Prison-reform activists tend not to call incarcerated people “prisoners” or “inmates,” preferring the term “insider,” with its more flattering connotations of hard-won knowledge. Friedmann was the insider’s insider. His condemnation of the American penal system came out of his time in brutal detention facilities, including Nashville’s old jail. Through pertinacity and patience, he’d penetrated the corridors of power.
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Hall began working in the jail a few months after Friedmann arrived. They didn’t meet at the time, but their lives intersected in other ways. Like Friedmann, Hall had a difficult relationship with his emotionally distant father, a salesman and a Nashville city councilman. And, like Friedmann, he liked a good crime thriller. He’d been inspired to go into law enforcement after reading Vincent Bugliosi’s “Helter Skelter: The True Story of the Manson Murders.” He reread it many times, always coming away fascinated and frustrated. “I kept thinking, If I keep reading this, it’s going to say, ‘And he was born with twelve toes,’ ” Hall recalled. “I really thought there was going to be an answer to why he did it.” But Manson was inscrutable. Hall couldn’t accept that. He kept asking why. Why do people end up in jail? Why do they so often return to it? He took girls on dates to the Nashville night court. Hall told me, “The ‘Why?’ is who I am.”