As a child growing up in Pueblo, Colorado, Jeremy Laintz travelled widely with his father, an aeronautics engineer at Lockheed Martin, who sometimes took his four kids along on business trips. Family vacations included tours of aerospace facilities and, on one occasion, a trip to watch a space-shuttle launch at Cape Canaveral. Laintz’s mother managed a bakery, and Laintz, the youngest child in the family, recalled enjoying a warm home life. He played soccer and football, and spent summers hunting and fishing on a ranch that his family owned in North Dakota. As a teen-ager, though, he slipped into trouble—he was arrested first for driving under the influence, and then, in his late teens, for felony car theft. He spent a year in prison, where he learned to weld, and a few more years in halfway houses. Then, in 2003, he moved to Alaska, where […]
Tuesday, March 5th, 2019
The Jail Health-Care Crisis
Author: Steve Coll
Source: The New Yorker
Publication Date: March 4, 2019 Issue
Link: The Jail Health-Care Crisis
Source: The New Yorker
Publication Date: March 4, 2019 Issue
Link: The Jail Health-Care Crisis
Stephan: The American Gulag is one of the great shames of America. If this were happening in another country we would be criticizing them for crimes against humanity.