Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - How does it feel to go to prison for the first time?

How does it feel to go to prison for the first time?

I haven't been to prison. I spent a month in a detention center and just got bail pending trial. Tell me how I feel. I was taken away for no reason because of the company, wearing thick handcuffs, sitting in the interrogation chair for two days and two nights, hardly eating or drinking, and having to deal with the police interrogation. At that time, I was in a state of ignorance, thinking about whether to let people go for 24 hours. I'm glad I wore thick clothes when I went out, because it was really cold and shivering. On the third day, I was taken to the police car and learned that I was going to the hospital for nucleic acid and physical examination. I know I can't leave, I'm helpless. Before entering the room, the supervisor will take it to change into a suit of size. He should take off all his clothes, including underwear, put them in his bag and put on a suit of dirty size. Slippers are missing. The director said that he should go barefoot. The feeling at this time is to lose face and feel ashamed. In the process of entering room 1, I was worried that there was a jailer inside, and I would be beaten. I didn't hit anyone after I went in, and I embarrassed the new number. It takes about ten days for everyone to get familiar with each other and get along well. When I got used to the life in the detention center, I began to ponder my case and asked the experienced old people how long they expected to stay here. I miss my family, I miss the delicious food outside and I yearn for a free life. I regret that I was reluctant to eat what I wanted before, and I didn't go where I wanted to go.

The sentenced people are eager to go to prison. Compared with detention center, prison is a paradise. They think that the prison can turn off the lights and sleep at night, without getting up and being on duty for two hours, and each person has a bed, that's all.

In fact, life in prison is not the hardest, but life in a detention center. I use my friend's personal experience to answer this question.

A friend was drinking at night, and two drunks at the next table accosted his girlfriend, so the two groups quarreled. In a rage, my friend slept with someone else with a beer bottle on the table. Of course, it is precisely because of this impulse that he also paid a painful lesson.

First, he was taken to the police station and spent the night there. The next afternoon, tell him to send him to the detention center. At this time, he knew that things were getting worse and worse. The other party was taken to the hospital and found that he was slightly injured. You know, although minor injuries and minor injuries are just the same difference, minor injuries can still be coordinated, and good cooperation can even exempt from detention. But once it constitutes a minor injury, criminal responsibility can be investigated.

In the afternoon, he was taken to the local detention center. I did a simple physical examination in the hospital, and after I entered the detention center, I missed my meal and my whole stomach was growling with hunger. After entering the prison, a dozen people put a board on the hard cement paved in Datong, and he was not used to sleeping. What is even more unaccustomed is that all kinds of bad breath, foot odor and sweat odor are a kind of torture for him who usually loves cleanliness. At night, I grind my teeth, fart, snore, talk in my sleep, and dare not even think about falling asleep. He lay alone in bed, afraid to think about how long he would be sentenced.

In the next three months, the police will come to know the situation from time to time. He has been living in fear and thinking about how long he will be sentenced every day. Get up early every morning, then make the bed and tidy up the office. Eating can also be said to be quite slimming. Every day, except for outdoor time, I stay in a closed prison, and there is no job in the detention center. Reading in a daze every day.

About two months later, he was sentenced, because the other party refused to show the letter of understanding, so my friend didn't get a suspended sentence and was finally sentenced to one year and five months. In addition to more than two months in the detention center, he has to serve a year and two months in prison.

According to him, after he went to prison, he was busy with manual labor every day, but the food was much better, and his family could visit him from time to time and charge some money into the card. It can be said that it was a hard life and he didn't worry about it every day in the detention center. Every day, he counts the days of going out with a hope.

Therefore, everyone must obey the law and keep calm. You know, impulse is the devil, and hands-on can't solve the problem! Remember, remember, be honest and never challenge the bottom line of the law!

The first time you commit a crime, you are first put in a detention center, not a prison.

Anyone who breaks the law is prepared in his heart. It is impossible to go to Lacrimosa all day, but when these criminals were just put into the detention center, the whole person must be a little ignorant. Leng Ding entered a small room full of baldness, and most people were confused, especially when they slept at night, everyone slept in a big shop with the lights on. At night, they snore, grind their teeth and smack their lips.

After two or three days, the mood will gradually calm down, and then I will privately ask the suspects who have been in for a long time some information.

