Inmates
in sentence
213 examples of Inmates in a sentence
And one of our most popular managers jokes that, this is what he says, "Google is a place where the
inmates
run the asylum."
And he considers himself one of the
inmates.
One key factor determining the future success of both
inmates
and their children is whether they can maintain ties during the parent's incarceration, but prisoners' phone calls home can cost 20 to 30 times more than regular phone calls, so many families keep in touch through letters.
You know, but there's obviously a notion that if you let the
inmates
of this thing out, that they would snatch a motorist off the street and eat his liver.
So what all of these death row
inmates
had to do was rely on volunteer lawyers to handle their legal proceedings.
What's happened is that lawyers who represent death row
inmates
have shifted their focus to earlier and earlier chapters of the death penalty story.
So I took to my bed for about a month, and when I woke up I found I was institutionalized, and when I saw the other inmates, I realized that I had found my people, my tribe.
B.J. was one of many fellow
inmates
who had big plans for the future.
So, 16
inmates
and 18 girls were invited.
So these are a bunch of
inmates
in a prison in Butare.
They're genocidal inmates, most of them, and they're stirring the contents of their own latrines, because if you put poop in a sealed environment, in a tank, pretty much like a stomach, then, pretty much like a stomach, it gives off gas, and you can cook with it.
Now, I happen to have followed one of my inmates, one of my friends, from his sick bed till death, and I can tell you it was not a nice thing at all.
Built at the end of the Victorian Era by the
inmates
themselves, it is where England's most dangerous prisoners are kept.
My task was to study a group of
inmates
who had been clinically diagnosed as psychopaths.
Over the subsequent months, we tested Joe and his fellow inmates, looking specifically at their ability to categorize different images of emotion.
Our population of
inmates
had a deficient amygdala, which likely led to their lack of empathy and to their immoral behavior.
Will he be among the 70 percent of
inmates
who end up reoffending and returning to the prison system?
When I went to work at our receptions center, I could actually hear the
inmates
roiling from the parking lot, shaking cell doors, yelling, tearing up their cells.
We put
inmates
in cells behind solid steel doors with cuff ports so we could restrain them and feed them.
Places became safer because those
inmates
who were most violent or disruptive could now be isolated.
My next assignment was to one of the state's deep-end prisons where some of our more violent or disruptive
inmates
are housed.
We trained the
inmates
on those same skills.
Inmates
and staff started interacting more often and openly and developing a rapport.
We talked and discovered how prisons and
inmates
could actually help advance science by helping them complete projects they couldn't complete on their own, like repopulating endangered species: frogs, butterflies, endangered prairie plants.
Inmates
were excited.
Inmates
are highly adaptive.
So that was the question: Could
inmates
live decent and meaningful lives, and if so, what difference would that make?
But then we started to realize that if any
inmates
needed programming, it was these particular
inmates.
Okay, we didn't forget our responsibility to control, but now
inmates
could interact safely, face-to-face with other
inmates
and staff, and because control was no longer an issue, everybody could focus on other things, like learning.
Our prisons are getting safer for both staff and inmates, and when our prisons are safe, we can put our energies into a lot more than just controlling.
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