they aren't that bad.
I had a friend do time really nice guy but he was one of scotlands most well known football hooligans.
Come out and went to america for boxing, come home and opened a gym keeping kids off the street.
Not long ago he had a pussy come up and shoot him in the back, he died.
Past caught up sadly
I love these, LadBible, thank you. So much more interesting than the shite on TV. Nothing beats hearing real people's real experiences,
@17:58 makes you really wonder if she was really bringing in contraband but is in denial 😒
Either way i don't think i could handle working in a prison. Obviously these two screwed up, but massive respect to anyone who has the balls to do that job properly.
Did 30 years in various jails in the Uk, lee tells us how it is- I was approached to bring stuff in but never succumbed to the money
Cheers buddy ❤
@@pablodavies414 hey nice to see and hear you tell your story, I left in 03 so was much different when I was in, the officers were actually in control 😀
Amazing how you never know the outcome of a situation. inmates are great at the manipulation game. But great video! I am a retired Correction Officer form California.
She really thought the inmates were chatting her up because they're good people and they care. Poor girl.
Lol I’ve known Bianca for years never thought I would see her on something like this
Bianca shows how easy it is to be manipulated. Either that or she's lying about her background before life in the prison service. Lee, you really have to wonder why you would take anything in after seeing the spread in the paper... but he also highlights how easy it is to get the job. The selection process for prison officers needs to reflect the fact that people doing that job should not have particular character types, and that needs to be selected for during screening. Seems obvious they are not doing that. Bianca for sure immediately came across as someone that may get manipulated easily before she said anything about her crime. This story also shows the normalisation of criminal activity when it surrounds you all the time. If that is normal for everyone around you, it becomes more difficult to see the right path.
Good to see you again, Lee. It’s been more than a year since your previous video. I hope you’re doing well since you turned your life around.
Yeah doing well now pal Thankyou. Hope you are well ?
My son just started as a prison guard here in the states. I worry all of the time
He will be fine keep talking with him x regards cases like mine x
@@pablodavies414 Thank you for telling your story. I'm 3 years in myself, and as kind as I am to them, they know my boundaries. I'm not saying this to put you down. Its important to know how easy these things can start, and you speaking up will help other Officers. So thank you for being willing to share your story.
Being a prison guard may be the toughest job in the world. On a daily basis, you are outnumbered and your life is in danger. Considering how our governments spend lavishly on so many things, the money is there for higher prison guard salaries, but there is no desire to do so. Also countries like Portugal have shown the benefits of drug decriminalization, which results in fewer prisoners.
That's no an election winner though is it ?
Not my problem.
I’d have to argue the proposition that a prison guard being the toughest job, even in the system, let alone the world. For 15 years, I ran community service programs, where I was alone, and often uncontactable, with 8 offenders. Admittedly, most were low level, but due to community service often being a component of probation, I had to accommodate violent offenders, mafiosi, bikies, and seriously connected drug runners. And of course, countless meth/amphetamines of all concoctions, users, people with numerous mental health issues, and any possible permutation of the above.
And during my time in this position, I had a number of occasions that might otherwise have ended very differently, but for either my ability to appear confident in potentially dangerous situations, and/or dumb luck, I managed to avoid serious consequences to all the violence I encountered.
Unfortunately, I was absolutely no match for the politics of the Department.
The uk don’t want less prisoners, they want more hence why they have and are building mega prisons
Haw much monthly they got ?? If u don’t mind
I've been a Prison Officer for 23 years and there is not enough money in the world that would turn me into a "Bent Screw".....
Good to hear
You bring trouble to more inmates and ur work mates dog move he done
I was in for 30 years bent screws were few and far between in fact can’t bring any to mind
Everyone has a price
Well Said, It may sound tempting, but the truth is after you do such a thing you are forced to live a lie. You don't belong in any camp, the stress you would place yourself under, not to mention the guilt, not to mention the hypocrisy... All the best deanheathcote5562
Much more should be done for the safety of prison officers!
I find it so weird; I would think they would be the last people to break the law. There are no people ever who the treat of going to jail would feel as real as to a prison guard. Why would they even risk it, when they know what it is like?
Great video! I am a retired C/O , I agree on l lot of the discussion
❤❤❤
I can understand having sympathy for an inmate who really needs something for their emotional survival, but I've always been a straight shooter/law-abiding citizen and would never risk myself for an inmate. Your family are the only people worth risking jail for(not even yourself). It has to be a selfless decision to do something wrong for others and not for your own personal gain.
This moralistic horseshit from someone who has never had real hardship.
You can't control the circumstances that make you into a criminal, numb nuts.
My mother's ex-boyfriend got 5 years for this, ended up doing 2 1/2 years and was on house arrest after. He wasn't a prison guard but the main supervisor for the workshop.
