When the interviewer was interviewing him he sounded bright, convincing and ready to go, but when he got in front of the panel i quickly saw he was a silver tongued swindler. The more he talked the more I thought he is not safe to let out. Once he got his verdict his true face came out. It was of a stone hard criminal. All those smiles and uplifting talking with the interviewer was fake. My concern was how in the world would he ever develop remorse in 4 weeks!!!! That just didn’t seem possible to me unless he was just coached on how to tell the panel he was remorseful. Sure enough he got out and went straight back to crime, no remorse! I think the only thing that will change this boy is God. I wonder what happened to the other boy and how he responded in front of the panel.
I already knew this kids fate and thats the saddest part. The panel made the right call and at first i said " well maybe he just couldnt express himself correctly and they made a mistake " untill i saw the eye roll and anger once he turned to get out the chair.
After watching so many of these you can tell which kids are changed truly and which kids are full of it. This kid hasn’t changed. I’m not getting a good feeling about him.
Sadly most of these kids don't have the maturity to think into the future. I think they've only got their sights on getting out, the immediate future. Once they are out it's whatever goes. 🙁
@yukiefromoz2573 - You make a good point. Kids are impulsive. Lack of maturity at this age can lead to all sorts of bad decisions, and many kids sadly don't see much hope or opportunity in their future. Thankfully, we've seen a lot of kids make it once they mature and (hopefully) stay away from bad influences. Appreciate you watching this video and taking the time to comment.
The problem is once these kids become gang members it's extremely difficult for them to get out. As I understand other gang members do not leave them alone. Maybe and it's just a thought these kids would relate better to reformed gang members that have actually been through what they are going through. It really is so sad to see kids go down that path and it's so easy for people to say who haven't been in his position how he should feel. I wish them the best of luck
I grew up in the intercity. Born in 1962, so basically my bringing up was in the 1970’s. This was a very volitive decade. My neighborhood and surrounding neighborhoods were extremely racially divided and violence, especially in the schools ran rampant. There weren’t so many “gangs” per say but the racial divides were very prevalent. I’ve seen some very disturbing violent behavior in school and for me, in the neighborhoods. The “beatings” that were common were the white kids that were bused from “white” neighborhoods to High School were assaulted unmercifully by black kids. It was the usual story, 4 to six black kids would corner a unsuspecting white person and jump that one person. It was pathetic and without being provoked. They were beat for the simple reason of being white and fearful. This was the reality of my life back then. Guns were not at play then. It was razors and pipes. One of my best friend was a black girl from my neighborhood. She hated what was going on as I was. Many of her friends tried constantly to pit us against each other. It finally worked. Now, all these decades later we reconnected and talked about the truth back then. It was healing.
Yeah. I went to a private school growing up. The school was 98% white. The racial hostility was awful. These folks would go to church. And call you a N Bomb in the parking lot. We also got cheated out of out grades. Total mind f*ck to hear a priest or nun make racials comment. Some of the stuff that happened, was difficult for me to process, until I became an adult. Although there was some wonderful people. There was a lot racist. History class was terrible. The teachers and students seem to enjoy Black American history. They would make jokes about black & Native Americans...We had no critical race theory to hide behind. The only escape for blacks and "People of color" is to learn about our history...If you don't. You'll have low self esteem and end up like some of these guys on the video.
I feel many of these kids live day to day, to survive, there’s no future on their horizon; this is how they survive. Walking the walk, talking the talk. Being used to ‘taking’ all their lives,Once on the out side they find they can’t cope. Especially maintaining their lives through hard work (like the rest of us) they end up back in prison, it’s easier to cope with. It’s a sad existence through the revolving door to nowhere
That fool just sealed his fate.. smiling.. no remorse.. the tattoo.. straight up fool, that's the type of cat that needs reformed and a few more years in isolation with a self help development counselor.. but he's not ready for a minute to go home.. he's a fool and locked in for life.. fool didn't even take the time to say hey thank you for setting this up so I can see exactly where I'm at in life right now thanks I need to work on and I appreciate you telling me things that you guys viewed and seen as a problem and I will continue to work on my own behavior I appreciate what you guys did today you didn't even do one thing other than throw a tantrum with his little mean bugs that :-) was done they said no you weren't going home to get f****** high and partying Bulls like that they need to spend a little extra time and get stuff out development because that is what the problem is with today no respect the bunch of little rats running around
@@mwbright been there and I've done that but the one thing I never did was sit there and make a fool of myself in front of everyone of those people, their job is to make sure and stare right at this individual to make sure that if they release him he ain't going to be the next Jeffrey Dahmer school shooter or f****** rampage killer running around taking people's lives because he's so entitled they want to know come on to know is he gonna be able to be released back into society without future problems and just by watching this kid and the way it cares himself absolutely not that one needs to be sent behind a lot of counseling self-help development classes because if not before you know it it could be your daughter or your son that he picks up off the street
The kid needed to be in programs that actually help in all ways …but being remorseful and sorry for what you did and understanding what you did was wrong is one of the main things to understand and learn… no gangs at all
Why are you mad? And who are you mad at? I watched it and wasn’t mad. I found it to be very sobering as the true colors of the bright confident boy in the beginning started coming out once he sat in front of the panel.
