Sir Trevor McDonald: Inside America’s Most Notorious Prison | Real Stories Full-Length Documentary – Everything Law and Order Blog

Inside Death Row with Trevor McDonald | Real Stories

This two-part series sees veteran presenter Sir Trevor McDonald come face to face with some of the world’s most dangerous criminals as he gets exclusive access to one of America’s oldest and most notorious prisons.

Housing 1900 inmates, 12 of whom are on death row, Trevor spends two weeks in the dark and forbidding world of Indiana State Maximum Security Prison. He hears from men who know what it is like to live under the shadow of the death penalty and even the date and time they will die.

Watch Part 2 here: https://youtu.be/0__XpC6c-bQ

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Inside Death Row with Trevor McDonald | Real Stories

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38 thoughts on “Sir Trevor McDonald: Inside America’s Most Notorious Prison | Real Stories Full-Length Documentary”
  1. Dead man walking, damn ive done some time in county prisons , jails but thenk God never thr Big house , when i did dirt i did it alone this way nobody to rat 🐁 me out , no vo-defendents but i couldn't imagine having a.death bid !!

  2. I know that kidnapping and robbery are serious crimes, but isn't a 3 life sentence + 1 year punishment a bit steep? Especially compared to the 13 year old triple homicide guy who got 170 years (the two are practically the same, though the crimes are totally different)?!

  3. Although i dont excuse their crimes and find them horrible, these are very intresting stories. Most of them seem changed and would not do the same mistake again, but they have to face the consequences of their actions.

  4. This is the best prison documentary of all time. Trevor was a great interviewer as he always is. And the inmate's stories left me speechless. 13 years old is heartbreaking, damn. The Barbe'r's story and history via pictures was cool in a way. For the gentleman who went in at 13 years old not to have been pardoned yet by a President or Governor is crazy. Even if that was my family members he killed,I would have pardoned him by now if I had the power to do so. He is a person who would most certainly be productive in society. Especially if his record while in prison is pretty clean. We may need to look into helping Ronald L. Sanford achieve that.

    EDIT: I can't even make this up!!! I just Googled Ronald, and saw that he is getting released this month. Today is August 13 @ 2:34am while writing this as I watch the documentary, and I just saw this info on Goggle. That is bone-chilling crazy! Welcome home Ronald, if you ever see this. If you need assistance with anything and see this, let me know bro. I live in Fort Worth and just got out the Army, I also just got back into the States after being stationed in South Korea for a couple years. So we both are finally home. God is good.

    Trevor's interview with Mike Tyson was a great on too. I wish he would have been the one to do one with Michael Jackson. Instead of evil Oprah and that other British-Indian guy, in which both tried to make Michael look like a bad person.

  5. Dude was like 6’2” 6’3” at 15, it wasn’t a very tough act to commit when he got to it. I’d be scared AF given how intelligent he sounds, reads a ton for sure.

  6. His Co Offender, Sean Rowe was older than Sanford at the time and agreed to testify against Sanford for a plea deal, which he received and was only sentenced to 5 years and was later released in 1991. The court had no substantial evidence on Sanford and actually only relied on Rowe’s testimony on convicting Sanford. Im so happy bro is getting out this month!

  7. I can tell you. I’m close to a couple of lifers. Throughout the years both achieved degrees while in. One achieved advanced degrees. You wake up after you’ve picked them up from the facility they’re in. Years ago you might wait outside the prison they were in. Sometimes now, they might have already been transferred to a halfway house. But, after 1 or 2 times. You can tell 3 to 3 minutes after they get in the car. How much, if any at all they’ve changed. My personal experience. They never did. Highly intelligent, self taught. But, as soon as they hit the street. You can see it in their eyes. Or, hear it in the way they talk. Haven’t heard em talk like that in 6 years. And, you pray no one gets hurt. But, someone usually does. Then there’s that pesky 25 to life sentence.

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