meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
True Murder: The Most Shocking Killers

FACING THE U.S. PRISON PROBLEM 2.3 MILLION STRONG-Shawn Grif

True Murder: The Most Shocking Killers

Dan Zupansky

True Crime, News Commentary, Documentary, News, Society & Culture

42.7K Ratings

🗓️ 29 November 2012

⏱️ 95 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Shawn Griffith spent over 23 years in various Florida prisons for an armed robbery he committed in 1992 at the age of 21. He has just recently been conditionally released from prison. He documents in elaborate and exacting detail what is wrong with the corrections system in the U. S and provides a host of solutions about how to improve it and save the taxpayers millions of dollars, while making our streets safer at the same time.

"Facing the U.S. Prison Problem 2.3 Million Strong" is written by someone from inside "the belly of the beast," who knows from years of personal experience what works and what doesn't. Ironically, most prisons today are not set up to rehabilitate prisoners but to do the opposite --simply to warehouse ever-increasing numbers of them until their eventual release with little or no practical training to succeed on the outside. Shawn advocates that the real purpose of prison, in addition to punishment, should be to enable the 90 percent who will eventually be released to cope on the outside and not return to prison within the first three years, as now just under half of all released prisoners do.

Shawn shows how tough-on-crime politicians, supported by guard unions and private prison corporations, have a vested interest in keeping the recidivism rate high. Instead of fostering in-prison drug rehab, job training, impulse control, and close family ties, prisons continually slash these critical programs to hire more guards and build more prisons. In California, 70 percent of the prison budget goes to pay the 31,000 guards it employs and only 5 percent to vocational programs to reduce recidivism. Until taxpayers grasp how counterproductive this approach truly is in providing public safety, there will be no chance for meaningful prison reform. FACING THE U.S. PRISON PROBLEM 2.3 MILLION STRONG-Shawn Griffith

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

You are now listening to True Murder, the most shocking killers in true crime history,

0:16.9

and the authors that have written about them.

0:19.6

Gasey, Bundy, Dahmer, The Night Stalker, BTK, every week, another fascinating author

0:27.3

talking about the most shocking and infamous killers in true crime history.

0:31.7

True Murder, with your host, journalist and author, Dan Zufansky.

0:38.4

Good evening, this is your host, Dan Zufansky, for the program, True Murder, the most shocking

0:51.5

killers in true crime history, and the authors that have written about them.

0:57.2

Sean Griffith spent over 23 years in various Florida prisons for an arm robbery he committed

1:03.2

in 1992 at the age of 21.

1:06.8

He has just recently been conditionally released from prison.

1:10.8

He documents in an elaborate and exacting detail what is wrong with the correction system

1:15.5

in the U.S. and provides a host of solutions about how to improve it and save the taxpayers

1:21.8

millions of dollars while making our streets safer at the same time.

1:27.1

Facing the U.S. prison problem 2.3 million strong is written by someone from inside the

1:33.3

belly of the beast who knows from years of personal experience what works and what

1:37.9

doesn't.

1:38.9

Ironically, most prisons today are not set up to rehabilitate prisoners, but to do the

1:44.1

opposite, simply to warehouse ever increasing numbers of them until they're eventually

1:49.8

released with little or no practical training to succeed on the outside.

1:54.3

Sean advocates that the real purpose of prison in addition to punishment should be to

1:58.8

enable the 90% who will eventually be released to cope on the outside and not return to prison

2:05.0

within the first three years as now just under half of all released prisoners do.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Dan Zupansky, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Dan Zupansky and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.