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  • 19
    Oct
    2012
    4:43pm, EDT

    Prison doctors get higher pay for dangerous job

    All photos by Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    Dr. David Mathis waits to be let into the main building of the California Medical Facility in Vacaville, Calif., Sept. 12, 2012.

    A whistle hangs from Dr. David Mathis' coat pocket as he does his rounds on Sept. 12. The whistle is worn in case he needs help in an emergency.

    Rich Pedroncelli, AP — Dr. David Mathis, a board certified physician,  was the highest paid prison doctor last year, earning a base salary of $239,572 and an additional $169,548 for working overnight shifts, weekends and holidays.  Prison doctors say they are worth higher pay because they face constant threat of assault from inmates.

    EDITOR’S NOTE: These images were made available to NBC News on Oct. 19, 2012.

    See more prison-related images on PhotoBlog

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    Dr. Davis Mathis visits with an inmate in the hospital unit at the California Medical Facility in Vacaville, Calif., Sept. 1.

    Dr. David Mathis, center, accompanied by physician's assistant Rob Johnson, left, examines a sore on the foot of an inmate at the California Medical Facility in Vacaville, Calif., Sept. 12.

    1 comment

    Good for them! Long hours, hazardous conditions, volitile patients, and being on constant call deserve greater compensation. I wouldn't want to work in a prison if I could work in a nice hospital or my own practice someplace!

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  • 24
    Sep
    2012
    4:08pm, EDT

    Dolled up inmates celebrate spring

    Martin Mejia / AP

    Female inmates wearing butterfly costumes attend an event that celebrates the first days of spring at a prison for women in Lima, Peru, on Sept. 24. The event is part of a program that aims to help prisoners reduce stress and build self confidence.

    Martin Mejia / AP

    Inmates watch their fellow female inmates perform at an event celebrating the first days of Spring at a prison for women in Lima, Peru, on Sept. 24.

    Martin Mejia / AP

    Inmates wear shoes they made from recycled materials during the fashion segment of an event celebrating the first days of spring at a prison for women in Lima, Peru, on Sept. 24.

    Martin Mejia / AP

    Inmates in costume dance as bodyguards stand by during an event celebrating the first days of spring at a prison for women in Lima, Peru, on Sept. 24.

    Related content:

    • Prison program aims to transform inmates into church leaders
    • New York's shock camps claim to keep inmates out of prison
    • America's only all-female chain gang toils in Phoenix heat
    • View more photos from Peru on PhotoBlog.

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  • 12
    Sep
    2012
    6:49am, EDT

    Prison program aims to transform inmates into church leaders

     

    Damian Dovarganes / AP

    Inmate Robert Ross, 32, far left, a leader in the seminary training program sings one of his musical compositions during a college-level seminary course held at the California Rehabilitative Center in Norco, Calif. The program aims to transform inmates into church leaders, pastors, teachers and evangelists.

    The Associated Press reports from Norco, Calif. — Robert Ross' mother died while he was in prison for robbing a bank and he hasn't seen his 12-year-old son since the boy was in diapers.

    Damian Dovarganes / AP

    William Johnson, 38, foreground, attends a college-level seminary course at the California Rehabilitative Center. The nonprofit group Prison Fellowship, which trains volunteers and runs the rigorous, three-year course behind prison walls, graduated its first class of 10 inmates last year and expects to graduate 14 more in 2013.

    For all that he has lost, however, Ross says he found something far greater behind bars thanks to a college-level seminary course that trains inmates to establish churches and evangelize in poor communities upon their release.

    "When I tell people that I'm grateful for the 15 years 4 months that I was sentenced to, people look at me like I'm crazy or maybe on some kind of medication, and they ask 'Why?' and I tell 'em, 'Well, it took that for me to find out who Jesus is and really fall in love with him and let him do his work in me,'" he said. "Had I not been arrested, I'm sure I would be dead." Read the full story.

    Editor's note: Photos taken on August 9, 2012 and made available to NBC News on September 12, 2012.

    Also on PhotoBlog:

    • New York's shock camps aim to keep inmates out of prison
    • A rare look inside San Quentin state prison
    • America's only all-female chain gang toils in Phoenix heat
    • Rikers Island inmates graduate with high school diplomas
    • Mother's Day event provides children opportunity to see moms behind bars

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    •Sign up for the NBCNews.com Photos Newsletter

     

    23 comments

    Now if we could only turn the church leaders into prison inmates... unfortunately the Vatican is too busy shielding pedophiles to allow that to happen.