It was godsent at the time because he was an alcoholic, abusive piece of shit and did other things I wouldn't dare to mention here.
But anyway, I was made aware of the whole situation by him when he was well into it and I was mortified. I actually saw a bag of goods he just brought home and amongst the regular cellphones, weed and hash, I kid you not, were bottles of L'Oreal shampoo and conditioner lol.
Bet them bottles were rammed with drugs too.
@@JBLancs Nope, I've seen them and it was just shampoo and conditionner lmao but you have to remember these are considered luxuries inside so while it doesn't make a lot of sense to the outside world, it does in prison.
@@mimoletayou can buy them on the canteen 👍
Hats off to these people
Thankyou x
Extremely interested insight...
I'm surprised the guy brought the package in on the first day back after what he read in the paper.
So he saw in the newspaper that it was over but still carried on like normal. And the girl had a child with the guy who manipulated her?
I have empathy with PO’s & the poor training/salary and support they receive (I am really supportive of prison reform) but I struggle to have sympathy with people in positions of power who have utilised that for their own gain.
You can go to prison for not paying your TV license???? Damn the UK is wild
You'd have to be gormless to be convicted for this.
Man is ready for another Guinness.. ohhh never mind he's got one. 🤣🤣
It's editing pal 😀
A friend of mine is a retired prison officer. He still has night terrors.
I can imagine ❤
💥💥YES LEE !! Definitely the best ex screw I’ve ever met!! Respect Lee from Lee Marvin & Ciara 💥💥
Love you both x ❤️ hope you are all going well and loving life. Lee ❤️
Being a C/O alone, yet in your twenties brings a lot of conversation that needs to be spoke upon more. Never been to a prison, inside a prison yet alone around 3,000+ inmates. The Texas prisons here in the US are packed full of men and women. I worked in a maximum security prison in Beaumont, Tx. Looking back, those 6 weeks of training really made me have to be a man and also the bigger person. First day of otjt I seen men who physically looked like women, talked like women. Men who needed mental help and not to be locked up and raped. As a correctional officer you’re always outnumbered, and in the back of your mind you know you could die. Yet if you mess up due to lack of training and experience you’re then placed on probation. Resulting in hourly and wages cut, all of the good officers get punished by rank by being put on the worst pods possible. Then those slipping shit in are always the ones with their feet kicked up eating free world food.. ranking officers sleep at work, how the fuck I don’t know but I didn’t trust many co-workers with nothing!
I mean if they’re trans that’s fine. But they shouldn’t be with the women either because they can then rape them. Inmates have become pregnant from stuff like that.
@@pri.sci.lla. you’re correct, they shouldn’t be placed with women. I was just saying as someone who hadn’t been inside a prison it was just a new environment to adapt to seeing everything that goes on.
It must be hard to get honest people who are willing to do that job. I think the only thing that would deter me from accepting bribes in there for smuggling would be the possibilty of being caught and prosecuted. There's no way I wouldn't feel underpaid after a bad day doing that shit
US prisons are shocking. So many lifers and a shit justice system.
One shouldn't unsee. One should adapt.
I hope you do pay these people lad bible
Very interesting but I wanted to fully hear Bianca's story such as why didn't she serve time?
It was her character outside of what she did. Never got into trouble. Seems kind and compassionate. Not every crime, even some of the bigger ones, deserve a sentence. If she ended up in prison, she very well may have never started a business.
She gave him the phone 😅
Awful job, you never know how badly you're affected by it till you get out.
Ofcourse she was going to be working with the guys in prison ..you can see that a mile away!! She a road girl 😂😅
I just want to say that Homes Under the Hammer is great!
Am I the only one that’s like ….they really didn’t do anything THAT bad
Yh facts
It may not sound bad, but the amount of danger they put others in, is indescribable. Once you reach that point (90% of the time) they can get you to bring in anything. Those inmates own you. Any slip up, and they are ratting you out. So it goes from gum to guns. Or knives. Or tools for escape. Or even actual help escaping.
It sounds silly, but look at what these two faced when they got caught? Years of their life, being on the OTHER side. That'd be scary af. So it starts small, and can quickly grow big.
Hope that makes sense, and I'm not saying these 2 would have done that or anything.
Corruption is rife and once Prison Officers decide to snuggle drugs, phones, or other contraband, they are owned by the inmates. I have little sympathy for Prison Officers who get convicted for corrupt practices. They should receive the severest of penalties!
If your idea of justice is punitive: you shouldn't work in justice.
Worked in the prison nearly 3 years, will never ever understand corrupt officers, putting everyone at risk just for there gain, scum.
