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The Feminist on Cellblock Y is an American documentary directed by Contessa Gayles and produced with Emma Lacey-Bordeaux for CNN.The titular subject is Richie Reseda, an 25 year old man incarcerated at a prison in California who studies and organizes around feminism and toxic masculinity with his fellow young incarcerated men.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics reports that in 2011–2012, 16% of white prison inmates, 20% of black/African American prison inmates, 16% of Hispanic or Latino prison inmates, and 20% of prison with some other racial identification were in solitary confinement at some point.
Both women married incarcerated men — one serving a life sentence and the other on death row Image credits: Love Within Walls: A Prison Wife Podcast Image credits: MarcelloRabozzi / Pixabay ...
The first of what would eventually become 29 different male prisons over 30 years for Baker was Feltham Young Offenders Institution. [3]On 12 December 1989, while Baker was being held at HM Prison Swinfen Hall young offender institution in Staffordshire, she tried to kill a fellow inmate with a garotte [9] [10] an alleged child rapist who Baker said had bullied her, attacking her three times ...
After serving 27 years in prison for crimes she did not commit, 74-year-old Joyce Watkins Nashville, Tenn., was exonerated this month, her convictions in the murder and sexual assault of her 4 ...
The film took three years to make. The directors initially made contact with approximately 100 transgender prisoners. Although they had planned to feature trans men in the film, they decided to focus only on trans women due to the different issues experienced by the two groups and the complex nature of the issues faced by them in prison.
The former ballerina convicted of killing her well-heeled husband — in a sensational case that came to be known as the “Black Swan murder” — has been sentenced to 20 years in prison ...
The film portrays the story of a young newlywed sent to prison for armed robbery. Her brutal experiences while incarcerated, along with the killing of her husband, transform her from a meek, naive woman into a hardened convict. [4] The film's subplot includes massive prison corruption. [citation needed]