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  • 31
    Aug
    2012
    12:44pm, EDT

    New York's shock camps claim to keep inmates out of prison

    Mike Groll / AP

    Correctional officer Juleigh Walker watches as inmates sit for lunch at the Moriah Shock Incarceration Correctional Facility, on Aug. 22, in Mineville, N.Y.

    Mike Groll / AP

    Correctional officer Juleigh Walker inspects inmates during morning formation at the Moriah Shock Incarceration Correctional Facility on Aug. 22, in Mineville, N.Y.

    Mike Groll / AP

    Inmates line up for lunch at the Moriah Shock Incarceration Correctional Facility on Aug. 22, in Mineville, N.Y.

    Mike Groll / AP

    An inmate shouts during morning stretching at the Moriah Shock Incarceration Correctional Facility on Aug. 22, in Mineville, N.Y.

    New York corrections officials say they have graduated more than 40,000 inmates from military-style boot camps over the past 25 years and most never come back. Established as an alternative to regular prison in the 1980s in efforts across the country, which got mixed reviews and dropped by several states, New York officials have kept three shock camps going with a model they consider effective, with lower recidivism and saving money.

    Only prisoners convicted of nonviolent crimes who volunteer and sign contracts go to the camps. Many drop out or are kicked out before completing the six months of mandatory physical training, manual labor, education and drug counseling, scrutinized by drill instructors. The prize for completing the course is a shortened sentence.

    Read the full story.

    -- Associated Press

    Also on PhotoBlog:

    • A rare look inside San Quentin state prison
    • America's only all-female chain gang toils in Phoenix heat
    • Rikers Island inmates graduate with high school diplomas
    • Mother's Day event provides children opportunity to see moms behind bars

    Mike Groll / AP

    Superintendent Bruce McCormick inspects inmates fingernails at the Moriah Shock Incarceration Correctional Facility Wednesday, on 22, in Mineville, N.Y.

    Mike Groll / AP

    Inmates wait to eat lunch at the Moriah Shock Incarceration Correctional Facility, on Aug. 22, in Mineville, N.Y.

    Mike Groll / AP

    Inmates stand during morning flag formation at the Moriah Shock Incarceration Correctional Facility, on Aug. 22, in Mineville, N.Y.

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    7 comments

    I am a graduate of the Shock program. I was an inmate in Moriah. I left on May 25th 2001. I really do have to tell everyone that doubts the programs effectiveness that it is what saved my life. Prior to entering the program, I was a very self centered, egotistical, pompous ass. I was a spoiled arrog …

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  • 22
    Aug
    2012
    4:55am, EDT

    Leovigildo Gonzalez / Reuters

    Prisoners' uncomfortable march to Mexico jail

    Federal police escort a group of prisoners toward a plane bound for an undisclosed location at the international aiport in Morelia, Mexico on August 21, 2012. Some 200 inmates serving federal sentences were transferred to federal prisons during an operation by the Secretary of Public Security (SSP), local media reported.

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    2 comments

    Their shoe strings appear to be missing which they always remove before getting locked up.

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    Explore related topics: world-news, americas, crime, mexico, prison
  • 20
    Aug
    2012
    6:50pm, EDT

    Relatives await news of inmate deaths in Yare I prison, Venezuela

    Juan Barreto / AFP - Getty Images

    Relatives of inmates wait for news following clashes between prisoner gangs in the Yare I prison, Venezuela, Aug. 20, 2012.

    CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) — Twenty-five people were killed during a prison riot and dozens were wounded when two groups of inmates waged a gunbattle inside the penitentiary while hundreds of relatives were visiting, Venezuelan officials said Monday. Read More

    See more photos from Venezuela

    Fernando Llano / AP

    Relatives of an inmate cry while waiting for information outside Yare I prison, Venezuela, Aug. 20.

    Fernando Llano / AP

    A relative of an inmate is aided after fainting while waiting for information outside of Yare I prison, Venezuela, Aug. 20.

    Fernando Llano / AP

    A relative of an inmate slams her hand on the main entrance of Yare I prison, Venezuela, Aug. 20.

    Miguel Gutierrez / EPA

    A general view of Yare I prison, Venezuela, Aug. 20.

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  • 26
    Jul
    2012
    9:00pm, EDT

    Inmates prepare for Peru's independence day celebrations

    Inmates prepare to parade the courtyard of a pavilion at the Lurigancho prison on July 26, 2012.