I think this is so so tragic! The inmates are in prison because they broke the law the wardens are also sort of serving a sentence too because they have to look after them yet at the same time they could too be placed in great danger! To me it's like a horrific and I mean a horrific catch 22! I know I could never ever work in a prison never! Yes of course there are bad wardens but here's to all the good ones thank you 👏. peace and love 💛
We spend more time in prison that at least 60% of the inmates.
PO stands for Principal Officer. Nights are tough but it sounds like the OSG on his wing was doing a better job.
I start my posting on the 3rd April 😳
Good luck and enjoy when can mate 👍
Don't keep things on your shoulders. If you slip up, tell your OIC. Be respectful too. It won't work 100% of the time, but I promise it will make your life easier. Starting off, you aren't shit to any of them. Some have seen hundreds of CO's come and go. Keep a level head, you aren't there to punish them. Be as consistent as possible, with everyone. Be fair. Be firm.
Hope you are still at it man! I wrote that forgetting that it was a few months ago, but it's still important to hear. Hopefully you heard that in training of course lol
You still in?
@jordanlyons8453 yeah best decision I've ever made 👍
@@hollenfeuer1 still in man loving it
This is what no self accountability looks like.
Think you have been listening to a different audio
Quite annoying that 10mins in, her story gets cut to another subject...I wish you had let her finish or is there an extended version where she finishes her story of manipulation?
I don’t think she’s telling the whole truth imo
They are both guilty as fuck. But the girl was clearly expertly manipulated by that inmate. The guy was part of a fricking organised crime syndicate.
Any videos on your time in jail ?
Few interviews on UA-cam pal . Type lee Davies prison guard
Anyone here after the other Wamsworth guard?🤣🤣
Which prisons did he work at?
Lancaster farms
A Transporter looll... to the inmates you were a bent screw son
Are the two not the same ?
@@pablodavies414 No, when he started the job he was straight, right? Then he became bent, right? It's not as though he is in a gang and has then intentionally become a prison officer in order to smuggle things in and to abuse power, etc.
@@kali_pow3389 this is correct however the role played to get caught was transporting items into jail or use to the correct terminology conveying articles into prison
@@pablodavies414 Smuggling items more like, not transporting. He is bent and abused his power to smuggle items in for inmates, not transport items in for inmates.
@@kali_pow3389 OK 👍 whatever you say . I'm nit sure I deny your above statement and I say as much in any if my interviews so you are preaching to the converted as they say
Just passed my fitness and medical tests for prison officer
Good luck mate and don't follow my path ❤
She wouldn't be able to get a sia licence herself with a record
How has she started a security buisness
It’s under a family member’s name.
You can get an sia licence with a record. Depends on the role and the offence but plenty have
They both should have got both three times worse prison sentence to show any one in future who wants to smuggle in drugs or phones etc that you shouldn't do it
Seems to keep all the regular criminals out of prison!
I don't think you have any idea what working in a prison is like. Have you ever had to tell a pregnant woman, no, you can't go to the ER to make sure your baby is safe? Have you ever told a person who's been rapped, that yes, they have to move back to the same place their rapist lives? Have you ever watched someone you know take their last breath, and then go on about your day like nothing happened? Have you ever walked into a room with 100+ enemies and then start telling them what to do?
A prison sentence isn't going to stop this from happening. I'm not being a jerk, there are just thousands of moments on any given shift, that acting human could lead you down this path. Those up there are just a few examples. What about someone who just lost a kid inside? You cant comfort them in anyway outside of talking. If you hug them in the moment before you think, boom, they could own you. You can't hug inmates, and they know that. So even though you were human, they can later ask a "favor" "Hey, CO, you remember that time you hugged me? I'll keep quite if you bring in some gum."
It could be even simpler than that. What's really needed is a strong team that is open and honest. Not to mention, you need a damn team to begin with. Too many times, we only had one officer on the floor of 400 inmates. Can't have a team when no one wants to risk their physical and mental health for low pay. Can't pay them more, because people don't give a shit about inmates or the folks who warden them. Your best defense is telling your Officer in charge that you slipped. Put it in writing and you are usually good, as long as you didn't do something really bad to start with, but even then, you are only risking your job in most cases.
Ffs we are here because of the fact that we are so quick to throw someone away.
Crazy.
I used to tell most of the new officers I encountered that they’re basically riding bird with man. They might have the keys but it effect them very similarly, the idiots 😅
I wonder how many inmates had to suffer (or were killed) because of these piece of garbage COs.. 🤔
A lot 🤦🏽
Served in the Royal Marines my best mate left before me I grew up with this lad born two days apart lived on the same street grew up as brothers anyway he left the marines and went into the prison service believe me when I say he was the toughest man I knew mentally he was unbreakable he pulled me out of so many dangerous situations that my stupid arse got us in both in Afghan and civvie street growing up he spent a year as a screw and then hanged himself he told me about certain things about his job and it sounded like hell me and his family believe him becoming a PO directly caused that tragic event too happen
Is english not your first language?
