24,99 €
inkl. MwSt.

Versandfertig in 1-2 Wochen
  • Broschiertes Buch

What I have written within are my firsthand experiences, boots on the ground, stab wounds and all. I was not one of the staff separated from the inmates by armed guards, metal bars, and bulletproof glass. I did my time with them, where they lived, where they slept and worked. I swam with the sharks in the open ocean while many others viewed them through their aquarium of bulletproof glass and metal bars. I was the one called upon as an emergency response team leader when they rioted, in order to take back control of the prison. What I write about within this book is not second-hand or events…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
What I have written within are my firsthand experiences, boots on the ground, stab wounds and all. I was not one of the staff separated from the inmates by armed guards, metal bars, and bulletproof glass. I did my time with them, where they lived, where they slept and worked. I swam with the sharks in the open ocean while many others viewed them through their aquarium of bulletproof glass and metal bars. I was the one called upon as an emergency response team leader when they rioted, in order to take back control of the prison. What I write about within this book is not second-hand or events taken from other officers and staff. These are my experiences. I was there, I did it, I saw it. These are my wounds, my scars, my blood, and my many years of bad dreams. The Correctional Service of Canada fears a sensational incident. This is an event within a prison such as a riot, murder, escape, or hostage taking, anything that can bring serious outside scrutiny from members of parliament, the news media, law enforcement, lawsuits, or a coroner's inquest, anything that shines a light upon what happens behind those walls and fences that the CSC, in my day with them, did all they could, sometimes illegally, to keep firmly contained within the walls and away from public scrutiny. This book is a sensational incident.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Autorenporträt
Dave Woodhouse has had a unique career combining many years of foundational experience as a frontline Officer with the Correctional Service of Canada and completing his career in the Canadian Justice System as a Police Officer with the Toronto Police Service.West Yard is a culmination of sixteen years of writing about his experiences within Canada's Prison system. As he mentions in his book "once you are out, it's wise not to return". Revisiting a career filled with incredible stress, violence and corruption took its' toll on the writer. The author had to relive the traumas that he suffered over and over through the writing and editing of his book West Yard.Throughout his career in Corrections Dave Woodhouse was Correctional Officer 1 or CX1, the lowest ranking officer in the service, and there was a reason for that static rank which is explained within West Yard. His time on the Inside spanned two decades. As the prison riot team leader, the author writes in detail about many of his experiences on the Inside that exposed him to life-threatening situations, be they prison riots or assaults by inmates or other staff members. The devastating and insidious effect of repeated exposure to workplace stress in a brutally hostile and violent work environment is well documented in West Yard.During his time with Corrections the author was a certified firearms instructor, coach officer, emergency response team leader, emergency response team instructor, chemical agent instructor, self-contained breathing apparatus instructor, distraction device instructor, firearm instructor, use of force instructor, coordinator of the ceremonial unit and he was a staff instructor at the Regional Correctional Staff College in Kingston.As a police officer with the Toronto Police Service the author was a front-line patrol officer working in 42 Division. The author was a detective constable, coach officer, member of the Public Order Unit and an eCOPS instructor.The authors' front-line experience in the Correctional Service of Canada speaks of a startling comparison in subcultures between the inmates and guards. This is truly an unpresented and disturbing look into the events behind the walls and fences of Canadas' prisons. The author writes of a deliberately hidden world that the Correctional Service of Canada concealed from the Canadian public sometimes illegally throughout his entire time with them.