    By Mariana Bazo / Reuters

    Lurigancho prison, with more than 9,000 inmates, organized a military parade to celebrate Peru's Independence and promote the integration of prisoners into society, according to their press release. Peru will celebrate its Independence Day on July 28.

    Inmates and police sing the national anthem as they watch a parade to celebrate Peru's Independence at the Lurigancho prison on July 26.

    Inmates march to celebrate Peru's Independence on July 26.

    An inmate decorates the fence of Lurigancho prison during Independence celebrations on July 26.

    Inmates weave bracelets in their rooms on July 26.

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  • 11
    Jul
    2012
    8:30am, EDT

    A rare look inside San Quentin state prison

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Administrative segregation prisoners take part in a group therapy session at San Quentin state prison in San Quentin, California, on June 8, 2012. All photos made available to msnbc.com on July 11, 2012.

    Chris Willis, 34, works out in the exercise yard at San Quentin state prison on June 8, 2012.

    By David R Arnott, NBC News

    Reuters photographer Lucy Nicholson secured rare access to San Quentin state prison, California's oldest correctional facility and the location of the state's only gas chamber.

    In 2001, The New York Times described San Quentin's death row as "the largest in the Western Hemisphere."

    This November Californians will vote on a proposition to repeal the death penalty in the state. KCET reports that California has 725 inmates on death row, all of whom would serve a life term without the possibility of parole should the initiative be passed.

    Related content:

    • Prisoners pedal to freedom on stationary bikes in Brazil
    • America's only all-female chain gang toils in Phoenix heat
    • Rikers Island inmates graduate with high school diplomas

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Albert Ruiz, 50, who is on death row for murder, is led down a corridor at San Quentin state prison on June 8, 2012.

    The entrance to death row at San Quentin state prison, June 8, 2012.

    Inmates walk through San Quentin state prison on June 8, 2012.

    Marvin Caldwell, 63, who said he was imprisoned for 20 years under the three strikes law for possession and sale of methamphetamine, looks out of his cell at San Quentin state prison on June 8, 2012.

     

    38 comments

    Anyone that is SO violent that they have to be put in a CAGE... why are they still alive? Very aggressive unrepentant murders should just be put to death.

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  • 10
    Jul
    2012
    2:14pm, EDT

    Prisoners pedal to freedom on stationary bikes in Brazil

    Felipe Dana / AP

    Ronaldo da Silva, left, and fellow inmates pedal stationary bikes to charge car batteries at a prison in Santa Rita do Sapucai, Brazil on Friday. An innovative program allows inmates at this medium-security prison to shave days off their sentence in exchange for riding stationary bikes hooked up to converted car batteries that are used to illuminate Santa Rita do Sapucai's town square.

    The Associated Press reports — Brazilian inmate Ronaldo da Silva hops on a bicycle and pedals furiously, clocking up several miles before slowing down and jumping off.

    Silva hasn't gotten far, in fact not an inch. He's still inside the medium-security prison where he's serving a 5.5-year sentence for holding up a bakery, standing next to a stationary bike.

    But he did move a bit closer to freedom. Silva is part of an innovative program that allows inmates at a prison in Brazil's southeastern Minas Gerais state to reduce their sentences in exchange for generating power to help illuminate the town at night. Read the full story.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    A woman using her smart phone is illuminated by a battery powered street lamp in Santa Rita do Sapucai, Brazil. An innovative program allows inmates at the Santa Rita do Sapucai medium-security prison to shave days off their sentence in exchange for riding stationary bikes hooked up to converted car batteries that are used to illuminate the town square.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    A inmate pedals a stationary bikes to charge car batteries at a prison in Santa Rita do Sapucai.

    Felipe Dana / AP

    An inmate takes a break from pedaling a stationary bike to charge car batteries at a prison in Santa Rita do Sapucai, Minas Gerais state, Brazil.

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

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    3 comments

    With all the prisons in the US if they had this program we could power America.

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  • 28
    Jun
    2012
    8:49am, EDT

    America's only all-female chain gang toils in Phoenix heat

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    Inmate Julie Harper, center, marches with members of America's only all-female chain gang early in the morning at Estrella Jail in Phoenix, Arizona. Photos taken in May 2012 and made available to msnbc.com on June 28, 2012.

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    The chain gang work in 104 degree heat, hacking at weeds at Bartlett Lake.

