Covered in Ants

Illustration for the story: Covered in Ants

Covered in ants in a dark lockdown cell with no water, I screamed for help. Officers laughed and left me to suffer for two weeks. This was my punishment for refusing gang-controlled housing in a Georgia prison—a choice that led to 18 months of isolation that broke my spirit.

Escaping the Cave: Plato’s Lesson for Prisoners and Families

Pathways to Success: Plato's Cave

Over 2,400 years ago, Plato described prisoners chained in a cave, mistaking shadows for reality. His allegory speaks directly to the experience of incarceration — and reveals why education is the most powerful path to transformation, both for individuals behind bars and for society as a whole.

The Nature and Circumstances

Illustration for the story: The Nature and Circumstances

Eligible for parole after seven years on a life sentence, he thought the system worked simply: serve your time, show you’ve changed, go home. Forty-one years later, he’s still waiting. This is his account of navigating Georgia’s parole system—a cycle of denials, broken promises, and punishments that feel like re-sentencing.

Time Is the Most Valuable Thing You Have

Illustration for the story: Time Is the Most Valuable Thing You Have

After a suicide attempt and arrest in the early 2000s, I entered Georgia’s prison system carrying self-hatred and confusion. Four years in solitary confinement became the turning point where I found faith, sobriety, and purpose—transforming isolation into a space for growth, creativity, and reconciliation.

Three Weeks with a Broken Hand

Illustration for the story: Three Weeks with a Broken Hand

When Marcus broke his hand at Georgia State Prison, he filed sick call requests immediately. Three weeks and seven requests later, he finally saw a doctor—but by then, the bones had already set wrong. Now 34 years old with a permanently damaged hand, Marcus shares his story of medical neglect and the solidarity that keeps incarcerated people human in a system that treats them otherwise.

Three Weeks Under a Bunk: Torture at Macon State Prison

Tortured at Macon SP

Christian Krauch was tortured for three weeks at Macon State Prison in June 2024 — bound, stabbed, burned, and left under a bunk while GDC submitted 168 phantom inmate counts. He lost his right hand and leg to amputation. The state said nothing. No arrests were made.

The First Week

Illustration for the story: The First Week

In January 2015, I entered Georgia’s prison system at Jackson Diagnostic. Within a week, I witnessed guards stand by as gangs beat a man to death. Over two months, I saw 50 people beaten into gangs while living in freezing, windowless dorms with no activities and constant violence.

The Death of Habeas Corpus Is Killing Innocent People

Georgia's restriction on Habeas Corpus electively kills the 830 year writ

For 830 years, habeas corpus protected the innocent from unlawful imprisonment—until Georgia destroyed it. The 2004 four-year deadline traps wrongfully convicted people in a prison system that killed 100+ by homicide in 2024. The Great Writ is dead. The innocent are dying with it.

Separate the Gangs or Keep Burying the Dead

Empty corridor during extended lockdown

The DOJ told Georgia to separate gang members. Georgia refused. Now 100+ die annually. Arizona cut violence 50% with gang segregation. After the January 2026 Washington SP massacre killed 4, Georgia’s prisons remain on lockdown—but lockdowns don’t stop gang wars. They postpone them. Separate the gangs or keep burying the dead.

GPS Lighthouse App: Complete User Manual

GPS Lighthouse The Complete Manual

Complete user manual for the GPS Lighthouse App, covering all features including AI chat, legal research, document generation, incident reporting, GDC statistics, and family resources for navigating Georgia’s prison system.

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