There's No Paris in Bama: A Comparison of Jailhouse Experiences

Jeanne Sparks-Carreker
Perhaps being one of the "Super Privileged" in this country provides more perks than the obvious gorgeous appearance and millions on hand. Perhaps an official decision was bought - they say that everyone does have their price.

On the other end of the cream of the crop's spectrum is the following comparison: during a lengthy stay in Birmingham's own Jefferson County Jail during 2001, I listened to the agony of a young, black woman giving birth on the cement floor of the cellblock one night. She was not helped in enough time to stop her preventable pain.

In addition to her mistreatment and horrible misfortune of having been jailed near her due date, the baby was stillborn. The following weeks of her confinement, the event clearly drove her mad.

The differences one immediately observes in the two women is something that actually feeds the thinking which originally led to Paris Hilton's early release. The differences mark both women's pasts, presents, and futures accordingly. The differences will probably be observed in comparisons of peoples' worth for the rest of this planet's days, sadly.

The young woman I listened to screaming in the middle of the block alone that night loved her unborn, dead child as much as Mrs. Hilton loved her Paris. If not, only the separation of adequate time spent getting to know the person her child became decidedly refines Paris's mother's love more intimately.

In a country that cares more for the elite's comfort than the care of the infant of a young, black female in the South, what can we Americans hope to teach the children who are alive and well and with whom we entrust our future?

The woman I cried with from a distance that night in Alabama always smiled. I remember seeing her approach and help new female inmates during the scariest moments of their stay with us, never seeking anything in return for her knowledge of jail or kind deeds. Being pregnant, she did receive a bit more food and a sandwich at night for a snack. I saw her give away some of her food to the ones battling withdrawals from hard drugs on occasion, as well.

I wonder then if her demeanor and selflessness at times can also be listed as marked differences between herself and Paris Hilton? Not knowing Miss Hilton personally, I cannot say she is not a generous person at times. But however stereotypical my reasoning here is, I believe she does not have the kind nature that young black woman did. Not many women in that cellblock did.

Will the few days Miss Hilton spent in jail eventually uncover secret goodwill and kindness she too showed to her fellow inmates during her stay? I think not, and this belief is not founded on the fact that she most likely had limited interaction with other prisoners.

Would Paris have even gone to jail had she been due to deliver a baby? Would she have even come close to suffering the same injustices, the same cruel neglect to medical conditions? Well, it seems she would not have, given the supposed reason for her early release.

"It isn't wise to keep a person in jail with her problem over an extended period of time and let the problem get worse," Sheriff Lee Baca told the Los Angeles Times on Thursday.

I guess that young, black woman that night just wasn't "up to par" as a human. Her medical condition didn't even qualify mild attention from deputies that night. Maybe she lacked a certain "pizzazz," or had a "glitch." Her shortcoming as a human was poverty and lack of elite opportunity.

Too bad her mother and father weren't ridiculously rich. Maybe her child would be alive and have the chance to become one of the rich monsters or payable judges like the rest of us.

Published by Jeanne Sparks-Carreker

Convicted felon, reformed drug trafficker, disenfranchised from society by the government. I spend most of my time creating ways to educate non-users about drug addiction, so that addicts are understood and...   View profile

  • Perhaps being one of the "Super Privileged" in this country provides more perks than we realize.
  • The priorities of this country is Fubar'd: 'd up beyond all recognition!
  • I do not know Paris personally, but doubt her life is worth more than anyone else's in the US.
Paris Hilton's supposed medical condition was an issue? Many die in prison in Alabama every year due to the simple neglect of proper care for the flu or untreated spider bites!

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  • Jeanne Sparks-Carreker 6/17/2007

    the drug trafficker is not allowed to attend special programs or work release, or even allowed out of the main gate to work the grounds, etc. They cannot take a SAP program (Substance Abuse Program) even if they are an addict. People who commit violent crimes are ushered into work release programs and catered to by addiction programs because they blame the crack pipe for having robbed that nice old lady at gunpoint. But if you screw Uncle Sam and traffick drugs without giving him his fair share... well, I really know a guy who did less time for being an accessory to murder. F'd up, huh?

  • Jeanne Sparks-Carreker 6/17/2007

    Well said, Alyce, well said. I know a few cold-hearted, career criminals who repetitively are given light sentences, but who deserve much more. The same comparisons can be made between mandatory sentencing, in a way: Trafficking methamphetamine gets you a mandatory 10 split three years to serve sentence and a 50,000 fine. Bonds of a quarter mill keep you locked up until your case is tried, etc. Then, once sentenced and shipped off to prison,

  • Alyce Rocco 6/17/2007

    The guy often sells drugs to support his habit. I saw him solicit to sell them to high school students. He is a career criminal and because of that he knows how to commit crimes and get away with them. He knows how to work the system and the judges in his favor. I said, he is just one of many like him in the greater LA area. He poses more of a threat to citizens than Paris Hilton and I would rather see him sitting in that jail cell than her. The girl that lost her baby was mistreated and her story is not an isolated incident. For the crime Paris committed, I think being released under house arrest was more approriate. To the best of my knowledge she does not have any prior criminal record, like those thousands of men that are free to roam the streets and terrorize honest, hard-working citizens.

  • Alyce Rocco 6/17/2007

    Sad treatment females get in prision and jails. Men too. I know a guy out here in CA that has been drinking and driving for years. He also uses drugs and steals. He has been arrested for various crimes, but seldom spends much time in jail. He gets assigned "Community Service". A recent sentence was for 3 months and he was released after two days given credit for having served his entire sentence. The LA jails are so overcrowded, this guy is not the exception.

  • Jeanne Sparks-Carreker 6/8/2007

    Well said, Sundance. And if she never really knows what it is like to live, will she ever truly know what it is like to love? Just a thought.... But hey, if everyone did actually ignore her, would she have a helluva fit, or what? Hee :) Good to read you again, Sundance!! I've missed ya :P

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