If people who enter the detention center for the first time often smoke and drink outside, the first thing they don't adapt to is smoking and drinking. The detention center in the south is not clear about how to manage it, and the detention center in the northeast only has the opportunity to smoke a few cigarettes when it is questioned. Some detention centers will give a number of cigarettes when they are on sentry duty. Not everyone has them.

Under normal circumstances, people who enter the detention center for the first time, after getting used to it, mostly consider their own existing cases. The people in the detention center are most concerned about how many years they can be sentenced!

Before I entered the detention center, I thought that the people inside were murderers and arsonists. I thought that there were not many women who committed crimes.

After entering, I found at first sight: so many women commit crimes! First of all, I was shocked. I thought there were more than forty people killing and setting fires in one number. Afraid, nervous, thinking about my family, to save myself.

The first 37 days are the hardest. Every day, I wait for the arraignment to call my name. On the way to the arraignment room, I will think it is a lawyer or a case-handling unit. I have been uneasy in my heart.

Thinking about my case every day, I can't sleep and eat, thinking about whether I can bail for 37 days. Some details of anyone's case will be imaginatively linked to his own case.

Anxiety and self-regulation. It is difficult to go through the formalities. Sometimes I wish I could get a paper sentence and go to prison, but I will pray to the Buddha to escape quickly.

Will guess what's going on outside.

When the real verdict came down, I felt at ease, relieved and relaxed! Thinking about going to prison quickly. This is one step closer to going home.

It takes time to go to prison day by day, and some people work in a more substantial prison area. There is no time to think about anything else. Our prison area is the prison area. We eat, sleep and watch TV every day, doing nothing and not participating. Prison activities are none of our business.

Watch a few TV plays all day, read books if you don't like them, make your own calendar, and draw a picture every day. Every month, what I look forward to most is to receive a letter from home and call home. Count the days every day.

I will chat with you and look forward to life outside.

I only think about the good things of my family and relatives, but I can't remember the bad things. I feel very happy every time I tell their good deeds.

I like dreaming at night best, because when I wake up, there is a high wall, and the world is in my dream.

Every day, I dream about my friends and family outside. Happiness is bursting. What I look forward to most is dreaming at night.

Even if there are grievances and sorrows in prison, as long as you take out your calendar, your heart will be strengthened.

Prison is not as terrible as imagined. Of course, it will be hard to lose your freedom. Feelings of serving a sentence in prison: First, there is no freedom and lax management. Second, labor reform is very vigorous and has production tasks. Third, there is not much time to rest. Fourth, don't make mistakes, or you will be miserable. I feel good: first, there are many people and excitement, especially for eating on holidays, and the atmosphere is good. Second, shopping every week and making phone calls every month are in good spirits. Third, I was in a good mood when I filled out the commutation materials myself. Fourthly, when you get out of prison and regain your freedom, the air is good. As for Lacrimosa, he has no energy or time to stay in prison. The most important thing is that the prisoner looks down on him. People who don't make mistakes bravely face their mistakes and correct them better than Lacrimosa.

It is said to be the first time. It must be anxiety, fear, unknown, caution, and then caution. However, I heard that prisons are quite standardized now, and those plots produced in Hong Kong no longer exist.

When you were sent from the police station to the detention center, your mind was absolutely full of all kinds of fears. The detention center has a transitional process. At first, you will be put into the transition warehouse, where you will stay for about 10 days, and then you will be assigned to the fixed warehouse. On the first day of entering the transition warehouse, there will be a rule that a captain will hand over your room, ask you why you came in, and then call you to the detention center.

In the transition room, my mind is full of ideas, thinking about when I can go out and how long I will be sentenced if I can't go out. Basically, most people have constipation and insomnia a week ago. In short, it is a great mental torture. In a few days, the public prosecution department, that is, the procuratorate, will come to interrogate you and convey the arrest warrant to you, so that you can't think about going out to execute it after being arrested.

The next thing you have to do is to find a way to get on well with other prisoners inside and make yourself comfortable inside. Detention centers and prisons are more realistic than the outside world. It's up to you whether you can mix well or not.

You must stay in the detention center for at least a few months before going to prison, and you can only go to prison after being sentenced.