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Odd Planet


March 4th, 2007 at 1:04 am

hot prisonpals?

If you spent Valentines all alone look no further .. maybe www.hotprisonpals.com will have a just the right man for you. Yep. Some of America’s most desirable felons are lining up to send you love letters, poems and even proposals of marriage.

Some of the men are getting out soon while others are until 2023. If you like space in your relationships this might just be perfect.

The idea for hotprisonpals came from New York pop artist Sam Wagner, who began writing to a friend in jail several years ago. The prisoner then asked Wagner to write to his cell mate who had stopped receiving letters from his family.

Requests for letters from lonely prisoners kept coming, until Wagner was sending a monthly letter to more than 100 inmates.

With no access to the Internet, letters are often the only contact U.S. prisoners have with the outside world.

“Prisoners have real abandonment issues. Friends and family often stop writing after a couple of years,” said Wagner’s business partner, Jason Rupp, who built the Web site in 2003.

“The letters they get through the site are crucial to their well being. They need to know someone on the outside cares.”

The inmates, both straight and gay pay $19 each to have their photos and a short note on the site. Female inmates have been invited to join hotprisonpals but so far none have joined.

“We don’t require that prisoners say what crime they committed,” said Rupp, a 30-year-old photographer who runs the site from his home in the Thai capital, Bangkok.

“We take everybody. If they are murderers or rapists they are not going to put that in the ad.”

“Sometimes the messages get a little racy and we like that,” said Rupp. “We pride ourselves on having the hottest prisoners on the Internet.”

Pen pal friendships often lead to prison visits and serious long-term relationships.

The prison marriage of Erik Menendez — convicted with his brother Lyle of the 1989 murder of his wealthy parents in Beverly Hills — has helped generate interest in prisoner dating.

Menendez married a woman with whom he had corresponded for years from jail. A book by his wife Tammi, “They Said We’d Never Make It”, heavily romanticizes the unconsummated relationship.

“It’s a thrill for women. These are good looking guys and they can seem really exotic from the outside,” said Rupp. “It’s a fantasy. You don’t see any of their flaws.”

“We have scoured the prison floors and checked each bunk bed, both top and bottom, looking for the men that you have dreamed about,” the site says.

Ladies? Get your pens ready.





December 11th, 2006 at 3:18 pm

So it was you that stabbed me!

The story goes like this. You see, there were these two guys, they were in jail in Dubuque Iowa. The one guy, Michael Kelley Jr, 29, in for attempted murder, was swapping stories with the other guy, inmate Jamie Brimeyer, 34. Kelley asked Brimeyer about his facial scar. Brimeyer started to tell the story of how he’d been stabbed in the cheek by an unknown assailant in 2005. Kelley realized that he was the one who had stabbed him and recalled the incident so well that he corrected some of Brimeyer’s recollections. As a result Brimeyer ended up reporting Kelley as his former assailant, and Kelley is now charged with assault with a dangerous weapon on top of his attempted murder charges.

I guess he’s lucky that Brimeyer didn’t turn on him and try to get pay back for the orginal scarring. Well he did get pay back but it could have been done with violence.





December 4th, 2006 at 4:18 pm

Prison Knitters

I don’t know if this started as a way for prisoners to learn a new skill that they might use when they are released from prison or if a charity minded inmate came up with the idea but either way, inmates at hte Cache County, Utah jail are knitting caps, blankets and booties for kids around the world. So far, the inmates have knitted more than 300 hats, half of which have matching booties.

Dave Evans, one of the prisoners, says that even though they are criminals they have big hearts. Jail officials are being cautious though, as knitting needles are collected and counted before the prisoners go back to their cells.





December 4th, 2006 at 12:55 am

Prisoners in the Pink

Do you remember that I wrote about a village in India recently that had painted the whole town pink? Well … Sherrif Clint Low of Mason Washington decided to try to deter inmates from becoming repeat offenders by covering the entire county jail with a pink wash.

Even the prisoners uniforms had a change of color. Prisoners now wear pink jumpsuits and pink slippers. Low dyed the uniforms after finishin painting the jail pink. He did this to stop inmates from stealing clothes from each other. The walls are painted pink in order to keep the inmates relaxed and keep the tempers at bay. So far things are working out with no fights between the prisoners.

The re-offense rate in the county is down by 70% too. Probably because release prisoners, if they’ve gone back to a life of crime might be doing it in a different county least they get caught again. I’m sure they wouldn’t want to return to the pink jail.