Davidssong

don't ask

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SON OF HOPE
AN EVIL TIME
ANNIVERSARY OF ARREST
LETTER TO GOVERNOR ON PAROLE
DEER
LOST THINGS
MOM AND DAD
TO THE VICTIMS OF MY CRIMES
ON BEING HATED
MY LIFE IS ABOUT HOPE
DEALING WITH ENEMIES
GROWING OLD
David's Poems
A STATEMENT OF FACTS
LETTER TO CRIME VICTIM'S BOARD
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EARLY DIARY ENTRIES
PRISON CHURCH LIFE 2000
David Wins Lawsuit
valleys
GOD COMFORTS
blizzard
caring
Fascination With Evil
don't ask
BEING THERE
MISSING ALAN
Valerie
HIDDEN
THANKS TO THE KING
THE HARD ROAD
THE HARD ROAD
TIME OUT
TREASURES IN PRISON
here comes the SON
LATE RESPONSES
moving forward
moving forward
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VOLUME OCTOBER 2002a
VOLUME NOVEMBER 2002a
VOLUME DECEMBER 2002a
misinformation
VOLUME DECEMBER 2002a
have faith
Danny's Song
wasp watching
the everlasting arms
London Terror
wee hours
no more satan
cranberry juice
prayers and cranberry juice
distress
A DARK NIGHT
looking ahead
outreach
TSUNAMI
OPEN HEARTS
PRAYER
ELECTION
CHANGES AND CHALLENGES
NEW HORISONS
PORTER
SNOWFLAKES
VETERAN'S DAY
WRONG THINGS
A TICKET
SUFFERING SERVANTS
HARD LESSONS
TRIPLE SIX
NOTES ON LOVE
GARY EVANS
HOME FOR OUTCASTS
CRUEL MOCKINGS
GANGBANGERS
REJOICING AT LIES
SIFTED AS WHEAT
SIMPLE THINGS
TROUBLES
GOD'S SURPRISE
BELTWAY SNIPERS
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JANUARY 2001 SPREADING THE GOSPEL
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DON'T ASK
 
BEARING INNER PAIN ALL ALONE
 

    As a rule prisoners seldom talk about their cases.  There are men whom I have known for many years, that I see every day, yet I have no idea what they're locked up for.  Their crimes and the circumstances surrounding them are never discussed. 

 

They've chosen to keep this part of their lives low-key and private.

 

     There is an unwritten "Don't ask-Don't tell" policy that we instinctively adhere to.  A man learns this when he first comes into the system.  No one needs to know your business.

 

     Of course certain inmates like myself have a "high profile" case.  So most of the guys know about my situation. 

 

And some of them have had their cases written up on the law books because they filed appeals.

 

     These books contain various court decisions, and may give brief details and generalized histories of the crime, resulting arrest, trial, and court proceedings.  Thus any inmate could read about another man's alleged serious errors that were committed by the prosecutor or judge during his trial.

 

     I have found, however, that those who are adamant about their innocence are usually very vocal about it.  They're quick to proclaim their guiltlessness, and they will talk to any sympathetic person they could find. While those who are guilty of the charges against them stay silent. They, like me, seem to have accepted their fate.

 

     Knowing this, I am suspicious of the reports I sometimes hear about a man getting arested for a serious crime, and then while he's confined in the jail to await his trial, he confesses to fellow inmates.

 

     Prosecutors somehow seem to find those one or two prisoners, usually with long criminal records of their own, who are ready to swear in court--usually in exchange for leniency--that so-and-so admitted to them that he did indeed commit the crime he was arrested for.

 

     In all the years I have been incarcerated I don't know of a single man who had ever confessed his guilt to fellow prisoners.

 

     Of course this doesn't apply to those who enter the jail boasting of their criminal acts.  This happens, too, but it's usually among gang members or with the younger men who want to quickly assert themnselves and gain what they think would be a more prominent position in the pecking order.

 

     The men who boast know they're guilty, and they don't care.  They only want to make themselves look tough.

 

     Yet for those who protest their innocence from the moment of their arrest, it is extremely doubtful they would secretly confess to having done what they were arrested for.

 

     I will always remain skeptical of the latter.  To admit one's guilt to another inmate while at the same time proclaiming his innocence to everyone else, is silly.

 

     Prosecutors are sometimes successful with this tactic, but not always.

 

 

                               David Berkowitz

                               April 15, 2005

 

 

 

(c) 2005 David Berkowitz

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