Posts tagged: FCI El Reno

The Jail House Lawyers; Dewey, Cheatham & Howe

There are all kinds of hustles in federal prison. There are guys who shine shoes, fix watches and iron uniforms. Then, there are your inmate attorneys. Also known as writ writers or jailhouse lawyers. These are men who have, or sometimes claim to have, knowledge of the law who’ll help you work on your case. Some are hard working dudes. Others, well … they’re simply in it for the money. If an inmate brings me his case and I read it and see he ain’t got nothin’ comin’? Then I’ll tell him he ain’t got nothin’ comin’ and like it or not, go away. The harsh reality of prison is, very rarely does anyone win their case on appeal. No use lying to these guys telling them they’re going to win. Because 999 times out of 1,000, they can’t and won’t. And the sooner they get this through their thick skulls, the better off they’ll be. Know what I’m sayin’? Holding on to hope that just isn’t there is what steals your soul and life blood.

Among we writ writers who sit here in the law library day after day, there’s a private joke about a fictional law firm we call, Dewey, Cheatham, & Howe. Personally, I don’t beat people out of their money, but there are a lot of these crooked so-called inmate attorneys who will. For example, there’s a former federal public defender I met from Gary, Indiana. Of course, he’s doing time for fraud. This guy will literally tell you anything you want to hear. He’ll convince you he can win your case on either direct appeal or certiorari when in reality, all he wants is your dough. Sent Western Union from your family on the outside to his contact in the free world of course. That way there’ll be no trace of any inmate-to-inmate or outside-to-inmate money transaction on record. The real deal being, “Yes we can cheat ‘em and this is how.”

Then there are your cheap jailhouse attorneys. Men who’ll promise you the world on a silver platter for as little as a carton of smokes and a couple of jars of Folgers. There was one such guy at FCI El Reno. His name was Bill. Eventually Bill got ran off the yard for promising bullshit with his mouth that his ass couldn’t pay. It’s not nice to lie to someone, promising them you can get them back in court. Especially someone desperate, who just got a hot 30 piece, and a man with little or no understanding of the system, the new world he’s been thrown into, or how the convict system works. If you know for sure a guy ain’t got nothin’ comin’, then why would you lie to him knowing the dude’s in for armed robbery, kidnapping and murder? One would have to ask himself, are coffee and cigarettes really that important? If it were me, I’d have to say no. After old Bill checked in, I heard he got his ass beat in the hole. Shit happens. It just ain’t gonna happen with me or to me.

There are former chiropractors serving time in prison who can work on your back. And there are preachers who claim they can save your soul. However, beware of the slick talkin’ inmate attorney who claims he can get you out of lockup, because again, more often than not, they’re full of more shit than a Christmas turkey. Regardless of what they say, if their lips are movin’, they’re lyin’. I can spot a fraudster from a mile away. Take former California attorney Joe Jammy for example. The name of whom has been changed to keep him from being further beaten at whatever federal joint he’s in now. This asshole decided he was going to bilk a mafia boss out of a few thousand bucks promising him he could write something that would set him free. When he lied, as it ALWAYS happens, the boss found out, he too found himself on the business end of a pair of homemade prison knucks. Badly beaten and bruised and barely able to breathe through his shattered nose, he spent many days in an outside hospital getting reconstructive surgery done before getting moved to a PC (protective custody) joint somewhere in the U.S.

You’re got your U.C.C. guys (Universal Commercial Code) that tell you the way to go is to lien up the judge and prosecutor that put you in prison. To have an outside collection agent go to their houses, change the locks on their doors and haul off all their vehicles. That too won’t work. Just ask the Montana Freeman who got an extra 15 piece added to their already existing 30 for doing that same, exact, stupid shit. Sitting in the law library next to those guys at FCI El Reno, I told them that crazy crap wouldn’t work. That all they were going to do was wind up getting more time. But nooooo! They wouldn’t listen to me! Now they’re buried under the hole in some unknown federal prison somewhere eating bread and water and a few cockroaches for protein. Rest assured, the United States Government has jurisdiction to prosecute you anywhere and for anything they’d like. Never underestimate the United States Attorney. You think the writ writers in prison are crooked? You should see these guys work! All I’m sayin’ is … U.C.C. ain’t the way to go.

I do a little legal work here in the joint. But only stuff I know how to do. I can file for a fast and speedy trial under the rules of the IADA (Inter­state Agreement on Detainers Act). I can get a guy jail time credit if it’s due. And I’ve even been known to get a divorce or two granted, or a detainer dropped. But only because it’s something I’m familiar with—something I’ve done before. I won’t charge a guy an arm and a leg for my services either. If they don’t have any money, I don’t charge them anything at all. If they have the ability to pay and it’s not going to take away from their wife and kids. It’ll usually cost them a few books of postage stamps. No need in being greedy. I’ll do what I can do only if I think my client can win. No Dewey, Cheatham & Howe here. Just straight up honest legal work done by a layman who has more knowledge of the complicated science of the law than the average con. In closing, I’d just like to say … if you can’t do the time, don’t do the crime. That reference has haunted me for 8 years. If you come to me in prison lookin’ for legal help, don’t expect a miracle and get your mind set on doing your own time. It’s just easier to accept it and try to live in today than hope for things that will never come tomorrow. I’m Tripper. Better Days!

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