Locked In with Ian Bick - I Was Sentenced to 32 yrs in Prison at 18 | Jesse Crosson

Episode Date: January 23, 2023

Addicted to drugs at 18 years old, Jesse Crosson was sentenced to 32 years in a Virginia State Prison after committing a robbery and shooting. Listen to find out how Jesse was able to turn his life ar...ound and get a second chance at life.Connect with Jesse:www.jessecrosson.com Connect with Ian Bick: https://www.ianbick.com/Subscribe to our membership program on YouTube to get early access to interviews, see behind the scenes photos & more:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRvVklIft6DMelVW18M0oBw/joinPowered by Q29 Productions, LLC Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 USAA knows dynamic duos can save the day, like superheroes and sidekicks, or auto and home insurance. With USAA, you can bundle your auto and home and save up to 10%. Tap the banner to learn more and get a quote at usa.com slash bundle. Restrictions apply. You're great at protecting your data, but lots of places could still expose you to identity theft. I thought it was safe. If that happens, LifeLock gives you a U.S.-based restoration agent who will stick by your side from start to finish. phone calls, filing documentation, preparing insurance claims, your agent handles it all.
Starting point is 00:00:33 In fact, we're so confident restoration is guaranteed, pour your money back. Isn't it nice to have someone like that on your side? Save up to 30% your first year at lifelock.com slash podcast. Terms apply. My name is Ian Bick, and you're tuned in to Locked in with Ian Bick. On today's episode, I'll be interviewing Jesse Crosson, who at 18 years old was sentenced to 32 years in a Virginia State Prison. On today's episode, we're going to be diving in to his prison experience, the charges that got him there, and what life is like for him after.
Starting point is 00:01:11 I owned one of the biggest music venues in Connecticut. I got out of prison in 2019, and since then I've been featured on HBO and vice. I quit my job to start making content, and I've amassed over 70 million views. Incredibly crazy stuff happened. Reflection on what put you into prison in the first place. foot their own actions. So I want to start at the beginning, beginning of your story, what life was like for you growing up, what your family was like, how did you grow up? My parents are both recovering addicts or alcoholics, but they stopped when I was younger. So there was some stability and there was
Starting point is 00:01:46 some kind of growth. They got divorced when I was seven. It was kind of ugly. I mean, it brought out the worst in both of them, but at the same time it wasn't the traumatic experience that a lot of people here. I was really fortunate to have their support and eventually having the support of really strong step families. Like those step families, in many ways began to feel like my family because those were the ones that I spent Christmas with or those are ones I spent Thanksgiving with and those are most of my memories. So it was just kind of the average middle class kid growing up. My mom was an attorney but she didn't do criminal work.
Starting point is 00:02:13 She only did property stuff and probably made less money than any attorney I've ever met. My dad was a substance abuse counselor. They were really passionate about what they did and, you know, I had that upbringing. I got to play a T-ball. I got to go to school. I got to be engaged in things. Now, even with that upbringing, by the time you're 17, you're abusing alcohol and cocaine, what brought you down that path, and how did you get into that?
Starting point is 00:02:35 So I think, at least for me, all the choices I made reflected an inability to cope. There was some skill that I didn't understand or something I didn't know how to deal with or some trauma that I didn't know how to process, and the easiest way to deal with that was to avoid it. And so I had this avoidant behavior when I was a little kid and I was eat too many Oreos sitting behind the couch or I would find some other way to distract myself or to numb the pain. And so when I found alcohol, I was like, oh, this does. This makes me feel better. this makes me feel confident. When I found cocaine, that was like the supercharger because it made me feel like a superhero. It made me feel amazing. It made me feel all the confidence that I'd always been
Starting point is 00:03:05 lacking. So as soon as I found it, I never wanted to let it go. Now, by this point in time, you decide not to go to college or take a year off. Was college accessible to you? And why did you ultimately decide not to go to college? Basically, I just didn't want to go through the application process. And I've grown up with this, let me know where it came from, but this scarcity idea. I never like to spend money. I'm really cheap. So I always said I wouldn't apply for college. I would go to community college because I could go for two years for really cheap and then get into a state school. That was really my plan. Now, I had a gambling addiction at one point and I knew some of the crazy things that I would do to fuel that addiction. What were some of the crazy things
Starting point is 00:03:41 you were getting into to fuel your addictions? My, the kind of until cocaine, the addiction process was was fairly mild. Like I always, you know, worked a job. I always had a hustle. I sold weed. Like I had a way to support myself. I didn't really get out of control. But then with the cocaine, it went from being able to like, support. support this hostel to being completely gone. And that was how I committed the robbery and that eventually led to the shooting. And who are the types of people you were hanging out around with? Were they different than from who you were initially hanging out with in high school? Were you drifting more towards like a bad crowd that led you down to this shady past or the
Starting point is 00:04:15 shady route? So the, my three co-defendants, two were illegal immigrants who I ran into because of guys that I used to buy coke from because I spoke Spanish so I could get better deals on cocaine than anybody else, which was initially how I supported myself. The other was a kid that I went to high school with, that we just connected over this kind of like interest in drugs and this kind of outlaw lifestyle. And so 18 years old, you get arrested for charges relating to a robbery and a shooting. Are those scenarios tied together? Are they different? What was it like and what exactly happened to bring those charges? So the robbery was first. We had run out of money. We'd run out of drugs. Nobody would front us anymore. Everybody
Starting point is 00:04:52 was after us. And we didn't know how we were going to get more drugs, basically. So one of the guys said, oh, you know, I used to work at this restaurant, and they're really terrible people, and they only hire illegal immigrants, and they only pay them pennies, and they keep all the rest of the money, so they're going to have $50,000 in cash in the house. And somehow that allowed us to create the narrative to where we weren't bad people. We were like Robin Hood, or we were only stealing from bad people, just allowed us to justify this absolutely horrible thing, because we needed some level of justification. So we ended up going there, and we thought we were just breaking in.
Starting point is 00:05:20 We didn't think anyone was home. My co-defendant went to the front of the house, and we broke in the back. Turns out there was a maid there. And so he stuck a gun on her face and tied her up and it was just this horrible situation. And we didn't even get anything. We didn't find any money. There was no reason. And this is where people have this idea that criminals are like this Ocean's 11 type, like, reasonable.
Starting point is 00:05:37 No, we were completely strung out. We were like feral animals. The shooting was, I had been so paranoid that I felt like I needed a gun because I felt like everybody was out to get me or somebody was going to rob me or somebody was going to shoot me. So a buddy mine said, hey, you know, these guys just sold me a gun. Do you want it? So I bought it from him. And they had stolen it and sold it to my buddy.
Starting point is 00:05:55 Then they came back to him and said, oh, you need to give us that gun back where else or you owe us. And I don't know exactly what went on there. But about a week after the robbery, my buddy's there and he gets this frantic call from his girlfriend who's pregnant sitting at home and says, hey, these guys are here and they won't leave him. They say you've got to bring them money or a gun or some cocaine or like, I don't know what's going on, but they won't leave me alone. So I got on the phone and I was trying to play hero and I threatened them. We ended up going to meet. And I had that moment of clarity, that moment of like, hey, this is a terrible idea. So right when I got to where they were, I left.