He was right in smiling as he explained to the panel that his "victims" called him racist names and he responded violently to their attacks.Or should he just pretend to ignore their name-calling and not react to their bullying, and move off as if no racial curses were directed towards him ? He couldn't just react like that because as he was part of a gang his mates would not understand how he reacted passively to these attacks, and he would certainly infuriate his gang if they saw him not resorting to violence towards his name-calling "victims". Anyway peer pressure would also result in violent responses from other gang members.
I think this panel was unfair compared to other panels on videos. Much more people involved, the superior attitude they displayed about the victim question response. If you are a victim and you get a chance to avenge an injustice done to you then you smile.
Sometimes remorse needs time and maturity. I appreciate his honesty. I hope they used this footage to help him. To break wrong thinking patterns and build up correct ones. I pray Abel allowed God to use that time in prison to form him into the man, God desires him to be. 🙏🏾
@@isabellemiango3228 honestly it often takes a spiritual awakening for people to develop true remorse. I hope he finds God and gets his life straightened out.
I work with young offenders, and saying only 'a small percentage' is a bold statement. Everyone of them is different and In my experience generational abuse, neglect and trauma and whether these things are addrssed or not has alot to do with how young offenders enter and ultimately exit correctional institutions. Its vital we don't carry a mentality of taring them all with the same brush, they need support and encouragement but also tough / honest love. Some rehabilitate and some don't but definitely dont count them out, it's often the one you least expect to end up surprising you!! It's incredibly difficult to work amongst but incredibly rewarding when result go in a positive direction. Often they are quick to lock these kids up but slow to offer follow up support to reintroduce them to society and help them on the outside.
Sad but true. Once you watch enough of these videos and hear about the kids’ lives, you can usually tell who’s a lost cause and who’s not. That kid was stupid and too deep into the gang lifestyle. He’ll likely spend the rest of his life in and out of prison unless he gets killed in the streets or some shit.
All theae aldults asking questions, judging, looking down on this child... Failed him. Not to metion all the previous adults in his lifetime. This child is a victim of his enviorment.
Its funny parents been telling these kids to go to school but they ditch and join gangs. Than once theyre facing years they always say they found god and tbey have plans to go to school and play football in college. Buddy your not going to college to play football you screwed that up when you joined the gangb
I come from the SUR. I don't know how they program in the mid-west but in California, its life full of heartache. Urself an for others. I spent yrs going threw it . Hope he didn't get institutionalized . Most who do more than 6 or 7 yrs straight get stuck on the cell life.
Lets hope Abel took that 12 year sentence and learnt from it, because if he didn't he will do something so stupid that will put him away indefinitely
lets hope so annette lol
When the interviewer was interviewing him he sounded bright, convincing and ready to go, but when he got in front of the panel i quickly saw he was a silver tongued swindler. The more he talked the more I thought he is not safe to let out. Once he got his verdict his true face came out. It was of a stone hard criminal. All those smiles and uplifting talking with the interviewer was fake.
My concern was how in the world would he ever develop remorse in 4 weeks!!!! That just didn’t seem possible to me unless he was just coached on how to tell the panel he was remorseful. Sure enough he got out and went straight back to crime, no remorse!
I think the only thing that will change this boy is God.
I wonder what happened to the other boy and how he responded in front of the panel.
sexual misconduct with a minor on 3 more occasions when he got out initially. This is for Andrew anyway.
This guy messed up that interview so bad... kids
I already knew this kids fate and thats the saddest part. The panel made the right call and at first i said " well maybe he just couldnt express himself correctly and they made a mistake " untill i saw the eye roll and anger once he turned to get out the chair.
There wasn’t an eye roll
He was throwing gang signs up when they weren't looking.
After watching so many of these you can tell which kids are changed truly and which kids are full of it. This kid hasn’t changed. I’m not getting a good feeling about him.
His goal is "to go to college & 'play football' ". Does ANYBODY help these kids set realistic goals?
The school he named doesn't even have a football team.
A trade or anything that is a full time job that would be permanent is what he should be looking for, and moving somewhere else.
Unfortunately.... he will be in and out of prison for the rest of his life if he doesn't end up dead from the streets!!
