Tag Page CriminalJusticeReform

#CriminalJusticeReform
Andrew Goltz

Reprogramming the Mind After Prison

It’s strange to admit this, but sometimes I have to lock myself in the bathroom just to calm my anxiety. I’ll freeze in the grocery store, staring at the cereal aisle — too many choices, too much noise. I’ve gotten so overwhelmed that I’ve just walked out with nothing. There are times in a restaurant when I can’t even eat. The movement, the chatter, the people walking past — my brain focuses on everything except the food in front of me. These are all signs of institutionalization. When you’ve lived in a place where survival depends on routine, control, and hyper-awareness, your mind changes. You reprogram yourself — not by choice, but by necessity. Most of us don’t realize how deep those changes go until we’re free again. And that’s when the anxiety hits hardest. You feel different. You know you’re different. And that knowledge alone can be crushing. Institutionalization is a kind of mental illness — an unintended consequence of the last 45 years of mass incarceration in America. Until a person actively works to reprogram their brain again, they’re at real risk of reoffending. So if you know someone going through this, show empathy. Ask how they’re feeling. Listen without judgment. You might be the one person who helps them stay free. About the author: Andrew Goltz writes about criminal justice, reentry, resilience, and recovery after incarceration — drawing from lived experience to shed light on the human #TheStruggleIsReal #Institutionalization #CriminalJusticeReform #Reentry #MentalHealthAwarenessNeeded #Anxiety #MassIncarceration #LifeAfterPrison

Reprogramming the Mind After Prison
Andrew Goltz

25 Years Inside the Federal System — What I Learned About America’s Prisons & Why Reform Can’t Wait

I spent 25 years in federal prison. There are five security levels: minimum, low, medium, high, and administrative max (ADX). I never made it to a minimum. Beyond those, there are two behavior management programs — the Special Management Unit (SMU) and the Communication Management Unit (CMU). I was never in the CMU, which mostly houses terrorists and individuals tied to organizations the U.S. is actively at war with. When I was inside, that meant Al-Qaeda, Taliban, and ISIS operatives, along with members of The Order and other organized subversive groups. The United States has some of the harshest sentencing laws in the world. Out of about 9 billion people globally, roughly 8 million are incarcerated — and 2 million of them are here in the U.S. That means we hold 25% of the world’s prison population but make up only 4% of its people. We also have the world’s highest recidivism rate: about 63% return to prison within two years of release. In my experience, there’s almost nothing in federal prison that prepares you for life afterward. The mental rewiring needed to survive inside is often destructive outside. Without real prison and criminal justice reform, we’ll keep producing men who are institutionalized and struggling to function in a free society. I’m here to answer real questions — about doing time, helping incarcerated loved ones, and navigating the legal maze. I’ve spent years helping men file appeals, briefs, and motions, and I understand how district, circuit, and Supreme Court rulings differ — and why federal law can contradict itself. If you’re seeking clarity about the system or someone caught in it, I’m here to help I spent 25 years in federal prison — mostly in medium and high-security facilities, with some time in the SMU and lows. I write about incarceration, reentry, and the realities of America’s justice system, offering firsthand insight and guidance for those affected by it. #PrisonReform #CriminalJusticeReform

25 Years Inside the Federal System — What I Learned About America’s Prisons & Why Reform Can’t Wait
Kelly Osteen

felon with a death wish

#CriminalJusticeReform hello my son is on parole and he is obscounding he's been to prison five times he's 39 years old and I'm do believe hes institutionalized hes obscounding right now and looking at going back he's got a warrant for the thing that he' was in prison for before he says he's innocent and I do believe him however he won't talk to anybody about it because he's afraid he could get 10 years or life for the same thing that he's already done time for do you have any help for that I do believe he's institutionalized and needs help but as of now it looks like he's going to be going back to jail to prison I can't bear the thought knowing that he's innocent he will go back to jail because he's a felon and on parole and running he lives in and is paranoid all the time I'm so worried about him can you help me could you help him he tells me he wants to die please help

felon with a death wish
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Tag: CriminalJusticeReform | LocalHood