    Photos and text by Jim Lo Scalzo, European Pressphoto Agency — It's a scene reminiscent of the Deep South at the turn of the 20th century: A dozen prisoners in pinstripes working by the side of the road, their legs shackled together and their brows dripping with sweat. Yet this is present-day Phoenix, and the prisoners are all women.

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    Kelly DeGrose, center, listens to a detention officer lecture them after a day's work on the chain gang.

    With a few exceptions, chain gangs were abandoned in the U.S. by 1955. But Arizona's Maricopa County, which includes metropolitan Phoenix, reintroduced the practice in 1995, and today the county runs the only all-female chain gang in the country. Women volunteer for the duty, looking to break the monotony of jail life. Most are in for minor convictions - a DUI sentence, a probation violation - and are housed at the Tent City, a collection of surplus military tents erected next to Maricopa County's Estrella Jail to ease overcrowding. 

    Previously on PhotoBlog: Rikers Island inmates graduate with high school diplomas

    The "chain girls," as they call themselves, gather at 6 a.m., when detention officers drive them to that day's work site. It could be a local park to pick up trash, a highway roadside to pull weeds, or even a county cemetery to help bury the indigent. Though summer temperatures in Phoenix can rise above 110 degrees, inmates volunteer with surprising eagerness.

    "It's worth it just to get out for a few hours," says Mickey Haas, who is serving time for a DUI. Fellow chain girl Honi Simmons agrees, adding: "It comes with a good story. I don't think people will ever believe I was in a chain gang."

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    Members of the chain gang line up for work early in the morning at Estrella Jail.

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    Members of the chain gang are seen in a bus driver's mirror en route to White Tanks Cemetery to help bury the indigent.

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    The chain gang help bury an unclaimed body at White Tanks Cemetery, an indigent burial site in the desert west of Phoenix.

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    Inmates Alma Madrigal, left, and Jennifer Thomas, right, help Lisa McCorvey roll up her sleeves before a day's work.

    Jim Lo Scalzo / EPA

    Members of the chain gang clean the dust off their boots after another day's work in the desert.

     

    97 comments

    Oh who cares. All prisons should bring back chain gangs and make the work rain or shine, hot or cold. Prisons should be hell for the prisoner NOT Club Med. They do not deserve TV or radio or computers or even law books.

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  • 27
    Jun
    2012
    7:03am, EDT

    Rikers Island inmates graduate with high school diplomas

    Mike Segar / Reuters

    Inmate Abdul Cornelius is hugged by his mother Regina, left, and his sisters after receiving his General Equivalency Diploma along with 26 others at a graduation ceremony for inmates at the George Motchan Detention Center at New York City's Rikers Island correctional facility on June 26, 2012.

    Reuters reports — More than two dozen students graduated on Tuesday from one of New York City's more unusual schools, where pens are forbidden and armed guards watch over every classroom.

    The ceremony at the East River Academy on Rikers Island, New York City's main jail, allowed prisoners to take a step toward a better future with a high school equivalency diploma, known as a GED.

    "Wow! Wow! I say ‘wow' because now I have something people can appreciate me for," said Adboul Hanne, who is awaiting trial on an attempted murder charge.

    Rikers makes the school mandatory for inmates who are 16 or 17 and encourages it for inmates ages 18 to 21. Some 3,600 students pass through the school per year, and about 800 are enrolled at any given time, the New York City Department of Correction said. Read the full story.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Mike Segar / Reuters

    Guards stand next to inmates during the graduation ceremony at Rikers Island.

    Mike Segar / Reuters

    Inmate Arisleida Duarte applauds as she and others receive their diplomas.

     

    28 comments

    I think this is a good thing. They are going to be in there so why not give them a chance so when they get out they can take a step in the right direction? At least give them a chance....especially the kids. Who knows what kind of enviroment they grew up in...not excusing just explaining.

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    Explore related topics: us-news, education, prison, graduation, rehabilitation, rikers-island
  • 13
    May
    2012
    1:42am, EDT

    Mother's Day event provides children opportunity to see moms behind bars

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Cori Walters, 32, right, hugs her daughter Hannah Walters, 6, at the California Institute for Women state prison in Chino, Calif., May 5. An annual Mother's Day event, Get On The Bus, brings children in California to visit their mothers in prison. Sixty percent of parents in state prison report being held over 100 miles from their children.

