A man who broke into jail

(newyorker.com)

91 points | by fortran77 2 days ago ago

45 comments

  • pavel_lishin 6 hours ago

    > Friedmann’s infatuation with the game had continued after he moved to Nashville, becoming so intense that his psychologist stipulated in the terms of his parole that, along with being kept from weapons, he be prevented from playing fantasy games such as D. & D.

    Now that's ... that's weird.

    • scottLobster 8 minutes ago

      To be fair, he sounds a little more intense than your average player:

      "A psychologist concluded that Friedmann suffered from dysthymia, today known as persistent depressive disorder, and schizoid personality disorder, writing that he showed ā€œindifference to social relationships and a restricted range of emotional experience and expression.ā€ He also had a tendency to ā€œblur fantasy with reality.ā€

      Friedmann was convicted of armed robbery and attempted murder"

    • Verdex 5 hours ago

      "Its not a fantasy game, it's far future dystopian post apocalyptic implied hyper technical ethereal augmentation science fiction."

      "Very clever sir. But Im aware of what dark sun is. You'll have to come with me."

    • brendanfinan 5 hours ago

      cruel and unusual

    • RyanOD 3 hours ago

      Should have banned him from playing Top Secret.

  • assimpleaspossi 6 hours ago

    One of the Peter Sellers films (Pink Panther?), he goes to prison to visit an inmate only to have the inmate take his identity, fake beard, moustache and clothes, and walks out of jail. This happens several times. In the very last scene, he's walking out of the jail, a smirk on his face, and tries to pull off his fake beard and moustache but it doesn't come off. "Good heavens! The wrong man has escaped!!"

    • qingcharles an hour ago

      Most county jails don't do any identity checks as they release detainees (except ask their ID number and birth date), they are usually small enough for the staff to know all the prisoners.

      I remember one incident at the Cook County Jail where two prisoners "swapped identity":

      https://www.cbsnews.com/chicago/news/escaped-inmate-jahquez-...

    • TYPE_FASTER 5 hours ago

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/After_the_Fox

      I didn't know about about this film. Thank you!

      • dylan604 5 hours ago

        Aw man, I'm kind of jealous of you. To be able to go back and see Peter Sellers movies for the first time again would be amazing. My dad absolutely loved him, and I can still hear him cackling at his movies growing up. As a kid, they weren't very funny, but as an adult I now get it.

        • TYPE_FASTER 4 hours ago

          I watched the Pink Pather movies with my dad growing up, and re-watched them with my son a year or two ago. Watching them with him was kinda like watching for the first time.

          He was so funny. I need to watch some of his other films.

          • js2 3 hours ago

            If you've never seen Being There, put it at the top of your list.

            • MrFots 3 hours ago

              Chauncey Gardiner

  • hollywood_court 6 hours ago

    I thought this was going to be about someone that wanted to go to jail in order to receive meals and/or healthcare. But this article was far more interesting.

    • butterbomb 6 hours ago

      > I thought this was going to be about someone that wanted to go to jail in order to receive meals and/or healthcare.

      Tbf, there’s probably an easier way to achieve that goal that involves much less serious charges than breaking into the jail lol.

      • hollywood_court 6 hours ago

        I'm sure there are. One of my mother's husbands — she had four, all cops — loved to tell the story about arresting a man outside of a Zippy Mart on Virginia Loop Road in Montgomery, AL.

        The cashier called 911 and told them that a man had robbed the store. When he pulled up he found the man sitting on the curb just waiting for him. He had pulled a knife and stolen one pack of Big Red chewing gum from the store.

        All because it was getting cold outside and he needed a place to sleep. And he also had a toothache that had been bothering him for weeks. So he hoped to see a doctor while he was in county jail.

        • qingcharles 5 hours ago

          Out of all the places to be incarcerated, county jails in the USA have a pretty poor record on healthcare. They are run by the counties, not the states, and therefore it is open season on how they provide the services. Most [1] just contract to the lowest bidder private provider. These providers' jobs are to dispense the lowest amount of healthcare to the lowest amount of patients in order to maximize profits. Mostly providing only emergency care to those who are in immediate risk of death. Many also require the prisoners to use the funds provided by their family (for phone calls, letters, clothing, food etc) to pay to even put a medical request into the system in the first place.

          In terms of dental, most county jails will only do tooth pulls, not any other type of dental work. They will not try to save teeth at all.

          [1] some larger areas like Cook County have their own healthcare systems and can be somewhat more sophisticated and less constrained by monetary concerns

          • throwup238 4 hours ago

            State prisons are usually only a smidge better than county. They’re a slight improvement in that they’ll give shitty prison dentures instead of just pulling all the teeth.

            The other side of it is that prison is the first time many people get any dental work done at all so they cone in with large problems all ready.

            • qingcharles 43 minutes ago

              Yes, sadly a lot of people coming through these institutions have terrible dental issues and probably need a lot of teeth removed already. Hopefully in the future the dream of regrowing adult teeth will come to fruition.

    • zem an hour ago

      same. there's a classic o. henry short story, "the cop and the anthem", based on this premise.

    • uwagar 4 hours ago

      im reminded of an o henry story where a guy tries that.

  • jbd123 7 hours ago

    Jail is a unique place. If you break in, they’ll gladly let you stay or at least welcome you back at a later date. They may even insist on it. It is a deeper more interesting story, but that is the first thing that came to mind.