I'm sorry to hear this 😔 x
@@RedSaint no welsh is
Where were you based when you served ? What unit ?
and what year did you go out to afghan and with what unit ?
and where were you based out of when you were over in afghan ?
asking as a former bootneck myself
So sorry to hear that, that's heartbreaking.
One mistake and this poor gentleman is now labelled for life. I hope he can be a success and not let this hold him back
I just saw anoter vid this thype... This vid as i was walking made me wander off .... bored me ....
No ones is getting the most important thing garry saying For most teams to get different ownership in a club from british people which makes sense Same as most lLa laiga clubs does !!
Such a tough job underpaid and under resourced ,I think ye are lucky to be out of there.
Totally agree pal
😢
desperate child vs desperate job seeker...... what could possibly go right, eh?
Like many cases in life aye . Isn't that how most situations form u mess you are born into entitlement or lucky
A lot of self righteous comments here, some from ex people in the job. I don’t know the ladies story but Lee made a mistake - no one’s perfect, he never killed anyone. No one’s perfect in this life, just try n keep your side of the street clean, and if someone makes a mistake that’s on them. Like I said no one’s perfect in this life, all we can do is try n be better. I personally think Lee seems like a decent fella who who screwed up but is actually not a bad fella at heart. I think he more than paid for his mistakes like I say keep your side of the street clean I don’t think you need to go running him down over that
Thank-you ❤ I hope you are well and appreciate your support
No remorse no regrets basically they didn't learn a lesson
Have you not been listening? Especially my end quote
Why as a good looking young girl would you ever want to work in a men's prison 🤔🙄😂
Why do u think?
Why? Only ugly people can work in prison?
@@chrisdumea961 You can gfy.
Did that turn you on?
100% women do this job better. especially in the yoi's.
Eh, I wouldn't say 100% of the time. I've seen just as many women burn out then men. Just as many nasty power trippers too.
However, our a good chunk of our best officers in my prison are Women. No doubt about that at all. In fact, both our Cpt.'s are women!
@@hollenfeuer1 tbf i have never met a wrong'un prison staff in all my time of being naughty. always had respect for each of them as they showed me respect everytime. i just seem to get along with females more than males i guess lol one exception being the prison dentist at reading way back lol he was a monster haha
Money talks
She ends having a kid with the guy 😂 female COs
Lee bro you knew it was on top yet you still decided to bring that stuff in dumb you deserve 4 in 7 on the out
Everybody is corrupt
Dunno sounds like a lot of excuses should have quit if you can’t hack it mentally seems weak in my opinion.
No excuses pal just an account t of how I became involved. All my own decisions.
Lancaster Farms has about max 600 prisoners, so I'm not sure what this lad is on about.
Do you need a cuddle Karen
And? Nights, you sometimes only have one other person for 400+ inmates. I think you'd shit bricks.
why are they playing the victim the whole time
No victim here just an account of my experience . I chose my own path .
Why can some people her a story and think its nothing but excuses and "playing the victim" especially when nothing of the sort happened.
You heard exactly what EVERY officer lives daily. Not the corruption of course, but we go through more then you could ever imagine.
@@hollenfeuer1 of course you do, victim
@@JymVer How many folks have you watched die? Cut to ribbons? Hanging off a 2nd story balcony? Been outnumbered sometimes hundreds to one? Been in a room by yourself, with multiple uncuffed murderers?
I bet you work at a god damn McDonalds 🤣
🤣
@@hollenfeuer1 cuz they all got the justice boner! They are righteous, fun for them!
Why do you need fat burners and steroids in jail though? Who are you trying to impress?
Yeah because thats the main reason why you'd take em, not to get bigger and stronger and be able to handle yourself better. Use some logic here ffs.
Most of the long-term prisoners and prisoners that work in the prison gymnasium use steroids. You also got drug addicts that have just got to prison start a three month course of roids to get them up to speed and bulk them up because they come in to prison like skeletons .
Yeah why would anyone in prison want to gain more muscle and strength? Beats me 😂
They’ve gotta be the biggest baddest most intimidating person there to get more of everything and be more in charge.
Maybe because she wants to lose fat and gain muscle the easy way?
Ohhhh cry me a river😭😭😭
Great tune
3rd?
well done
Bronze yeah lol
1st
All I see here is two decent people, trying to keep the peace in prisons. That's it.
Nice one @leepablo1980new 👌🏻 another boss interview thoroughly enjoyed
Cheers bud . Hope you are well mate
💥💥YES LEE !! Definitely the best ex screw I’ve ever met!! Respect Lee from Lee Marvin & Ciara 💥💥