Menu
Sign In Search Podcasts Charts People & Topics Add Podcast API Pricing

David

👤 Person
6912 total appearances

Appearances Over Time

Podcast Appearances

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They think it'd be better, and they want their prison time to be easier, for one, and they think for some reason if a program would make it less likely that you'd come back to prison. I don't think so. There could be an argument made, and I'm not making this argument. I'm just saying that people do make this argument that, no, prison should be less enjoyable and less –

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They think it'd be better, and they want their prison time to be easier, for one, and they think for some reason if a program would make it less likely that you'd come back to prison. I don't think so. There could be an argument made, and I'm not making this argument. I'm just saying that people do make this argument that, no, prison should be less enjoyable and less –

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They think it'd be better, and they want their prison time to be easier, for one, and they think for some reason if a program would make it less likely that you'd come back to prison. I don't think so. There could be an argument made, and I'm not making this argument. I'm just saying that people do make this argument that, no, prison should be less enjoyable and less –

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

you know it's harder to deal with in that way you wouldn't be saying things like it would have taken a 10-year sense for me to stop you might be saying dude i wouldn't risk it for six months you know what i mean that's an argument that other other side has about their their attitudes towards prisons and and and people also hate for some reason they hate the private prison system first of all i don't think anybody knows what it is i don't really even understand how that works

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

you know it's harder to deal with in that way you wouldn't be saying things like it would have taken a 10-year sense for me to stop you might be saying dude i wouldn't risk it for six months you know what i mean that's an argument that other other side has about their their attitudes towards prisons and and and people also hate for some reason they hate the private prison system first of all i don't think anybody knows what it is i don't really even understand how that works

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

you know it's harder to deal with in that way you wouldn't be saying things like it would have taken a 10-year sense for me to stop you might be saying dude i wouldn't risk it for six months you know what i mean that's an argument that other other side has about their their attitudes towards prisons and and and people also hate for some reason they hate the private prison system first of all i don't think anybody knows what it is i don't really even understand how that works

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

And they don't either. And why would you hate the private prison? The government can't do anything right. Why would you disagree with the public or private people having something to do with the prisons? Because you think, they think, not you, I'm saying they think that it's somehow related to the amount of people that go to prison. I've heard it a million times.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

And they don't either. And why would you hate the private prison? The government can't do anything right. Why would you disagree with the public or private people having something to do with the prisons? Because you think, they think, not you, I'm saying they think that it's somehow related to the amount of people that go to prison. I've heard it a million times.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

And they don't either. And why would you hate the private prison? The government can't do anything right. Why would you disagree with the public or private people having something to do with the prisons? Because you think, they think, not you, I'm saying they think that it's somehow related to the amount of people that go to prison. I've heard it a million times.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They think a private prison system is incentivizing the courses and to send people to prison for slave labor is what they think. Well, slave labor in my ass. You could never regain the amount of money it costs you to imprison somebody from their labor in prison. You're not going to get your money back. The state's not getting their money back because you made a couple shelves. It costs them.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They think a private prison system is incentivizing the courses and to send people to prison for slave labor is what they think. Well, slave labor in my ass. You could never regain the amount of money it costs you to imprison somebody from their labor in prison. You're not going to get your money back. The state's not getting their money back because you made a couple shelves. It costs them.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

They think a private prison system is incentivizing the courses and to send people to prison for slave labor is what they think. Well, slave labor in my ass. You could never regain the amount of money it costs you to imprison somebody from their labor in prison. You're not going to get your money back. The state's not getting their money back because you made a couple shelves. It costs them.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

How much do you think it costs to put somebody in prison for a year? How much do you think that really costs? Do you have any idea? I don't. I bet you it's over $100,000 a year to keep one guy locked. It's got to be. When you're talking about paying the mortgage on the building and And the court system, the legal system, it's in millions.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

How much do you think it costs to put somebody in prison for a year? How much do you think that really costs? Do you have any idea? I don't. I bet you it's over $100,000 a year to keep one guy locked. It's got to be. When you're talking about paying the mortgage on the building and And the court system, the legal system, it's in millions.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

How much do you think it costs to put somebody in prison for a year? How much do you think that really costs? Do you have any idea? I don't. I bet you it's over $100,000 a year to keep one guy locked. It's got to be. When you're talking about paying the mortgage on the building and And the court system, the legal system, it's in millions.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Yes.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Yes.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Yes.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Right. Okay.

Matthew Cox | Inside True Crime Podcast
Wrongfully Convicted in the Weirdest Trial Ever

Right. Okay.