60 Days In: Top 5 Moments From Etowah County Jail | A&E

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[INAUDIBLE] TONY: Versace and Willie walking around, arguing, fussing, cussing-- acting a fool type deal. DENNIS: Willie man cool with everybody, so I'm just thinking they joking. I'm thinking, Willie, man, like just joking around. They're going back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. [YELLING] TONY: I'm trying to jump in and say, listen, you need to stop. I don't want shit to do with nothing y'all got going on. I hid the shank in my room. So, if it leads to shake down, that's a major problem. [YELLING] They're not stopping. The CO's not doing anything about it. DENNIS: Willie man went to go pick up the garbage can-- --getting ready to go hit him. But, he put it back. So, I'm thinking this is over. I look over, and I seen it in his hand. It's a shank. TONY: If I was a CO there, that stabbing could have been prevented, 110%. If he failed to comply, you spray him. But before you even act, you should have been on the radio, calling backup for his safety and everyone else's safety. Versace stabbed him a couple of times, and to me, it looked like he walks to the shower, flushed the shank in a toilet. Next thing you know, you see Versace upstairs. The CO let him back in the cell, blood on him and everything. I'm like, this man just damn near killed somebody. What the hell? TONY: And as far as I can see for myself, when I went in, he was never handcuffed. DENNIS: Eventually, they end up coming to get him. You see him walking down the stairs with all his stuff. Versace did get removed from the pod. DENNIS: Seeing a guy get stabbed two feet from my face-- it was a humbling experience. Very humbling, very humbling. Because that could have been me. It's not a show. This is not something you want to sign up for, to be on TV for-- anything like that. This is real life and somebody could've lost their life, for real. TONY: I feel like Justin, now-- he's starting to get more confidence being around me. I feel like he's coming out of his shell, like now he's a little more confident, got his chest out a little more. But, Justin and Donyell-- it's becoming a major problem. This dude stinks, bro. [INAUDIBLE] JUSTIN: Bro it's like, all that. Bro, that ain't never been washed. I can't be living like Pigpen, bro, it's nasty. I ain't used to it, bro. TONY: Donyell, you going to wash your ass today? JUSTIN: No, [BLEEP] you, dude. For real, you smell like [BLEEP] You ain't bathed in a solid [BLEEP] week and yesterday you said Monday was the day. So, today is the-- Get the [BLEEP] up, go get in the [BLEEP] shower. TONY: We're in the cell, all three of us. Prior to that, Justin was like, hey man, I'm tired of Donyell not wanting to shower, this and that. [LAUGHING] Your sheets are crusty brown, bro. [LAUGHING] I really am thinking about beating his ass. Like, that's the point I'm at. I've asked you too many times nicely. [SLAM] [INAUDIBLE] Bro. Do it. TONY: I mean, me personally, I'm all for a fight. A straight fight? Hey, do what you need to do. Justin caught him-- hit him like, maybe three times. And Donyell hit him in the back of the head really good. Justin pushed Donyell back in the toilet-- his right hand fell in the toilet. And I think Justin hit the side of his face. JUSTIN: Get off me, bro. DONYELL: Let's keep going. JUSTIN: No, bro. All right, that's enough. That's enough. That's enough. That's enough. JUSTIN: Wash your hands, bro. So at that point, Donyell, he won. You good? No, I'm pretty mad. No. All right, stand up then, shake hands. Man, come on. So everybody can sleep. Ain't none of that sneakin-- [INAUDIBLE] Everything good. Yeah, 100%. Tony just stood there. He jumped up on his bunk. JUSTIN: It's broke, there's no doubt in my mind. It's broke. I can't say much, other than I wish he would have intervened and, like, broke it up. Or been like, nah, bro, you're going to bathe. I don't like any of this. Just because-- it's like this. If my brother gets in a fight at jail, and if it's a one on one fight, I'm not jumping in. I'm not one of them guys that say, oh, I'm going to fight regardless. No, I'm not. JUSTIN: I feel betrayed. Like, I feel like he's not there to help me no more. I don't-- I mean, maybe he did. If he did, I'm not. Hey, but listen. I am looking out for Justin. TONY: However, I won't be there-- I'm not your daddy. Justin started a fight as far as I'm