FoxySly
01-30-2009, 01:31 AM
~Snippets
We are speaking with Jenni Parsons, the new Director of the Nevada Sleeper prison.
You are in charge of a new type of prison system. Can you explain what it is?
It is a federally controlled prison that will eventually house most or all of the most dangerous criminals in the United States.
What makes this prison different from existing prisons?
All the prisoners serve their time in medically induced comas. We refer to these inmates as sleepers.
What is the advantage of doing it this way?
There are three main problems with the old system. First, criminal leaders can still run their operations from inside the prisons. Second, the old style prisons have always been training grounds where the novice criminals learned from the more experienced criminals. And lastly, the costs of housing criminals in the traditional system has always been quite high.
The sleeper style prison is designed to address those three issues.
Can you describe a little of the actual prison and what goes on there?
There are actually two buildings located in the Nevada desert. One is the actual sleeper prison. This is a building that has three hundred floors and houses approximately seventeen thousand sleepers per floor. Ultimately, it can house up to five million sleepers.
The other building is the temporary prison. It is more like a regular maximum security prison. This houses the inmates that either about to become sleepers or have been resuscitated from their sleep times and are now undergoing physical therapy before release to the outside world.
All sleepers have id chips embedded into their forearms that tell the security system who and where they are. If the sleepers are moved more than a half of a meter from their assigned location, the security computer is notified and guards are sent to investigate. Also, each bed has twenty four hour video surveillance to protect the sleepers from negligent or malicious actions by doctors or med techs.
http://www.technologiesofdestiny.com/sleepers.htm
Anyone have thoughts about this?
Sly
We are speaking with Jenni Parsons, the new Director of the Nevada Sleeper prison.
You are in charge of a new type of prison system. Can you explain what it is?
It is a federally controlled prison that will eventually house most or all of the most dangerous criminals in the United States.
What makes this prison different from existing prisons?
All the prisoners serve their time in medically induced comas. We refer to these inmates as sleepers.
What is the advantage of doing it this way?
There are three main problems with the old system. First, criminal leaders can still run their operations from inside the prisons. Second, the old style prisons have always been training grounds where the novice criminals learned from the more experienced criminals. And lastly, the costs of housing criminals in the traditional system has always been quite high.
The sleeper style prison is designed to address those three issues.
Can you describe a little of the actual prison and what goes on there?
There are actually two buildings located in the Nevada desert. One is the actual sleeper prison. This is a building that has three hundred floors and houses approximately seventeen thousand sleepers per floor. Ultimately, it can house up to five million sleepers.
The other building is the temporary prison. It is more like a regular maximum security prison. This houses the inmates that either about to become sleepers or have been resuscitated from their sleep times and are now undergoing physical therapy before release to the outside world.
All sleepers have id chips embedded into their forearms that tell the security system who and where they are. If the sleepers are moved more than a half of a meter from their assigned location, the security computer is notified and guards are sent to investigate. Also, each bed has twenty four hour video surveillance to protect the sleepers from negligent or malicious actions by doctors or med techs.
http://www.technologiesofdestiny.com/sleepers.htm
Anyone have thoughts about this?
Sly