Starting point is 00:06:26 And when I left, they chased me. And I was like, in my mind, I'm thinking, like, please, just like, I'm trying to go away. Like, I'm trying, like, please. And then as we were driving down the road and they were in the left lane, the passenger reached around behind him to grab something. And in my mind, he was reaching for a gun. So I just pulled the gun out, the gun that they had stolen and just unloaded into him. It wasn't like a careful calculated, like, you know, whatever Ryan thing. It was, it was me just freaking out and then going completely deaf and then tears streaming down my face
Starting point is 00:06:50 and then, like, swerving in the middle of the road. and I'm just grateful that they didn't die. So the second you pulled the trigger, you instantly regretted it? I don't even know that there was a moment of regret because it was just an instinct. There wasn't a thought process there. But yeah, as soon as the sound came back,
Starting point is 00:07:06 as soon as I was driving down the road and they weren't there, I was horrified at what I'd done. And did you know these individuals, or never known them a day in your life? I'd never met them before. Wow, that's really something. Definitely crazy. And after the shooting happens,
Starting point is 00:07:20 are you caught that same day, or does a couple days, couple weeks, whatever goes by before you're eventually caught and charged? It was basically the next day. So they had been investigating us for the robbery, and I don't actually know how they connected us to the robbery. But again, we were completely out of our minds running through the streets like crazy people. It wouldn't have been hard to make that connection. And the people that I shot gave my description of the police. He was driving this car.
Starting point is 00:07:42 He was doing this. This is what we looked like. So the police then connected me based on, I think, the other investigation. And the next day, came to the house where we were staying and brought the SWAT team and arrest. of us. This is at your parents' house? No, this was, so my buddy from high school was running a place in town, a little duplex downtown, and we were all, you know, five of us crammed in there together. Now you got arrested. What do you say to your parents? How do they react? What's that first conversation like? God, I was, in a weird way, I was more scared to tell my parents than I was
Starting point is 00:08:09 even face, like, the judge or the criminal justice system. I just, I remember being horrified because I didn't know then that I was like front page news. This was a huge deal and they already knew. In my mind, I was going to have to call them and tell them the most horrible thing that I'd ever done, and I didn't think they would forgive me. And instead, you know, my dad, just, I remember he was so sad. He was like, this is my fault. Like, you know, I raised you with all those stories. Like, I gave you this idea, like, this is my fault. My mom was just freaking out. She just completely panicked. She had always tried to fix things. Like, her role had always been to, like, figure out a way to make things better. And this was something she couldn't make better. So I just,
Starting point is 00:08:39 I remember being just completely struck by how much they were grieving or how much they were suffering and just how horrible I felt because of their grief. you decided right away to plead guilty, but what caused you to come to that decision? Because the same thing is after the shooting. Like the realization of what I'd done, how profound the impact that I'd had was, I just wanted to have this over with. I wanted to be able to take accountability. I wanted to do the next right thing because I felt like I had thrown my life away. Like there was no redemption, but maybe I could do some small thing. Maybe I could, you know, spare somebody some more trouble. Because the idea of going through a trial and making people come
Starting point is 00:09:10 to testify and making them go through reliving the worst experience of their lives was just unconscionable. Why do you think that some people in your same situation decide they want to take it to trial? Because sometimes you read about in articles and on the news that, you know, you know that they're involved in the shooting or the robbery, but they still want to claim their innocence or whatever they want to do, and they take it to trial instead of pleading guilty right away. Well, I mean, one reason is a lot of times they won't offer them a deal, and that actually happened in my case. I pled guilty, but they didn't give me a deal. They didn't say, oh, well, we're going to limit you to this, or we're going to cap this. And so I think some people maybe threatening
Starting point is 00:09:44 to trial as a way to try to bargain. Say, hey, I'm going to go to trial unless you offer me a deal. In my case, I asked my lawyer, I was like, look, I just want to plead guilty. Like, if there's some way we have to do this or some game we have to play to get like a reasonable sentence, that's cool. But I just, I want this done. Like, I want to accept responsibility and be over with it. Now, how much time are you facing going into sentencing? Based on your deal, there was no time. There was no deal. But the sentencing guidelines, as we went into the courtroom that day, were from eight to 13 years with a midpoint of 10. My lawyer was like, look, you're probably going to get 10 years. You're going to have to figure out a way to cope with it. But like,
Starting point is 00:10:13 you did some really bad stuff. You just got to deal with that. And I could own that. Now, the day of sentencing, first thing we came in, they filed a new motion, and they wanted to modify the sentencing guidelines. So then they became 10 to 16 years.
Starting point is 00:10:24 And I was like, okay, well, you know, what should we do? My lawyer was like, look, he's seen the old sentencing guidelines. Like, look, your case is really extraordinary. It's related to drugs. Like, there's nowhere you're going to get a bunch of time. You'll probably still get 10 years. So I said, okay. So go in front of the courtroom.
Starting point is 00:10:36 The judge starts reading off, and he gives this kind of speech, and he starts reading off sentences because they reached done individually. Like 10 years for this with five suspended and two years for this and 20 years for this, 15 suspended. And I'm doing the math in my head. By the time he gets done reading off all these charges,
Starting point is 00:10:50 I counted what he said, but nobody else did. So my lawyer stood up and said, Your Honor, but what's the total sentence? The judge said, I don't know. I just told you. And there was this kind of gasp in the courtroom, like, wait, you actually don't know. So the court reporter had to read back the thing and do the math, and he had sentenced me to 32 years in prison. Now, did any victims come and speak, like victim impact statements?
Starting point is 00:11:08 The one that sticks to me, It was the grandmother or one of the guys that I'd shot. And she got on the stand and she talked about having heard that her grandson had been shot and not knowing if he was going to live. And it just, like, it struck me to my core. I was in the courtroom crying because I'm listening to this woman describing, again, the most terrifying thing you can imagine. Like losing a loved one, losing a grandson,
Starting point is 00:11:26 or thinking and not knowing and panic and driving to the hospital. That just has always struck with me or stuck with me is something that like I don't know how to, I don't know how to process that. Because I think that's one of the big things about accountability is you need to come face to face with the consequences of your action. And somehow that to me was more profound and more in my face and any of the other consequences, any of the other things, because it was so real and it was so emotional, it was so human. Now, the judge sentences you to ultimately 32 years. What's going on in your mind? I know, like, when I just got 36 months, my mind's racing. I'm trying to calculate how many years is 36 months because I'm like this 21-year-old kid that when you refer to an amount of years, you never refer to it in like in months. So what's going through your head? How are you feeling? What's your reaction? What's your reaction? reaction to that sentence.
Starting point is 00:12:12 I mean, I had this kind of split reaction. I had this kind of like numbness, this, you know, just resignation. But I also had this sense of like, that's it. Like this is my deepest fear. Like I'm irredeemable. There's nothing I can do. Like this judge has proven. Because a whole part of like getting high and running from things and not dealing
Starting point is 00:12:31 with things was this feeling that something was fundamentally wrong with me, that I was broken. And he seemed to validate that. And there was some little part of me that was angry or was outraged or how can you do that? That's not the deal. I was supposed to get the guidelines or, but so it was this combination of approaches, but I remember just mostly feeling numb.
Starting point is 00:12:45 Like all these thoughts or all these processes were going through my mind, but I remember feeling numb and I turned around and it was a kid that I went to school with. I was really close to his sister, but I knew him, and his jaw was just wide open. And I just remember, like, kind of smiling. Because in that moment I was like, you know what? Maybe I can smile and tell him it's going to be okay, because I sure didn't feel like it was going to go okay, but maybe I could make his day.
Starting point is 00:13:04 Obviously it didn't. He just kept his jaw dropped and just was struck. Now, what happened to the co-defendants? So why did they get significantly less time than you did? Was it a different judge or what was the situation with them? One had a different judge. They all cooperated with the police and the investigation, which was part of it. And also it was just, I was kind of tagged as the ringleader.
Starting point is 00:13:23 That was the way that they presented it was, you know, he was the one who was involved. And also they weren't involved in the shooting. So I was involved in the robbery and they were, you know, they were absent from the shooting. But on that, so for the robbery, I got 20 years. I got 12 years for the shooting, which says a lot about like the value of property versus human life. You get twice as much time for, you know, breaking into a home and stealing something, especially since I wasn't even the one who actually, like, had the gun or, like, you know, basically tied this woman up. He got eight years. The other co-defendants got two and a half and four
Starting point is 00:13:51 years. And did you ever talk to them again after that? I ran into my co-defendant. We were at, like, there's a receiving prison and a regular prison kind of across from each other. I yelled at the window out a couple times. And then the only other interaction I had is I had somebody reach out to him when I was in prison putting in for paperwork later, and he wrote a letter in support, and he basically said, look, I don't like this guy. Like, this isn't because he's my friend, but because what happened was fundamentally wrong.
