1,825 Days of Hell: One Man's Odyssey Through the American Parole System e-bog
40,46 DKK
(inkl. moms 50,58 DKK)
1,825 Days of Hell is the shocking story of one mans fight to regain his self-respect, dignity, and livelihood against a government bureaucracy so bent on exerting total control over his movements and activities that it was willingand astonishingly ableto unilaterally revoke, without due process, his constitutional rights, including the most fundamental and cherished American right to freedom o...
E-bog
40,46 DKK
Forlag
Balboa Press
Udgivet
29 august 2014
Længde
174 sider
Genrer
Jurisprudence and general issues
Sprog
English
Format
epub
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9781452520957
1,825 Days of Hell is the shocking story of one mans fight to regain his self-respect, dignity, and livelihood against a government bureaucracy so bent on exerting total control over his movements and activities that it was willingand astonishingly ableto unilaterally revoke, without due process, his constitutional rights, including the most fundamental and cherished American right to freedom of speech.It is the tale of a harrowing journey through the US parole system, a mismanaged and bloated bureaucratic labyrinth of onerous regulations, restrictions, and reporting requirements that more than half of all parolees fail to complete, most of whom are returned to prisonmost often without committing any new criminal offenses!In 1,825 Days of Hell author Jerry Tanner takes on a corrupt and self-propagating US correctional system that deliberately and methodically thwarted his every effort to become a hardworking and productive member of society once again, despite having been one of the most successful entrepreneurs in the health-care industries in the history of two states: Alaska and Maine.A scathing expos of our hopelessly broken American parole system told from the perspective of someone who experienced and was victimized by it, this book is a must-read for every American who values and holds dear the rights and freedoms embodied in our Constitution. As the author states, the Department of Corrections in these United States is in peril of becoming, instead, the Department of Incarcerations.