Sadly most of these kids don't have the maturity to think into the future. I think they've only got their sights on getting out, the immediate future. Once they are out it's whatever goes. 🙁
@yukiefromoz2573 - You make a good point. Kids are impulsive. Lack of maturity at this age can lead to all sorts of bad decisions, and many kids sadly don't see much hope or opportunity in their future. Thankfully, we've seen a lot of kids make it once they mature and (hopefully) stay away from bad influences. Appreciate you watching this video and taking the time to comment.
The problem is once these kids become gang members it's extremely difficult for them to get out. As I understand other gang members do not leave them alone. Maybe and it's just a thought these kids would relate better to reformed gang members that have actually been through what they are going through. It really is so sad to see kids go down that path and it's so easy for people to say who haven't been in his position how he should feel. I wish them the best of luck
Love how the cam always goes to the hands, they do this for a reason :)
HERE IS WRITTEN LITURATURE LECTURE AND SUCCESS IN EVERY SINGLE ONE 🕐
I grew up in the intercity. Born in 1962, so basically my bringing up was in the 1970’s. This was a very volitive decade. My neighborhood and surrounding neighborhoods were extremely racially divided and violence, especially in the schools ran rampant. There weren’t so many “gangs” per say but the racial divides were very prevalent. I’ve seen some very disturbing violent behavior in school and for me, in the neighborhoods. The “beatings” that were common were the white kids that were bused from “white” neighborhoods to High School were assaulted unmercifully by black kids. It was the usual story, 4 to six black kids would corner a unsuspecting white person and jump that one person. It was pathetic and without being provoked. They were beat for the simple reason of being white and fearful. This was the reality of my life back then. Guns were not at play then. It was razors and pipes. One of my best friend was a black girl from my neighborhood. She hated what was going on as I was. Many of her friends tried constantly to pit us against each other. It finally worked. Now, all these decades later we reconnected and talked about the truth back then. It was healing.
Sounds no different from when I was in high school back in the mid 60's.
Nothing ever seems to change. Nothing.
Yeah. I went to a private school growing up. The school was 98% white. The racial hostility was awful. These folks would go to church. And call you a N Bomb in the parking lot. We also got cheated out of out grades. Total mind f*ck to hear a priest or nun make racials comment. Some of the stuff that happened, was difficult for me to process, until I became an adult. Although there was some wonderful people. There was a lot racist. History class was terrible. The teachers and students seem to enjoy Black American history. They would make jokes about black & Native Americans...We had no critical race theory to hide behind. The only escape for blacks and "People of color" is to learn about our history...If you don't. You'll have low self esteem and end up like some of these guys on the video.
I feel many of these kids live day to day, to survive, there’s no future on their horizon; this is how they survive. Walking the walk, talking the talk. Being used to ‘taking’ all their lives,Once on the out side they find they can’t cope. Especially maintaining their lives through hard work (like the rest of us) they end up back in prison, it’s easier to cope with. It’s a sad existence through the revolving door to nowhere
Yea he definitely blew that interview
Based on his parole release meeting, this boy CLEARLY DID NOT want to go home.🙄😑Throw the book at him and keep it moving.
Yes mam Sargent Kelly 🫡😉
We can only hope, he will stay out of the trouble but that's our hope.
And 🙏 for him and the rest of the Troubled Youth
Yesss, hi my favorite crew! 🩷
Hey hey @ashandemi! Hope you're having a good week!
What happened to andrew from the start of the video?
@heatharnst1165 - Thanks for asking. Andrew was released during his hearing. We'll be posting an update on his story very soon!
@@CalamariProductions woohoo you guys are legends!
That fool just sealed his fate.. smiling.. no remorse.. the tattoo.. straight up fool, that's the type of cat that needs reformed and a few more years in isolation with a self help development counselor.. but he's not ready for a minute to go home.. he's a fool and locked in for life.. fool didn't even take the time to say hey thank you for setting this up so I can see exactly where I'm at in life right now thanks I need to work on and I appreciate you telling me things that you guys viewed and seen as a problem and I will continue to work on my own behavior I appreciate what you guys did today you didn't even do one thing other than throw a tantrum with his little mean bugs that :-) was done they said no you weren't going home to get f****** high and partying Bulls like that they need to spend a little extra time and get stuff out development because that is what the problem is with today no respect the bunch of little rats running around
When I was his age, sitting across from all those scary as Hell adults, I'd have lost it too.