Starting point is 00:14:15 Like, at that point, he'd been out of prison for more than a decade, and he was like, this just isn't right, but that's the only interaction we fed. Now, were you on bail at all during this process? So no bail because of the nature of the crime? So what's, like the first week of prison like? Like, after your sentence, do they move you to a different prison? And what's the hardest thing to adjust to once you're in that prison?
Starting point is 00:14:35 So I went from the jail. I got really lucky and they moved me about two weeks later. Some guys were waiting months then. At this point in Virginia, people are waiting years in the jail. They might be there for three years before they get sent to prison
Starting point is 00:14:45 because they just don't have any beds. So the first place I went to was a receiving prison where you go for classification. They determine what's your security level is going to be, what special conditions you have. And I went there and I was thinking, oh, cool, it's like people have told me prisons can have all these things.
Starting point is 00:14:57 We were just locked in a cell for 23 hours a day. We got some time outside and get some time for a shower and that was it. So adjusting was really, it felt like the jail again. Like I just sat in the room and I read books. because we just passed books all around the tier
Starting point is 00:15:08 and really couldn't do anything. Now, at what point does everything hit you like a ton of bricks and you're like, wow, I'm going to be here for the next 30 years of my life. I really fucked up. When's that moment? So things hit me in waves after I got arrested. Like there were these moments of guilt
Starting point is 00:15:24 just before I went, before I pled guilty, before anything happened, where it just hit me and it was this emotional experience and this kind of like struggling with how powerful it was. And then in prison or even in the jail shortly after I was sentenced, I still had the hope that an appeal would come through. Because my lawyer said, there's no way this will stand. He sentenced you to twice the high point of the guidelines.
Starting point is 00:15:43 There's no way you're going to be. So I kept waiting for these appeals because I was like, okay, maybe this will come through. And I remember when the first appeal got shot down. It just, it hit me. It was like, hey, I tried to accept responsibility. I tried to get this. Like, how can they give me 32 years?
Starting point is 00:15:57 Like, this isn't okay. And I remember feeling angry because I was like, this just doesn't seem right. And I'm totally unjustified. I put myself in that situation. I created all of this chaos. cause unimaginable harm. So to sit there and feel sorry for myself in that moment was just,
Starting point is 00:16:11 was the kind of like small-minded response that I had came from. But I struggled with that. And there were just moments throughout. So when the next appeal got turned down, it hit me again. And then when the habeas got turned down, I had just already given up hope. You know the moment in Shawshank where Matthew, Morgan Freeman's like, look, frankly, I don't give a damn. I'd gotten to that point where I just didn't care.
Starting point is 00:16:29 Like I was just crushed. And I was just like, you know, it's not going to change. Like, I'm just here. This is my life now. Yeah. So you think losing that final appeal helped you to realize that? I remember like when my situation, I was going through the appeal process for like the first 10 or 12 months of my prison sentence. They denied me bond because in the federal system you can get bonded out while on appeal. I didn't get that, which looking back on it now, I'm grateful for that because then I
Starting point is 00:16:55 would have had to do the time anyways. And we got a hearing with the second circuit, the appeals court, and I'm like, wow, there's hope, this and that. It's great. They shot it down not even 24 hours after that court case, which I was like, wow, did they even have time to, like, analyze everything? So I think that really helped me get through prison, too, because at that point, I'm sitting there finally calculating how much more time do I have to do on my sentence, what's my release date looking like, and that kind of just changed my mentality at everything. So what kind of people are you in the prison with, like in regards to their criminal charges? Who are you surrounded with?
Starting point is 00:17:32 So after the receiving prison, I went to a level four. Most of the people were in there At least half the guys had life. Most were in there for robbery or murder, you know, serious violent charges. And it was weirdly like the kind of calmest place. Like it was not what I expected. Remember, I was expecting to come in
Starting point is 00:17:48 and just be a complete zoo and just constant violence and craziness. And the first day I walked in, people were just living their lives. They were on the phone and playing cards and laughing and going off to work and it just shocked me. But it was also about three days in,
Starting point is 00:18:00 you know, after all this piece and this normalcy and thinking, hey, this isn't so bad after all, we came out for breakfast, and they would open the doors at 5.30, and they would let us sit out in the pod, and then eventually it would call us. We might be out there for five minutes, or we might be out for an hour. And I came out, and it was normally quiet because people were tired, but it was like extra quiet. And all of a sudden these two guys started arguing, and then one steps back and reaches in his pants and pulls out this giant knife, and the other one steps back and reaches back and reaches over, and they had this big round trash can lids. He picked it up, and the guy with the lock and the sock swung, hit the trash can lid, and the locks go forward. And they start going back and forth, and the guy with this big round trash can lid, and the lock in the lock. He picked it up, and the guy with the lock and the locks go flying off. So he's standing there with an empty sock facing a guy who has basically a shield and a machete. And I was like, I'm going to watch this guy get murdered. Like, he's going to die. And they went after each other. And they called chow and we just went to chow. And that was when it struck me that this is the most bizarre place I can imagine because it is completely normal, 99% of the time. It's just people live in their lives. And then incredibly crazy stuff
Starting point is 00:18:53 happened. And there's no real like space in between. Remember one time they had, the pod was literally covered in blood. These guys had gone at it and one guy was really hurt. Literally just like, they bring in buckets. They finally get the blood. and they just open the doors when we go to chow. Like, that's it. You just have, like, violence weaved into normalcy. So there was no, like, separation of different types of offenders or criminals or anything like that.
Starting point is 00:19:14 That's crazy. Now, you and I both go to prison at a very young age. You go a couple years younger than I had went. Did any guys try to take advantage of you, like, your first couple weeks or a couple months in there because of your age? Not really at first. One of the things that I appreciated is the prison that I went into had a mindset of, like, we had juveniles at that prison because juveniles could be tried as an adult.