    Reuters photographer Lucy Nicholson:

    The children bounded off the bus and ran excitedly towards a tall fence topped with razor wire. In the distance, through layers of fencing overlooked by a guard tower, huddled a group of mothers in baggy blue prison-issue clothes, pointing, waving and gasping. Many had not seen their children in over a year.

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Mothers watch their children arrive to visit at the California Institute for Women state prison in Chino, Calif., May 5.

    Frank Martinez jumped up and down, shrieking with delight. “Stay right there Mommy,” he yelled. “Don’t cry.” As the children disappeared into a building to be searched and x-rayed, a couple of the mothers began sobbing.

    An annual Mother’s Day event, Get On The Bus, provides free transport for hundreds of children to visit their incarcerated moms at California Institute for Women in Chino, and other state prisons. Sixty percent of parents in state prison report being held over 100 miles from their children, and visits are impossible for many.

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Fulorise Gadson, right, of Riverside hugs her daughter Ken'yida Draper, 7.

    California locks up more women than any other state in the U.S. — 11,250 in 2007 – and three quarters are mothers. The children left behind with family or in foster care often feel abandoned and some don’t see their moms for years.

    Regular prison visits lower rates of recidivism for the parent, and make the child better emotionally adjusted and less likely to become delinquent, according to The Center for Restorative Justice Works, the non-profit organization that runs the Get on the Bus program.

    Reuters reporter Mary Slosson and I choked back tears as we walked into a large room packed with mothers throwing their arms around their kids, spinning them round in tight hugs. A shriek rose above the cacophony of voices and laughter every time a new child was escorted in.

    “You’ve grown!” “Your feet are as big as mine!” “I’ve missed you,” came the cries.

    Outside, Norma Ortiz, 31, cooed and fed her eleven-month-old son Axel with a bottle of milk for the first time since he was taken away after she gave birth to him in the prison. Her mother Olga, 55, and her three sons surrounded her protectively. I asked Norma how it felt to see her baby. “I can’t talk about that,” she said, nodding towards her sons. “I need to be strong for them”.

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Levell Jones, 7, who has not seen his mother in 17 months, holds up a card for her.

    Other mothers chased their children around the climbing bars, and down the slide in a small playground, as a burly prison guard paced the perimeter. Most quietly chatted, or played board games during the few hours they had together.

    Children stood on tiptoes to push the coins they had brought into vending machines, which were off limits to the inmates. They carried back bags of chips and soda gifts for their moms.

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Camille Glinton, left, kisses her mother Luz Gonzalez.

    “I know how to do side flips,” boasted seven-year-old Levell Jones to his mother Shonta Montgomery, 28, who said she was serving time for involuntary manslaughter. It was the first time he had seen her in seventeen months. Montgomery clasped his face, sat him down, and began tying his shoe lace. “When you go home, wash your laces just like we used to do,” she told him.

    “No-one wants to see their relative behind bars,” said Christal Huerta, 22, who was visiting her mother Sonia Huerta, 36, with her 12-year-old sister Breeanna Huerta. Their father was deported to Mexico three years ago, and now Christal takes care of her two sisters at their grandmother’s home. “It’s kind of sad, because you expect to have both parents with you, teaching you how to become an adult and how to become responsible,” she said. “But they’ve taught me enough to teach my other sisters.”

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Cali Farmer, 4, cries as she hugs her mother, Netta Farmer.

    “You need to have a lot of strength and patience to deal with things that come. I’m just glad my parents are still alive, and I could see them. Others aren’t so lucky. I’m just very happy for the things I do have. I always try to stay positive.”

    As the afternoon slipped away, and the guards began to call for children to board buses back to different cities in California, a quiet settled over the yard. Lakisha Perry, 29, cradled her daughter Stephanie with her arms and kissed her forehead as they both stared into the distance. “I want to stay here with you,” Stephanie said.

    Lucy Nicholson / Reuters

    Levell Jones, 7, looks out of the bus window as he leaves his mother.

    A few children cried as they touched their mothers’ hands across a line of tape on the floor, marked with “Do Not Cross,” as they were ushered out of the room by a prison guard. Most shuffled out in stunned silence.

    Back on the bus, the children hugged cuddly toy animals they had been given and stared trance-like out of the window at the receding prison fence. A couple of girls curled up in the fetal position under blankets on the seats and fell into a deep sleep. The bus carried them back to Los Angeles to resume serving their own time.

    See more images from Lucy Nicholson's story.

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    227 comments

    This was a very well written and emotional story. I can't imagine the emotions of actually living either side of it.

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