  • bstsb 6 hours ago

    fascinating article. while i certainly sympathise somewhat with Alex - it is clear his actions are at least in part a consequence of mental conditions - i can't help but feel like being caught wasn't his plan as the article seems to suggest, and he wanted chaos upon the prison's opening, as some kind of strange payback or revenge

    • pluralmonad 4 hours ago

      I like to think all of my actions are a consequence of my mental conditions.

      • bot403 2 hours ago

        Not a chance, all of our actions are disconnected from our mental conditions and have been pre-decided for us.

  • dogtimeimmortal 5 hours ago

    interesting article, though i probably would have skipped if not for a hand injury i'm dealing with.

    mentioned in the article:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Games_People_Play_(book)

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_Berne

    all i can think is the guy is nuts. why sabotage the new jail where you have a personal relationship with with the new sheriff and are supposedly making progress fixing all the problems with the old system? i don't know what i was expecting...

    • qingcharles 23 minutes ago

      I don't know. I've communicated with Alex a few times over the last decade or so and he's always seemed one of the most rational, smart and pragmatic jail reformers I've ever know. He has always followed the legal path through the courts, even though it is often broken, trying to make it less broken for those coming behind.

      You can't see inside anyone's mind. What caused him to commit his original offense that got him locked up for a decade? It wasn't a crime of necessity, I'm sure. Most crimes aren't. A lot of people commit crimes because some untreated mental health issue which lowers their self control. Then followed by ten years he was locked up, who knows what damage that did to his psyche which lay undiscovered?

      edit: I've now read the rest of the article, and I knew nothing of the extensive mental health issues Alex suffers from

  • amenghra 7 hours ago

    TL;DR: "while a new jail in Nashville was still under construction, staff discovered missing keys and other anomalies. Surveillance footage eventually revealed that someone had repeatedly disguised themselves as a construction worker and entered the building many times. Inside, they hid weapons, tools, and escape items in walls and rooms around the facility."

  • xvxvx 6 hours ago

    Leaving keys etc. I could understand as a political statement, but loaded guns? Madman!

    • pavel_lishin 6 hours ago

      He gives a reason for doing so, although the article points out that his reason is suspect.

      • NoMoreNicksLeft 2 hours ago

        More like the sheriff is butthurt at the explanation, even were it proven true he wouldn't be able to accept it as such.

        Though, Friedman also does have a touch of the narcissim thing going on, in that he enjoys it that Hall says "he can't be understood".

  • mcswell 3 hours ago

    Otis Campbell was known for locking himself into the Mayberry jail.

  • twohaibei 4 hours ago

    I recommend reading on "Witold Pilecki" - old story, but pretty fascinating.

  • jareklupinski 5 hours ago

    > reƫlection

    > reƫnacted

    whats with the ree-s in the article...

    • nerevarthelame 5 hours ago

      It's a diacritic marker that indicates how the word is supposed to be pronounced, with a syllable break on the marked letters - as though readers might get confused and think the word is pronounced "reel-ection" as opposed to "re-election." It's a pretty archaic practice, but The New Yorker persists. They have a lot of unusual stylistic preferences, like preferring the spelling "vender" over "vendor," which also occurs in this article.

      A more common example of the diaeresis would be the name "Zoƫ" - the "ƫ" indicates the pronunciation is "zoe-y" (2 syllables) not "zoe" (1 syllable).

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diaeresis_(diacritic)#English

      • irdc 41 minutes ago

        As a Dutch person, what’s interesting to me is how this exact rule applies to Dutch. Maybe that’s why I didn’t notice it while reading the article…

      • jareklupinski 5 hours ago

        til, thank you! i guess it's important for them we all coƶperate on prƶper spek :P

        thought i was seeing this because some ebooks also have missing/poorly substituted ligatures for me

    • retrac 5 hours ago

      Some style guides recommend the diaeresis over doubled vowels when they are pronounced separately. The idea is I believe from French: maïs, Noël, etc.

      I was taught to do it that way in public school here in Canada in the 90s; it is the textbook proper way to spell words like coƶrdination. I was also taught that no one actually spells it that way and that co-ordination and coordination are both fine and far more common.

      • derriz an hour ago

        > The idea is I believe from French: maïs, Noël, etc.

        Apropos of nothing, except that it will allow me to vent a bit, it also changes the rule for the pronunciation of the last consonant of French words.

        Normally the lack of a trailing "e" would mean the last consonant is not-sounded but the diaeresis changes it: maïs/"my-isz", Noël/"noh-ell", etc.

        And yes Moƫt (the champagne) is pronounced "moh-ett" in France and by French speakers.

        It's incredibly annoying having someone subtly but in a slightly superior manner "correct" your pronunciation by repeating the mispronunciation right after you've pronounced it correctly - "sure, I'll order some some MOHAY". Outside I'm smiling and nodding pretending not to notice, inside I'm screaming "IT'S MOH-fcking-ETT MTHERF*KER - MOH-ETT."

        • sebastiennight 30 minutes ago

          > it also changes the rule for the pronunciation of the last consonant of French words.

          This was a very well explained distinction, with the exception of you using "Noƫl" as one of the examples, since "Noel" would still have a sounded "L". It would be weird to a French speaker but would most likely end up being pronounced somewhat like the English "null".

          > And yes Moƫt (the champagne) is pronounced "moh-ett" in France and by French speakers.

          My favorite Moƫt mispronunciation is one that it took me several months to understand: Russians pronounce it as if it was spelled in Cyrillic, so they say "mah- yacht".

          There is a famous MORGENSHTERN song which I only understood was about champagne when I saw the music video for the first time.

    • enmyj 5 hours ago

      that's the New Yorker signature style

      • jareklupinski 5 hours ago

        i thought jaywalking was the new yorker signature style :P