Starting point is 00:19:36 We had 16-year-olds in the prison. And there was this mindset that people hated child predators. And if somebody was going to try to pick on somebody or attack somebody because they were weak, like that person was going to be targeted. That wasn't stood for it. Because we had these old heads that upheld this kind of standard of like what's okay and what isn't. And that was something that wasn't okay. Now, once I started putting myself out there and making dumb decisions or, you know,
Starting point is 00:19:56 putting myself in situations, then it became an issue and then I got into fights or I had problems. But in the beginning, it really wasn't a bad situation because, again, that the old heads kind of maintain the standard of conduct. Now, did you ever find yourself in, like, morally compromising situations where you had to do things maybe you weren't proud of or were against what you stood for in order to survive there, especially like those first few months in there? I put myself in some bad situations and did some things that I wouldn't do going back. Some of the fights are the violence, especially, because I saw guys get really hurt over really
Starting point is 00:20:27 stupid things, and I was one of those guys who would get into a fight or would respond, you know, kind of off the cuff. And it took me a long time to, recognized that I had to choose the direction of my life, that I couldn't allow this environment to dictate me. And there was a specific situation that really did that, where I was in the weight pile, and these two guys were jumping another guy. It was an inner gang issue. And they were just standing there, stomping on his head and laughing about it and stomping on his head for like five minutes. And I think what bothered me was both the kind of inhumanity of that, but also our
Starting point is 00:20:53 role, which was to like not pay attention and make jokes about like, oh, ha, ha, its head's going to be like a watermelon. And I was like, that was the moment it hit me that if I allowed this place to me that I would not like or ever understand what it would turn me into. And how far into your sentence are you at this point to even have that mindset? That's probably about four years. Because I think up to that point I felt like I had to follow everybody else's
Starting point is 00:21:13 lead or I had to like do what was expected to me. And that was a point at which I basically decided like, look, I would rather die than allow this place to turn me into somebody that I can't accept. Now at what point do you stop becoming like the new kid on the block and you're not like singled out for being the new guy. You start
Starting point is 00:21:29 to learn the system. You know how things operate, you learn how to move around. I think it took a couple years, but then it also, you know, when I transferred from one prison to another, I was a new guy for a little while. But once I got comfortable and once I realized that if I could build a routine, I could do really well, so that was going to work, making sure I could get a good job. It was basically staying out of the way, but also finding a way to engage with people, finding a way to have relationships that allowed me to be in a position that created value, where I was the law library clerk for a while, where I tutored guys, where I mentored guys. And what I found was, like, you don't have to be big and
Starting point is 00:21:59 scary. Like, if you bring value to the system, everybody's going to protect you. Like, nobody's going to beat up the tattoo man or everybody's going to be mad. Like, nobody's going to beat up the law library clerk because he's helping people get out of prison. So I realized that having value in the community made me essentially in a position where I didn't ever have to worry about that. Like, maybe some small conflict would come up, but generally I could avoid it. Now, what's the most corrupt thing you've witnessed correctional staff do at the prison? I remember, uh, we had one guy, he was arguing with the sergeant. And I don't remember the specifics of the sentence, but I remember he was right. It was something to do with how the
Starting point is 00:22:27 sergeant had treated his visitor. And the, and the sergeant turned around, grabbed him, slammed him against the wall. And it was like there's stucco walls and dragged his face down the wall, then put him in handcuffs and charged him with assault. Really? That's crazy. And what nothing happened to the guard? And this is like a normal occurrence in prison?
Starting point is 00:22:44 Not as normal as some places. That's one thing I can say I'm grateful for in Virginia is that I didn't see the series of abuses that I've heard about in other places. Like when I first got to Nottoway, I remember there was this crew, this lieutenant and his guys. Like they were kind of like a click. When the officers, especially in the hold, they would give you a fair fight. Like if you started talking shit to them, they'd be like, all right, like, we can do this. They'd take their stuff off.
Starting point is 00:23:02 They'd go in the cell and they'd fight you. And it was like, you win, you lose. Like, they're not going to press charges. They're not going to make a big deal out of it. But once they started bringing in cameras, once the whole culture shifted, that stopped being a thing. And it also, I think, bringing in the cameras and bringing in the kind of accountability took down some of the abuses that were happening.
Starting point is 00:23:16 So it was a mix. Because in some ways, guys really appreciated that. Like, they really like those guys. Because like, yeah, they might get beat up because they were all really big. But there was a certain level of respect about the fact that they would treat them as equals and say, hey, we can fight like men. Now, do all the guards kind of stick together, kind of like the inmates stick together?
Starting point is 00:23:30 For the most part, yeah. Okay. Now the contraband in state prison, what do they have access to and what's the contraband itself like? I mean, the biggest contraband is obviously drugs and cell phones. That's what everybody wants. That's what's allow them to maintain business.
Starting point is 00:23:45 I had a conversation with a buddy the other day who was talking about how much the prices have changed because it used to be, depending on the corruption, or level of the institution, or like what was going on, because prisons in Virginia are all built in rural areas that have no other industry. Like there's not a lot of money there. And this guy's going to work and making, you know, back then it was like $27,000 a year.
Starting point is 00:24:02 This guy's like, hey, I'll give you $1,000 a week to bring me stuff. Well, it's pretty hard to say no, especially when you got, you know, three kids at home. But yeah, I mean, I remember when I first started seeing smartphones, they were like 500 bucks apiece. Now I'm hearing they're like $2,500 or $3,000 apiece. But so people could come up with $500, especially knowing that they could turn around and hustle and do something with it. So phones became really popular. Drugs were everywhere. Like there was just this thriving economy.
Starting point is 00:24:23 at me. Did you learn how to use a smartphone in prison? Because they didn't exist before you went in. They did not. There was no Facebook, no YouTube, no any of that before I went in. So one of the best things they did that helped me was they brought in J-Pay tablets, which were basically decommissioned Samsung smartphones. So everybody, whether they had a cell phone or not, learned to actually use the tablet. Like you learn the basic interface, you learn how to interact. And I think that helped a lot of people going out. But even so, I've talked to guys who've gotten out are still struggling. They're like, yo, I don't know how to do this. For me, like, I was out for like nine months before I realize you could order a pizza on the phone. I was like, you don't have to call. Because I was like,
Starting point is 00:24:56 where is the phone number? Like, why can't I find the phone number? And she was like, just order it on the app. I was like, wait, there's an app for that? Yeah. Yeah, for me, I went in before smart TVs were really a big thing. And then three years later, when I get out, my parents have a smart TV. And I'm thinking, you know, it used to be like the Amazon fire sticks you would use. And I didn't realize you could get all the apps and all the video downloads on this TV, which I thought was the coolest thing. Now, anyone that's ever been to prison before, you know they always have experience and stories from their best cellmate and their worst cellmate. Who's your best one?
Starting point is 00:25:26 What's that like? And who's your worst cell mate? The best soulmate I ever had was a guy who I was friendly with but not friends with. We were in the cell for basically six years together. We might not talk for days, but it was never uncomfortable. We might have really in-depth conversations. He just did his art. I just lived my life and we kind of coexist.
Starting point is 00:25:45 At Hyundai of Glendale, Lisa New, 2026 Hyundai Tucson SC Frontwheel Drive for 269 a month plus tax for 36 months. with owners' assurance in America's best warranty. Ten-year, 100,000 miles. Stop by Hyundai of Glendale today or Hyundaiofglendale.com. 36-month lease, 4,49 to its signing. Tax title license and dock fees extra, plus government fees and taxes. 7,500 miles per year, expire 6126.
Starting point is 00:26:08 Who available at this payment? PH 71529, PH7159. It had just allowed for it to feel like my space. I didn't feel like I was having to share with another personality that I was conflicting or conflicting with. The worst was, oh man, we had this guy. He moved in there, and he started just doing this little, like, petty things, just kind of like poking me and creating problems.
Starting point is 00:26:30 And I remember being like, look, I really don't want to fight this guy. Like, I really want us to try to stay calm. And it was just day-to-day, there was just something else coming up. And then he was part of an organization. When his homeboys came up to me, it was like, yo, look, dude's messed up. Like, I got to back him up if something happens. But, like, I'm telling you get out of that cell. Like, dude, it's a piece of ass.
Starting point is 00:26:45 I was like, when your own homeboy is coming and telling me you're a piece of crap and, like, to get out. So it was one of those situations where I had pride, and it's like, I'm not going to let somebody run me out of the cell. Like, I was in that cell first. And then I was like, you know what, it is just not worth it. And so I was trying to move in with a guy who was a lead plumber. The older head, like really good, stayed out of the way. And they kept giving me the run around. Like, oh, well, you let the guy move in like it's your fault. Like, all right, fine. You're going to keep giving me a run around.
Starting point is 00:27:09 So finally, the only way I could get out was the head plumber went to the building lieutenant because the building lieutenant kept kept spinning me around. He said, look, this is what's going to happen. Either you're going to move this guy myself today or every time you have a broken sink or a broken toilet or a broken whatever, you're going to need to get a work order, you're going to send it my supervisor, and then he's going to direct me to fix it, otherwise I'm not fixing it. And this is a guy who goes out every day, every night to fix stuff, every time they need it, Bill and a new tenant just looked in him and he was like, all right, you'll move in an hour. I'm sure enough I moved in an hour.
