Inmates

Prison Management. Prison physical designs and inmates separation policies do not protect inmates in the environment designed for them. Violence threats to all […] could be divided into three levels: Inmates with a zero violence threat level to all […] have no physical or communicated violent tendencies. Inmates, with a non-physical violence threat level towards others they express violence without physical harm or contact. Inmates with a physical violence threat level towards others they express violence through physical harm or contact. Inmates must be separated by rigid physical boundaries twenty four hours a day based on their intentional violence threat level. As a result, inmates security, counseling and benefits  could be managed based on common threat level needs. (…)

This is a synthetic reading of a study about prison management. It took me a while to recognize it was not read by a real life voice. For instance, notice the emphasis on every single occurrence of the word “phýsical”.  “Prison Management”… never spend one thought about it, certainly not with the perspective of the “protection of inmates”.

You can listen to a fragment of this reading.  I put a slightly threatening sound under her voice. After all, a prison remains a nasty place to stay.