concerned. And the winner wins, the loser lose. VANESSA: The inmates, they're allowed up until about 2:00 or 3:00 in the morning. I could tell there was probably going to be a fight. [YELLING] HEATHER: The inmates have no consequence for their action. So, their first response, for many of them, is a violent and aggressive response. They don't hide it. It's not a shock. They're yelling, screaming constantly, all day long, who they're mad at, who they're going to fight. And if I'm hearing it, I know the COs are hearing it. [YELLING] VANESSA: The CO is confused. Like, you didn't really do anything for the situation. She was just so confused. HEATHER: They gave every indication that they were going to fight and that is what they did. It got pretty intense. VANESSA: This place is ran by the inmates. You can't put it any other way. There's no control over the unit. [YELLING] VANESSA: Sorry, you dropped the ball on that fight. They could have prevented the fight. They could have prevented the whole situation. HEATHER: Watching this happen, I immediately click into the CO role myself, into a jail commander. I'm ashamed. I'm embarrassed. These are two females full blown fighting for the better of five minutes, while correctional professionals stood by and could not take control of the situation at all. This is the second major fight that I've seen since I've been here, and both times the first reaction was quick to the pepper spray. But neither time did it have any effect. Just sitting there and watching that happen was very difficult. But it motivated me even more, because it just showed how much help Sheriff Horton needs to get this place under control. VANESSA: Being a special ops participant, with eight years experience in corrections, I didn't think any facility could have as many problems as this place. Like, I've never-- this is unreal. I did not like how they responded to the code. It was pretty slow. It's just so out of control in here. People could actually be dying behind these doors. There's so much going on here that's just not safe. TONY: Last phase, it took me about a week to be a pod boss. This time, two or three days days. It's going to be rare that an individual is going to fight me, one on one. Champagne-- I sized him up, he sized me up. He's the big dog in the pod, right? Until he met me. See, in my pod, I'm running stuff. And if Champagne owes me something, I can use that to my advantage. I give him, like four or five items. I said, here, boom. All right, you owe me. So, now I got you. So, I gave you what, two cookies? CHAMPAGNE: Yeah. A bun-- and something else. TONY: I gave Champagne like, four items. And if he don't pay me back, I could appear weak. I can't have a reputation like that in jail. I want to say I gave you two-- And he was like, oh nah, bro, I ain't going to play with you play with you. All right, I said, as long as you know. I said, when it comes time to pay up, you need to pay up. TONY: If I had given someone some commissary, and they don't pay me back, I could appear weak. So, I have to enforce some type of discipline. I got to do something to you, put on a show for everybody else who's looking. So, store day comes, right. So, that means it's time to pay up. I see that Champagne got his little bag. He got his items in there. Yeah, you. So, he walks over there. So, mind you, people are looking, right, people are looking. So, I got to act some type of way to make sure my name stays silent. With Champagne, he definitely thinks he's big stuff. That's fine. But, if it was a fight between me and Champagne, I would definitely put Champagne on ice. Me and Champagne went in the cell. And I just back up, like, how are we going to play it? Bro, I need meat. I got paid. Me checking him, put him in his place in front of everybody, they're like, oh man, Tony. Yo, he checked Champagne. I know what he'll do to me. Moving forward, we'll see what happens. CANTRELL: Come back, you ain't paid my [INAUDIBLE] since you been here. I ain't seen you out here, bitch. TONY: This guy named Cantrell started accusing Houston of touching his wife on the street before they even got locked up. [YELLING] The COs, they're oblivious. They're just going to do the bare minimum and keep moving. Houston came out, got his ponytail up and stuff. At that point, Cantrell backed off. But then, he go to Champagne's cell, talking to him. Cantrell asked Champagne to do his dirty work for him, to beat up