Starting point is 00:27:33 But it literally took blackmail to get me out of the cell with somebody that I was getting ready to get into a fight with. Wow. Now, how does your family support you throughout this whole thing? Do they support you your whole prison sentence? And how do you think that shaped you doing your time to have or not have their support? I've been able to be successful, both during my period of incarceration and after my release, because of the support and resources and opportunity I have.
Starting point is 00:27:56 That's the main thing that I try to emphasize, because my mother had me enrolled in college while I was still in the jail before I'd even pleaded guilty. She was like, look, you're going to find a way to make the best of this time. You're going to find a way to do something with this time. So I'm taking college classes in jail before I even plead guilty or get sentenced. I was able to do that. It took me 15 years, but I was able to get a bachelor's degree. That's awesome.
Starting point is 00:28:15 My dad died in 2006, but he was there and he would send money, and he would send books and he would make sure that I was connected to people in the community. And that was the main thing. I had an entire base of community sport because of my parents, because of people who then kind of spread that out. There was a woman who I call kind of my adopted stepmother who just worked in my mom's office,
Starting point is 00:28:31 sent me a Christmas card. I wrote her back, and then we wrote letters every week for 16 years. What was it like to have a parent die in prison? Were you able to get a furlough at all? I know in the federal system you can apply for one. What was that like for you? Did they let you go to the funeral or be in touch with him? finding out my dad died while I was locked up was really hard. I was actually in the hole for contraband
Starting point is 00:28:52 possession of pancake syrup. Pancake syrup. And my dad had a medical emergency. He had expatriated and was living in Costa Rica. So it wasn't easy to contact, but I just got a, somebody called the watch commander and the watch commander let me know, like, hey, your dad's not doing okay. They got me over there and let me get a call, I think with my stepmom, where I got this kind of update, where he had fallen out, he had a blood clot, and he had to be airlifted
Starting point is 00:29:14 to San Jose, but that, you know, they had some ideas and he was going to get surgery and everything should be okay. But I'm like, I'm sitting in the hole and I'm waiting. and then this amazing woman there. I'll never forget this woman. She got me over there to get a last phone call with my dad before his surgery. So I got to get it and, like, you know,
Starting point is 00:29:29 he was not in a good place. And I think that's what threw me off. Because if he had been like trying to assure me, I would have been like, okay, he's okay. But he wasn't. He was just like hopeless and lost and scared. And then the psychologist came around while I was still in the hole
Starting point is 00:29:41 and she was like, hey, Jesse, I want to let you know. Your dad came out of surgery. He's fine. Like, you know, I just wanted to let you know. I was like, oh, okay. But I'd been sure up to that point, like something wasn't going to go right. Like, everybody had been telling me I was crazy, but I was like, no, I don't think this is going to go right.
Starting point is 00:29:53 So that was when I finally slept, because I hadn't slept for like two days, being worried about it and being stressed. So it's the middle of the day, and I lay down, and all of a sudden, my door just opened. And in the hole, your door does not open until you go and you cuff up at the door. So I was like, what's just like, yo, come here, like, put these cuffs on, like, we got to take you somewhere. I was like, my getting, like, what do you mean? You got to take me somewhere. You don't do that. This is completely against everything.
Starting point is 00:30:13 And they start walking me up to the front of the prison. And there's this big door that says, inmate, like, do not pass. like this is a line where they can like shoot you or you don't pass this line. And they march me past this line. And I'm like, what is going on? They opened the door and my mom and my stepdad are sitting right there. And I just look at her. I was like, my dad.
Starting point is 00:30:29 And she said, yeah, and I just lost it. And I'm in shackles. They got me all tied up. And I just sat on this thing and my mom was able to put her arms around. And I just sobbed. And it just, it crushed me. Wow. So were you able to go to the funeral or anything like that?
Starting point is 00:30:42 No. So because my dad had died outside the country, technically his funeral was in Costa Rica. There was a memorial service in Charlottesville, but I wasn't able to go. I was at a level four institution. They basically didn't grant permission for things like that. And if they had, what they would have done is I would have had to pay for the time of the staff
Starting point is 00:31:01 and the time of transport. I would have had to wear an orange jumpsuit, full shackles, a black box, and they would have had to take me there for 30 minutes before the service. So I wouldn't even have been able to go to the service. And because my dad was cremated in Costa Rica, it wasn't even like I would have been able to see the body. So they basically would have just take me on a road trip that would have cost like 20, $2,500 to stand there with a couple people that...
Starting point is 00:31:20 Now, did that cause you to have an instant reflection on what put you into prison in the first place? Was that, like, a defining moment? Because maybe you wouldn't have been in that position had those initial crimes occurred and you would have been able to see your dad? I felt really guilty about not being able to go to my dad's memorial service. But I, in a weird way, felt more resigned. I don't think it was a matter of reflecting and feeling like, oh, if I'd done things
Starting point is 00:31:45 differently. It was a more a matter of this deepening sense of like shame and self-loathing. Like this is further proof that I'm kind of worthless and that there's a problem. And I went through these cycles where I would like do really well and I feel really good about myself and I feel like I was doing something positive. And then I would just go into this period of self-loathing and just self-doubt. And that was definitely one of those low periods. Now going back to your time in the shoe, I did six months in the shoe so I know what that's like. What was it like for you? How many times were you in and out of the shoe during your prison sentence? I was probably in six or seven times.
Starting point is 00:32:16 The longest I did was 90 days. The shortest I did was like a couple hours because when they moved me to the new prison, one of the guys that I shot was there. And we're just like on the yard hanging out and somebody says, hey, this guy's there. You want to talk to him? And I was like, oh.
Starting point is 00:32:31 But I told him, I was like, look, I'd really like to settle this. Can we talk about it? Like, you know, I'm not going to let you hurt me, but like I apologize. Like, I did this messed up thing. And he went to the people and got me locked up while they did an emergency transfer for him. so I was back there for a couple hours.
Starting point is 00:32:43 But the experience was always the same. You just basically, you're in a cell by yourself, just waiting for time to pass. Now, when I first went back to the hole, the first time I went back, you could have your fan back there, you could have your thermals back there, you could have your hat back there,
Starting point is 00:32:55 you could have like, you know, you could feel fairly comfortable. And then they took all that away. So when it's hot, you're hot, when it's cold, you're cold. They didn't have AC or anything? Wow, that's crazy. Now, at what point do you finally say
Starting point is 00:33:06 to yourself in prison you want to stop screwing around, you want to not let this situation to find you as a, person and that's when you set off to accomplish like all these great things that you were able to accomplish in prison. What was that moment and also what you what were you able to accomplish after that? There was no singular moment at which I said, hey, I'm going to make all these changes and then stuck to it. It was really a consistent pattern of two steps forward and one step back,
Starting point is 00:33:30 where I would do some really positive things and I would make a dumb mistake or I would kind of go in another direction. And it was this slow incremental progress and then falling back and progress and falling back, but I was always on the path of saying, hey, I want to be able to make the best of it at some point. So over 15 years, I was able to get a bachelor's degree. That was amazing. I was able to become a journeyman electrician. I was able to be involved in the founding of a peer support mental health program, where I was one of the first mentors and got to put this program in a place where we were so successful they were sending people to our institution because we had such a high success rate. I was able to get a couple articles published.
