Published
I've seen several posts here, where the nurses state that the staff can sometimes be harder to deal with that the inmates.
My son recently had to serve two weeks in a county jail for an old DWI charge - in the year since this happened, he has been off the booze - but he still had to serve his time - and that's not the problem. He was guilty. He's a decent guy, but he screwed up, and all this has taught him an important lesson. We had been trying to tell him that he was an alcoholic, but he was in denial, said he could stop anytime. Well, after he was first picked up, and went into re-hab, he went thru a major withdrawal, and has been clean since.
The problem was with the county jail - he said it was disgustingly filthy, and had mold on the walls - and he said each jailer had a separate set of rules, and he said some of them were real jacka##es.
Now, I don't feel that being in jail should be a happy trip, but this place seems a little over the top. I finally had to call his lawyer, because they hadn't let him have clean clothes in over a week. I heard stories from many people who told me how nasty the place was.
Is there some regulatory agency that oversees these places? It seems like they should have to maintain SOME levels of cleanliness.