What time do they wake you up in prison?

+1 vote
asked Sep 11, 2020 in Law/Ethics by Opaxe (430 points)
What time do they wake you up in prison?

1 Answer

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answered Sep 11, 2020 by Christeen (70,120 points)
In most prisons the inmates are woken up at 6:00 AM in the morning which is when they do a head count of all the inmates.

You must get up when they say to get up and stand for the count every single morning so they can count you and make sure every prisoner is locked in their cell and has not escaped.

The same happens at night before bed.

They count you before you go to bed and they also count you through the night as well to ensure the prisoners are all locked in their cells.

Some prisoners may be allowed out of their cells during the day but at night you must get into your prison cell where they lock the cell door and you are to remain locked in your prison cell until the next morning and until they count you.

Hard time in prison would be when an inmate is locked up in solitary confinement or is on death row and only gets 1 hour outside in a rec cage for recreation and spends the rest of the 23 hours of the time in a prison cell.

There's also another definition of hard time in prison which is.

"Hard time is when the inmate doesn't have their head on where they are.

When the inmates are worried about things outside out of their control it makes the prisoners prison time harder then just being locked up its your mind that is your tormentor not as much the CO's"

The shortest time you can spend in a prison is around 1 year.

If your sentence is 1 year or less than you may just serve your time in a county jail and not a prison unless you have a year or 6 months left on your sentence and the jail is getting too full.

Then you may go to prison for the remainder of your sentence and could spend only 6 months or less in a prison.

Usually you stay in county jail if your sentence is a year or less.

And if your sentence is more than a year then you would be transferred to a state prison to spend your time.

If you've been in jail for 6 months or longer awaiting your prison sentence then that time would be credited and you would have that time taken off your prison sentence.

But if you're going to prison for life then the time spent in county jail doesn't mean anything because you're going to prison and will have to live there until you die.

For prisoners time must seem like it's going slow and a minute probably seems like 2 hours and an hour probably seems like 12 hours.

But time never speeds up or slows down and time always goes at the same speed for everyone no matter where they are or what they are doing.

The time seems like it's going by slowly in prison because of the boredom and the the prisoners are waiting until the time in prison is up so they can be released if they have a release date.

I imagine the time in prison for life in prison without parole prisoners goes by slowly at least for the first 10 to 20 years in prison.

Then later they get into a routine and the time just goes by without them thinking about it.

But I would imagine that if I were in prison which I never hope to be that if I was in prison sitting around doing nothing and watching a clock tick by then the time would drag.

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