Starting point is 00:34:01 I was able to network and build a sense of community with people on the outside. And again, these were things. I mean, I had to work really hard at these things, but I was only in that position because people supported me and gave me access to resources and gave me opportunities that most people never had. Now, do you think the prison pushed you to become that better person, or is that something you had to figure out on your own? And if you didn't figure that out on your own, do you think life, as you know it now, would be a lot different? I don't think that prison made me a better person. I think prison gave me the time to reflect, and it was the support I had that allowed me to kind of take that path. Because if I hadn't had that support, I wouldn't have
Starting point is 00:34:37 people encouraging me and believing in me and lifting me up, I would have people just absent. And I watched so many people just kind of fall apart and get worse and worse. And I just watch prison destroy people. So prison gave me the time, but it was really the people and the sport I had that allowed me to be in that direction. And I can't imagine where I'd be if it hadn't been for that. Because those guys that I watched just get lower and lower, we had a number of suicides. We had guys overdose. We had people just like live hopelessly. And I watched that a lot. And that always broke my heart because I knew that that could have been me. Now, once you figured out like your daily routine in prison? What was that like? What's a day in the life of Jesse
Starting point is 00:35:08 inside state prison? Sure. For me, structure was really important. So when I realized that I had to find a way to build structure and basically the entirety of my day, so every count time I would meditate for 20 minutes or one period for 30 minutes. I would go to work. I always tried to have a job that allowed me to be engaged and do different things. So whether that was a law library or the medical worker or the maintenance tech or something along those lines, it was busy. And then I would have an exercise period. I would go to programs at night. I would run programs and teach classes, I wanted to have as much as possible. And then I always just wanted a little bit of time to kind of reflect and write. So that was used to my time late night. But I try to
Starting point is 00:35:40 have it be as booked as I could be from sun up to sundown. Now, what's your prison hustle? Because every guy has it that goes into prison, whether they have money or don't have money, what are you doing? I mean, I did a bunch of different things over the years, stuff with the law library, you know, different positions. But the one I was most proud of was the apple pie hustle. That was, I love that. Apple pie. Okay. So we would, we would bring back all these apples, from the chow hall. And this is a perfect example of prejudice and how people do it. Because all the officers, by then I'd been there for eight years or ten years or something. Everybody knew me. So nobody ever shook me down. So I've got like 25 apples down my pants.
Starting point is 00:36:13 I'm smuggling back butter and cinnamon and cinnamon and the new guy. But I would get them back. I would peel all these apples. I would cook them in the microwave with the cinnamon and the butter. We would get the apple pie stuff. And then we would actually use cake. And this always blew my mind because my buddy, Billy came up with this. We would get people to give us cake and give us their apples. And then we would give it back to them and they would pay us. It blew my mind. We would use the cake. We would use the cake. and we'd use cookies to make a crust, and then we'd use the peanut butter or the icing from that, put something on top, and we would put out as many apple pies as we possibly could.
Starting point is 00:36:40 Sometimes we would do like 50 or 100 apple pies in the night, and it was a lot of work, but it was a hustle. It was good. What are you guys charging for each pie? It was $2 for these little trays. They were trays that like the pre-made meals came in, the microwave meals, you could buy off the holiday package. So we would stack up on those. I probably had 100 of those in the cell. But literally, like, we would be making them, and then people would be bringing back the old ones.
Starting point is 00:36:58 One person would be washing while the other person was filling. And what's the currency in state prison? And I know I had like the mackerel fish pouts, sometimes tuna pouches and books of stamps. What's it like in the state? When I first went in, it was cigarettes. Everything was about a pack of cigarettes, a box of cigarettes. That was everything. That's when they were legal, though, right?
Starting point is 00:37:13 Yeah. Then after they cut out smoking in 2010, nobody's really sure what it should be. So for some people whose bags of coffee, that was all they wanted. For other people, it was hygiene. Especially for gambling. Hygiene was a big thing, like toothpaste and deodorant. For some people who was stamps, for other people, who's only food. Like, I don't accept anything but food.
Starting point is 00:37:27 So it just dependent on what kind of subunit. For that, like, we would only take food for it. because hygiene was considered less valuable. So if you want a pie, it's going to be $2 in food, not $2 in hygiene. Now, over the course of 19 years while you're inside, how many different prisons do you go to and why are you moved? I was at, if you include the receiving prison, I was at four different prisons. And the only time I was ever moved was because my security level dropped.
Starting point is 00:37:49 So I went from the receiving prison to Nadaway, which was level four. I was there for four years, stayed charge free, dropped to a level three. It was at Buckingham for 13 years. And I was only supposed to be there for like four years in my security level drop, and I did everything I could to be able to be able to. to stay there because it was so much better. It wasn't a dormitory. You had your own cell. You were at a wreck all day. I could get jobs and teach classes. And it was like I actually had the opportunity to live a life. So I always volunteered for stuff or I used my college credit or I used the job I had to
Starting point is 00:38:13 get institutional needs so they wouldn't transfer me. And then in the height of COVID, I had finally made it to the honor pod. I had a single cell. Like even though they'd shut everything down, they were having me make videos for statewide, basically like statewide broadcast. So I was like teaching Spanish and teaching DBT skills. I was so into this. And then the fire marshal came in. And they were like actually doing inspections on the ventilation system because of COVID. And they were like, oh, well, this system doesn't like meet standards at all. And as a matter of fact, it hasn't met standards in years. They were like, we're going to have to find you.
Starting point is 00:38:40 So COVID ended up kind of screwing us because they said, all, well, we're going to have to do something as an emergency or we're going to get fine. So they picked 64 people at random, which is a number of people they have in a pod to transfer. And I wasn't on that list, thankfully. And there was one guy in the on a pod that was, and we all felt so bad for him. Because they're like, that's horrible. Like, man, you'd leave this and go to a dorm and just packed them with people. And then somebody had a medical emergency.
Starting point is 00:39:01 And because of his medical emergency, he couldn't go on transfer. So they picked me off the list because my level had technically dropped years before, but I just always got an override. And they packed me up on that bus, and they sent me to a dormitory. So that was the last place that I went. Wow. Now, you get a 32-year prison sentence. A lot of people in this world would not be able to survive that mentally.
Starting point is 00:39:21 They'd have thoughts of suicide, not making it forward. What was your why to get up every morning? What kept you going? How did you get out of bed and dealt with that? and ultimately come out on top of that. Well, and to be clear, I definitely had thoughts of suicide. Like, I had really low periods. Some of my lowest periods were the biggest struggles of my life.
Starting point is 00:39:40 But that was really what it was. I kind of had to have everything stripped away to be able to start new. So it was an all idea of, like, basic training. And that's what I think about. Like, everything that I used to think or I used to know or I used to hold deer was just stripped away. And then in that place, I found, like, this new beginning. And the why was, there were specific whys at times.
Starting point is 00:39:57 It was like, I would be tutoring somebody that was like, this guy's going to get his GED. or I'd be working on a project, and I'd be like, this article is going to get published. There were the small things, but the why for me was really about being present. Meditation became a huge part of my life, and it became about being as present as I possibly can in every moment, as engaging with people, as being helpful. And in those roles that I was able to be helpful, whether in the law library or as a mentor, as a tutor, or just as a friend as somebody was struggling, that was what sustained me, and that was what allowed me to keep going.
Starting point is 00:40:22 So as long as I continued to find ways to connect, I found a reason to get up every morning, and I found a reason to feel good at the end of every day. Now, did you have friends from before prison that stuck with you your whole sentence, or did they kind of give up after like the first few months or the first couple of years? I know sometimes it's hard for our friends to really adapt and do like, you hear that expression. You have the friends and family that do your bid with you. Did that happen in your scenario? I got really lucky with support. You know, I had my mom that was there the entire time.
Starting point is 00:40:52 That woman that I said was kind of my adopted stepmother. She was there with me from, you know, that first couple years. some other people like had it came in and out. I had one friend that visited me at least once a year for the whole time. But yeah, a lot of those initial stages went away. Some people would come back for like one visit or one phone call, excuse me, one phone call, but then, you know, kind of disappear again. So it was just that small core group that was there.