Houston. [YELLING] [SLAP] CANTRELL: Ow, dude. TONY: Hey, fall back, fall back. We fight five times, I win four, guaranteed. DENNIS: I've gotten the confidence to just do as I please when I want. I didn't care what anybody said. And the little small guy, Mark Bullock, he wanted to say something. He just wanted to say something. I'm tired of this shirt business, for real. He is making me the target. He's a lame-o. I don't worry about him. Rules are just not for me. Believe that. CHIEF BULLOCK: Why did you move to a different pod? You know, I'm such a good guy. CHIEF BULLOCK: The deal was to find out what you need to do in that unit. We don't need you to go to unit six. CHIEF PEEK: We stuck you in a particular unit, where you know you're being watched. You know, there's cameras everywhere. And you know that we can get to you in 45 seconds to get you help if something happens to you. CHIEF BULLOCK: We told you to stay in that unit, don't volunteer-- OK. All right. DENNIS: They called me out my room. The lady wanted to speak to me. The lady said, "Dennis Johnson, pack your bags." Cut the act in here, OK. We all straight, we know what's going on here. Let's make something real clear. We're expecting you to help us out. CHIEF BULLOCK: Your safety is our concern, OK. DENNIS: Yeah, I'm safe. No you're not. Not when you go and move to another unit, OK. They get you back there in one of them pods with no cameras in and whoop your butt, how are we going to know to come get you. CHIEF PEEK: So, what you're going to do, is you're going to go back to that unit, say you're having some problems with some guys up there, and you just don't feel like you need to be in here. Can I go back to unit four? DENNIS: Understood, understood. Talk to me like a man, and everything's good. I've been doing what I can to do to throw everybody off. Do you understand what you're doing? I'm doing a-- CHIEF PEEK: How many people do you see take their shirt off every day in front of the camera and work out? The shirts get wet. CHIEF PEEK: You know the rules, you can't have your shirt off in the pod. I'm playing by the rules. CHIEF PEEK: Did you have your shirt off-- DENNIS: Yes, I did-- CHIEF PEEK: You had it off-- that's not following the rules. All that does is draw attention to you. And if we're allowing you to get away with stuff like this, they're going to know something's up. If they know what you're in there actually doing, how safe do you think you would be? This ain't some schoolyard, some college, or some football field. This is real life. So, quit doing all this stupid [BLEEP] that you're doing. You're trying to look cool and all this kind of stuff. I don't need that. Don't raise your voice at me. CHIEF PEEK: You're in my building. Don't turn around anything on me, because I promise you, I will walk you out the door right now. And this will be over with and done. Go in there, do what you're supposed to do, and do your job. Simple as that. Are we going to have any more problems? We're good. CHIEF PEEK: We are? OK, go do your job. Hang in there. You don't have to grip your hand hard. Trust me. No, sir. Look, we can cut the camera off and we can have a real talk, but at the end of the day, I do this for a living. Don't try me. DENNIS: Chief Peek, from the jump, you don't like me. He's threatened by me-- intimidated by me-- because he thought when I was going to come in-- he thought they was going to, you know, look at me and pounce on me. But, that ain't the case. You get what I'm saying? I'm in there making it happen. This whole situation, right here? Like, I can't-- I can't deal with that. You're not going to talk to me like that. No, you ain't going to talk to me like that. We got a problem. We got a real problem.
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Channel: A&E
Views: 831,963
Rating: 4.8837538 out of 5
Keywords: a&e, aetv, a&e tv, ae, a&e television, a&e shows, a and e, a+e, a&e full episodes, 60 days in, prison, prison project, prison experiment, inmates, jail, go to jail, locked up, alabama, etowah county, life behind bars, 60 days in season 6, watch 60 days in, 60 days, 60 days in jail, 60 days in prison, top moments, top 5 moments, etowah county jail, etowah, mashup, compilation, best moments, funniest moments
Id: vJkw7IJWxR8
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Length: 25min 28sec (1528 seconds)
Published: Fri May 21 2021
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