@@mwbright been there and I've done that but the one thing I never did was sit there and make a fool of myself in front of everyone of those people, their job is to make sure and stare right at this individual to make sure that if they release him he ain't going to be the next Jeffrey Dahmer school shooter or f****** rampage killer running around taking people's lives because he's so entitled they want to know come on to know is he gonna be able to be released back into society without future problems and just by watching this kid and the way it cares himself absolutely not that one needs to be sent behind a lot of counseling self-help development classes because if not before you know it it could be your daughter or your son that he picks up off the street
The kid needed to be in programs that actually help in all ways …but being remorseful and sorry for what you did and understanding what you did was wrong is one of the main things to understand and learn… no gangs at all
I’m really mad now, but I’m not going to vent and ruin the doc for anyone who hasn’t seen it yet, but Curses!! Lol
Why are you mad? And who are you mad at?
I watched it and wasn’t mad. I found it to be very sobering as the true colors of the bright confident boy in the beginning started coming out once he sat in front of the panel.
So the board was right about him
Military would be the best place for him!!
He was right in smiling as he explained to the panel that his "victims" called him racist names and he responded violently to their attacks.Or should he just pretend to ignore their name-calling and not react to their bullying, and move off as if no racial curses were directed towards him ? He couldn't just react like that because as he was part of a gang his mates would not understand how he reacted passively to these attacks, and he would certainly infuriate his gang if they saw him not resorting to violence towards his name-calling "victims". Anyway peer pressure would also result in violent responses from other gang members.
Why did he think they were going to let him that day yo lol
I think this panel was unfair compared to other panels on videos. Much more people involved, the superior attitude they displayed about the victim question response. If you are a victim and you get a chance to avenge an injustice done to you then you smile.
U sound dumb
U wonder if these kids are really remorseful.
Some are but only a small percentage
This boy flat out said he was not.
Sometimes remorse needs time and maturity. I appreciate his honesty. I hope they used this footage to help him. To break wrong thinking patterns and build up correct ones. I pray Abel allowed God to use that time in prison to form him into the man, God desires him to be. 🙏🏾
@@isabellemiango3228 honestly it often takes a spiritual awakening for people to develop true remorse. I hope he finds God and gets his life straightened out.
I work with young offenders, and saying only 'a small percentage' is a bold statement. Everyone of them is different and In my experience generational abuse, neglect and trauma and whether these things are addrssed or not has alot to do with how young offenders enter and ultimately exit correctional institutions. Its vital we don't carry a mentality of taring them all with the same brush, they need support and encouragement but also tough / honest love. Some rehabilitate and some don't but definitely dont count them out, it's often the one you least expect to end up surprising you!! It's incredibly difficult to work amongst but incredibly rewarding when result go in a positive direction. Often they are quick to lock these kids up but slow to offer follow up support to reintroduce them to society and help them on the outside.
You all knew he wouldn't make it
Sad but true. Once you watch enough of these videos and hear about the kids’ lives, you can usually tell who’s a lost cause and who’s not. That kid was stupid and too deep into the gang lifestyle. He’ll likely spend the rest of his life in and out of prison unless he gets killed in the streets or some shit.
All theae aldults asking questions, judging, looking down on this child... Failed him. Not to metion all the previous adults in his lifetime. This child is a victim of his enviorment.
Definitely plays an important part on how a child turns out to be😕😟☹
He screwed himself showing no remorse the victim word sunk him smh 18 u got to see in yourself your messing up
YEAH AND KIDS ARE ALWAYS HUNGRY BOYS SHOULD WORRY ABOUT SPACE AND GIRLS SHOULD WORRY ABOUT BALLET
He was smiling too much and you can tell he was full of shit
This 18 year old is clueless smh
REHABILITATION AND HOSTILITY
This doesnt surprise me. Now he will go back to the placecand people and do it again
Its funny parents been telling these kids to go to school but they ditch and join gangs. Than once theyre facing years they always say they found god and tbey have plans to go to school and play football in college. Buddy your not going to college to play football you screwed that up when you joined the gangb
What happened to 12 years later? Click bait 😡
All updates are at the end of the video.
Didn't you watch the entire video?
@@CalamariProductionsis there a video on this ese .. times changed im curious to see how he sees the world now
INCOMING DEPRESSION DADDY ISSUES KIDS PLAYING COMFORTABLE FOOTWEAR OBSESSION ON WOMEN
I come from the SUR. I don't know how they program in the mid-west but in California, its life full of heartache. Urself an for others. I spent yrs going threw it . Hope he didn't get institutionalized . Most who do more than 6 or 7 yrs straight get stuck on the cell life.
“Life full of heartache.” We sadly see a lot of that. 😢
And women wait in line to date these idiots
CLICKBAIT!
How is this clickbait??? There is an update at the end of the video. 🤷🏻♀️
I hope he sues because this isn't right!
??
Say young blood get yourself together
Omg...I bet the bad ass didn't pay the price.,g!! They did him roo
Another lost soul
GMA boy.... really???
NORTHK
Just gotta really want it!! 🤍