Starting point is 00:41:13 But at the same time, it was, I held on to the hope that some of those people that I really cared about I would be able to connect with. And there have been a couple people since I got out that it was. Like the first visit, it was like that. We were back together. And it just, it felt so good to know that those friendships were able to endure because I wasn't mad that they didn't stick with me the whole time. I remember my best friend out in California. We started talking and she basically like one day said, you know what,
Starting point is 00:41:35 Jesse, like I love you, but I'm not going to be with you. You got 20 years left in prison. Like you were a great guy, but I deserve better than that. And that was the beginning of our friendship because she set a really healthy boundary and I needed that. And we stayed in touch and we fell out of touch. But when I was out for two months, she and her daughter flew to see me and it was one of the happiest times. Now, fast forward to August 2021. You find out one day randomly that you're getting released from prison within the next hour and a half, two hours, almost pretty much 12 years earlier than when you were expected to. Did you apply for a pardon?
Starting point is 00:42:06 Did you know what was happening? What's going through your mind when you find out in that moment you're going home? Yeah. So in the beginning of 2019, it's kind of an exercise in doing everything that I could and letting go to the results. I applied for a conditional pardon. And this was basically pleading to the governor, writing out a reason and saying, hey, you know, I was sentenced to twice, the high point of the sentencing guidelines. I'm now done more than the high point of the sentencing guidelines. I've gotten a bachelor's degree. I've been a mentor in a mental health program. I've done all these things. And essentially, like, this is my plan moving forward. This is what I want to do with my life. This is how I want to help other people. Because at that point, the only people they got a pardoned were at the end of a governor's term for political reasons or for good PR, but it wasn't a reality. But for me, it was like, all right, I can do that and spend the rest of my time knowing I've done everything in my power to try to get out. And then,
Starting point is 00:42:54 And it was kind of weird. There was this like snowball effect. So this local reporter contacted me and said, hey, I want to do a story on you because I want to highlight and the problems with Virginia getting rid of parole because we haven't had parole since 1995. And that got a lot of really strong local response. And I was like, that's interesting.
Starting point is 00:43:07 And all of a sudden people from the community start contacting me and saying, hey, we really believe in you like keep fighting. And it started growing and growing and growing. But even then in 2021, I still didn't believe it. I had other people who were like, look, man, if they're going to get it to anybody, they're going to give it to you. But it still just didn't seem real. But it was this perfect situation where the governor,
Starting point is 00:43:24 who pardon me pardon more people than every other governor in Virginia history combined. Like he made this huge push to say, hey, we need to make a change in our criminal justice system. Without parole, this is a way we can do it. So that day, yeah, they called me in the office. Like I was getting ready to try to get on the phone. I just worked out. I was just going through my daily routine. And the woman over the speaker phone said, Mr. Crosson, you're sitting down because you're going home today. And I like hit a knee and like started tearing up and just didn't know. And she said, yeah, well, you go get ready. And I walked out of there and I was like, look, man, they are messing with me.
Starting point is 00:43:53 Or like, this is going to be a mistake or they're going to take it back. But I was, like, kind of in shock. So I went back and there was this kid who didn't have any family, didn't have anybody. So I called him over that. I was like, look, all this stuff is yours. Like, I think I'm coming back. Like, I don't think this is going to work out. But if not, like, take it.
Starting point is 00:44:06 And at first you thought I was going to go, like, beat somebody up or something. I was like, no, no, it's not that. Like, you're good. So he goes and takes my stuff. I take a shower and I walk up there. And then it starts becoming real because, like, I'm signing paperwork. But they really messed with my head because they're like, lo, you've got to get this paperwork signed.
Starting point is 00:44:19 If we can't get it in in time, we can't release you. I was like, why would you tell me that? Like, I'm already freaking out, but I'm signing paperwork and I'm going through, and then I walk back to the pod and they actually gave me an escort. Because at that point, I'd signed the paperwork. I was technically a released person, so they couldn't have me without an escort.
Starting point is 00:44:31 So I got, like, officers escorting me to pick my stuff up, which was bizarre. And I come in and people are, like, clapping and shaking my hand because they had heard, and that was when it really felt real. Like, I'm going home. Like, this is... So they walk me to the front of the prison, and I walk out there, and there's my mom. And because of COVID,
Starting point is 00:44:45 I hadn't seen my mom in a year and a half. We hadn't had visits. We hadn't had interactions. And I signed this paperwork. And I could just sign paperwork for like 10 minutes. My mom's like 10 feet away. And I'm like, I don't know what to do. Finally, I go over there.
Starting point is 00:44:55 I give her a hug and I pick her up. And she just whispers my ear. She goes, Jesse, we're getting the F out of here. And I was like, okay. And we went out. And that was the beginning of this life. And there was crazy. I think it's like a very wholesome experience,
Starting point is 00:45:08 not only for the person that's going home, but also for the inmates that you're close with and surrounded with because it kind of gives them hope. remember when I was at Fort Dix in New Jersey, there was guys that had like 30, 40 year sentences, and they were down to like their last few years. And on the like the final hour of Obama being in office, he commuted all their sentences. There was like a couple people in just my building alone. And it was just great seeing them going home. And they were in there just for, you know, marijuana charges. They were cheering. And the whole prison was just like juvenated by that.
Starting point is 00:45:40 They were so happy for them. And those are like the moments in prison that. it kind of like really humanizes the inmates and it gives you like a different light to it because anything there could be like a gang war going on there could be whatever going on and in that moment like everyone just comes together to rally and celebrate so it's really good to see that now you had mentioned the reporter you ended up forming a relationship with this reporter in prison before you ever knew you were going to get out that earlier what was that like having a relationship behind the prison well inside prison was someone that was in the free world. It was bizarre. Courtney wasn't the first relationship that I ever had, but all the other
Starting point is 00:46:20 ones had been based in like just kind of really unhealthy stuff or really long distance. Like I was in relationships where I never met the people. And Courtney was actually an example of that because she'd interviewed me in 2019 for a story and we kept in touch and we would talk on the phone or we would go back and forth. But it was really at the beginning of 2021 where there was just like nexus. Somebody that she cared about got into a lot of trouble, the criminal justice system. And she reached out to me and she was like, hey, I can't be a reporter. Like, I can be your friend, but I really need your help. Like, can we do this?
Starting point is 00:46:49 And so I talked to this person. We went through some stuff. And that was when we just started talking because she was in such a bad place. I was like, hey, I'm going to call and check on you every day. Like, I want to know you're okay. You can cry. You can scream. You can tell me to F off.
Starting point is 00:47:00 Like, just, please. And so we talk for five minutes. And then the next day we talked for 20 minutes and then 40 minutes. And the next thing, we're talking for two hours every day. And at the end of a month, she just said, I got something to tell you. I love you. And I don't know what you do with that. And I don't know what we do with that. And this is a messed up situation, but I got to tell you. And I was really, like, hesitant to get into it because I thought I was going to be in prison for at least 10 more years. Like, I wasn't going anywhere.
Starting point is 00:47:24 This was a terrible idea. She was going to throw our life away. But we kind of went back and forth and we built a really amazing relationship over the phone. And we worked on a podcast together. And we did stuff that kind of defined who I was as a person. Now, how do you guys, like, stimulate each other to give each other, like, the experience of having a relationship when you're just so far apart from each other and can't physically be there. A lot of people in this day and age have spouses, wives, husbands that are behind the prison walls. So what would you guys do to keep that like spice going on? It's funny you say that because I remember when we first started talking as like friends,
Starting point is 00:48:02 she was like, look, I don't understand. Like how do people get into a relationship? It's like, if you can't have sex, like you're just friends. Like, how do you know? And I was like, oh, you know. And I remember that month later, she was like, oh, I know. I get it now. And So obviously there are ways, like you have phone sex, you have letters, you have things like that. But what I found was it's a focus on emotional intimacy. And I think out here in the world, that's what's really lacking. And especially for women, that's what they're looking for. Like a lot of guys are okay with being like, you know, Neanderthals and just going through and getting physical pleasure.
