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Montford
Dec 12, 2016 15:24:41 GMT -5
via mobile
Post by corywensle on Dec 12, 2016 15:24:41 GMT -5
Anyone have an opinion on Montford? I was thinking about working out there...
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Post by mley1 on Dec 12, 2016 20:31:33 GMT -5
I've never worked there. However, as I understand it that's a psych unit similar to Jester 4. With that in mind, there will probably be more UOF than on a regular unit. You may end up getting some additional crisis management training as well. Most the folks I know that work at J4 seem to like it.
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Post by crosstimbersokie on Dec 13, 2016 14:55:30 GMT -5
When i worked for Oklahoma DOC about 1990 the prison I worked in had a psych unit. One particular nutjob who had murdered his parents flipped out every year when the anniversary of their murders rolled around.
The 1990 anniversary the thug refused to return to his cell because it had been commandeered by demons. Sergeant Bennett exorcised the cell by spraying it down with Lysol thereby driving out the evil spirits so that the Wonderful Offender felt safe in occupying it. This wonderful offender worshiped the ground that Sergeant Bennett strode upon thereafter.
It really is all about communication... Given the choice, I'll work with lunatics any day.
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Post by accussedsnitchgp11 on Dec 13, 2016 16:31:24 GMT -5
Don't Know Nothing about the Unit....Lubbock is College Town... Home To the Red Raiders at Texas Tech...Birthplace of Buddy Holly...Almost 250K (Twice the Size of Wichita Falls)..and several other smaller college..gets as Hot as Wichita Falls, Gets more Snow Than Wichita Falls....They Have 4 Breweries...We have Zero, Zilch, Nadda, None....Just about as Far to Amarillo, and DWF as we are.
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Post by bobothebeaten on Dec 19, 2016 16:45:48 GMT -5
When i worked for Oklahoma DOC about 1990 the prison I worked in had a psych unit. One particular nutjob who had murdered his parents flipped out every year when the anniversary of their murders rolled around. The 1990 anniversary the thug refused to return to his cell because it had been commandeered by demons. Sergeant Bennett exorcised the cell by spraying it down with Lysol thereby driving out the evil spirits so that the Wonderful Offender felt safe in occupying it. This wonderful offender worshiped the ground that Sergeant Bennett strode upon thereafter. It really is all about communication... Given the choice, I'll work with lunatics any day. So who was crazier - Sergeant Bennett or the convict? The problem is when a convict hitches his feelings to just one person then only that person can handle him from then on. Should have sprayed that Lysol in the convicts eyes and pushed him dumb ass back into his dark cell. He murdered his parents and he should be haunted by demons. Demons that he created.
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Post by mley1 on Dec 19, 2016 19:35:51 GMT -5
When i worked for Oklahoma DOC about 1990 the prison I worked in had a psych unit. One particular nutjob who had murdered his parents flipped out every year when the anniversary of their murders rolled around. The 1990 anniversary the thug refused to return to his cell because it had been commandeered by demons. Sergeant Bennett exorcised the cell by spraying it down with Lysol thereby driving out the evil spirits so that the Wonderful Offender felt safe in occupying it. This wonderful offender worshiped the ground that Sergeant Bennett strode upon thereafter. It really is all about communication... Given the choice, I'll work with lunatics any day. So who was crazier - Sergeant Bennett or the convict? The problem is when a convict hitches his feelings to just one person then only that person can handle him from then on. Should have sprayed that Lysol in the convicts eyes and pushed him dumb ass back into his dark cell. He murdered his parents and he should be haunted by demons. Demons that he created. I have to admit that I did something similar one time at my unit back when I was a sergeant. We had a nut job that we had to keep locked in a cell. He was seeing his dead sisters in his room. He said they were telling him to hurt himself and the nurses. I entered the cell, and he asked me to help him get rid of his sisters. I looked all over the empty room with my eyes, and yelled at the far corner. "We don't allow visits in the inmates room. Go home.". The convict slept like a baby that night. He told me the next day that his sisters were mad that they couldn't visit him in the room, but they left anyway.
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Post by accussedsnitchgp11 on Dec 21, 2016 1:06:32 GMT -5
There are the true Crazies and then there are the "Fake Crazies". Trouble is...The Outsiders don't know what happens inside and they expect "Professional Staff" treat everyone with the same level of Compassion and professionalism that the Law requires. There ain't stipulations for those that we know who uses the systems to get outta cases or get outta paying gambling debts.
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Post by crosstimbersokie on Dec 25, 2016 16:58:51 GMT -5
So who was crazier - Sergeant Bennett or the convict? The problem is when a convict hitches his feelings to just one person then only that person can handle him from then on. Should have sprayed that Lysol in the convicts eyes and pushed him dumb ass back into his dark cell. He murdered his parents and he should be haunted by demons. Demons that he created. I have to admit that I did something similar one time at my unit back when I was a sergeant. We had a nut job that we had to keep locked in a cell. He was seeing his dead sisters in his room. He said they were telling him to hurt himself and the nurses. I entered the cell, and he asked me to help him get rid of his sisters. I looked all over the empty room with my eyes, and yelled at the far corner. "We don't allow visits in the inmates room. Go home.". The convict slept like a baby that night. He told me the next day that his sisters were mad that they couldn't visit him in the room, but they left anyway. I don't know how it all turned out because I went to the feds before the next anniversary. I suspect that any old Guard could drive out the demons with fresh Lysol...
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