Starting point is 00:48:26 But the ability to like really focus on another person and pay attention to another person, connect and share history. It's a really profound experience. And it's something that a lot of people aren't capable of. So somebody who's in prison, who can give the entirety of themselves, it allows for a different level of relationship. I think that's also why certain women will gravitate to individuals like me and you, especially seeing us put our lives out there on an emotional level on social media that automatically ropes these individuals in towards us and it attracts them on a whole new level, which is way different than someone that may not look like us or have similar backgrounds. It just changes it
Starting point is 00:49:00 because we're so different in that regard. Now, what's it like to be physically intimate with someone after 19 years in prison? Did you remember anything? Is it like starting a over from scratch? What's that like? It's pretty wonderful. And then now this is the first time, I'm assuming, in 19 years. Yeah, so we talked a lot about that. And we were like, hey, you know, this might be awkward
Starting point is 00:49:23 or this might be difficult. We just got to, like, get through this. Because if we overthink it, we can blow this whole thing up. Like, let's just try. And we did. It was really, really wonderful. And I was surprised at how good it was.
Starting point is 00:49:34 And I think part of that was that we had both sold the worst versions of ourselves. Like, rather than catfishing, we had done the opposite. We were like, no, like, I'm out of shape, and the pandemic hasn't been good to me, and things are rough. So we had no expectations, and I think that allowed us to really embrace each other in a healthier, better way. Now, first day of prison, what is, I mean, first day out of prison, what's that like? What are you eating? Who are you hanging out with? What's that day like? I mean, the first day, I was a blur because I wasn't out until 3.30. I'm out, and then we have
Starting point is 00:50:02 to drive. The prison's way away, and we go and we meet in town, and I had a breakdown in Costco, because, like, I still had money on my account from the stimulus check. So I had this little debit card that gave me all my money on, and I'm trying to go buy stuff. And I just freaked out because I realized, like, okay, I know how to get socks and boxers and, like, a toothbrush and deodorant. I couldn't imagine because that's all I bought for all those years in prison. Like, I hadn't bought a life.
Starting point is 00:50:22 I hadn't bought the things. And it just became so overwhelming with so many people in such this big space that I just lost it. And so we went, and before I had lost it, my mom managed to get some steak. She was like, do you want some steaks? I was like, yeah, I want a steak. So we're driving home, and my mom's like, yeah, it's too bad. too late, we're not going to be able to have those steaks. I remember being so angry. It's been like almost 20 years. What do you mean we can't have a steak because it's late? And she was like,
Starting point is 00:50:45 yeah, we'll do it tomorrow. I'm actually kind of glad because I got home and she had some like some stew in the fridge. I tried to take one bite and it just made me feel sick. I was still so adrenaline and just excited and nervous and crazy. I couldn't do anything. But we, we sat at home, they ate dinner and I sat there with my mom and Courtney. We had a conversation. It was really surreal. And then everybody went to sleep and I didn't sleep for three days. So I was kind of sitting there in my thoughts. But in a weird way, I needed that. It was like this calming, centering, like coming back to myself because I didn't know what was going on. And I realized that I just had to let go of any expectation that I would know what was going on. Because this was
Starting point is 00:51:19 such a huge change. I wouldn't get it. There was no easy answer. And that was when it kind of calmed down. And that was also when I remembered the ice cream in the fridge at midnight. And so I'm sitting on the porch in the dark at midnight eating ice cream just as happy as I could possibly be. Probably one of the best moments of my life. Now, social media didn't exist at all before. It wasn't even a thought in anyone's mind before you went into prison. When you get out, you make it a part of your life now to be on social media and tell your story. What made you get into that? Why did you decide to go on TikTok? What's your first TikTok about? Sure. So Courtney and I, while I was still inside, had said we needed a shared project. So we did a podcast together, which was basically just
Starting point is 00:51:58 me calling on the phone, her recording, and us having a conversation about something to do with the criminal justice system. And the friends that she showed it to or had listened to it said, hey, is like somebody's going to care about this. So she and a friend of hers who works in marketing were like, look, you need to get your story out there. And her friend said, you really should try TikTok. Like, I think you're going to get an in. I didn't know what TikTok was.
Starting point is 00:52:16 Like, I literally had to download the app on the way to the place that I made the first video. But I'd always said that I was going to go to this mountain. There was this hike. And I was like, I'm going to go there and I'm going to go to the top of the mountain. And I'm going to scream. I'm going to do whatever I have to do. And I'm going to put this prison stuff behind me. Like, I'm going to be done with it.
Starting point is 00:52:30 I'm going to start my life. And so I went up there. and I basically recorded a video talking about that. And she said, hey, I just got out of prison after 19 years, and this is who I am. And then that night, I think I had like 10,000 views on the video. And I asked this friend, and I was like, hey, is this normal? And she was like, no, that's not normal. Like, you did something.
Starting point is 00:52:47 And so I made another video and I responded to a comment. And I made another one. And all of a sudden, I just, like, start building interaction. And people start asking questions. And for me, it was really healing because I got to talk about these things that I didn't necessarily want to talk about in other situations because I could control it. Like, it wasn't like I was in a hot seat and I had to answer. answer questions. It was, hey, that is an interesting question. Let me think about it. Let me answer
Starting point is 00:53:05 this. Let me share this. And it ended up being this really positive experience for me. And I was able to interact with people who had family members who were locked up or who had been locked up previously and could give me hope or were struggling and I could give them hope. Or people who have been victims of crimes who said, hey, the person who hurt me has never taken accountability. Like, you give me hope that maybe they will or maybe they'll change. I've had law enforcement reach out. I've had everybody across the board reach out. And it's been this incredible process of connecting people or connecting with people in this really honest, vulnerable way. What advice do you give to an individual that's either about to go into the criminal justice system like you once were or someone that's just getting released and is looking to change their life and go down a successful path like you've chosen?
Starting point is 00:53:46 Going in, I would always tell people, make sure you determine how you want to do your time. Because if you allow that environment of those people to determine it, it's going to make you worse. Because prison is not full of healthy, well-adjusted people. and if you allow them to shape you, you're going to end up unhealthy and poorly adjusted. For people getting out, I always tell them to start slow and start small because I had a panic attack in Costco.
Starting point is 00:54:08 Like every sight, every smell was just overwhelming. Like everything was bigger than I could possibly imagine, and I didn't have the resources to cope with that. So I tell people just go slow and then figure it out piece by piece, like figure out who you want to be in the world. Like what are your values? What are your keystones?
Starting point is 00:54:21 How do you want to live your life? And then find a way to build a bridge to that. Like figure out a way to live. And, you know, when I first got out, I did construction jobs and I worked for a publisher and I just did other construction stuff. But I was able to build a path just by consistently working and connecting and networking.
Starting point is 00:54:35 And it has allowed me to be in a position that I never imagined. And I don't think most people are going to end up in this position. I don't think that everybody's going to end up doing social media or running a nonprofit or connecting in the ways that they have. But I think everybody will be capable of finding something that they're passionate about or finding something that they care about or finding community of people that they connect with and then basing their life around that.
Starting point is 00:54:53 I think that, you know, you give people hope that this is, because there's so many guys in our position where they go to jail and you're coming, someone that goes to prison is always coming out as like the underdog and they are kind of frowned upon in society and everyone's kind of rooting against them. There's this idea set that if you come out of prison, you're not going to ever be successful. And I think when the world sees guys like you go out and make a name for themselves, I mean, you have almost 800,000 followers on TikTok and thousands more on other platforms and you're doing all these great things,
Starting point is 00:55:30 that's not a small feat. That's something major, and those are the type of people that are going to end up changing the world. And I think it's great what you're doing. I really thank you for coming on to our show and being our first guest. You have an awesome story.
Starting point is 00:55:45 I'm really glad I met you through TikTok. We wouldn't be here today if it wasn't for TikTok. So, you know, Jesse, just keep rocking on, keep doing your thing, and keep being, you know, that person that people look up to and know that, okay, just because they had one shitty experience in their life doesn't mean that that's going to make their future. Thank you.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.