Detainees who are condemned by society and temporarily imprisoned in detention centers awaiting trial will be extremely miserable if their families do not care about them and do not care for them. The environment in the detention center is far less relaxed than that of a prison, and it is only a temporary detention facility, with limited annual funding and relatively poor accommodation and food conditions.
Here, if you don't eat well or sleep well, your mind will be under great pressure, and your body will inevitably get sick after a long time. When you enter the detention center, you may be strong, but after you are released from prison, you often become emaciated, which is undoubtedly a true portrayal of the suffering in the detention center.
In detention centers, every detainee longs for an early release and entry into prison as soon as possible to carry out their sentences, but this desire is often difficult to achieve. It's easy to get in, but it's hard to get out. Normally, those who are sent to detention centers are suspected of committing a crime and are about to face trial by the courts.
However, there are also detainees whose faults do not warrant their imprisonment and who may be released, although this is quite rare. As for wanting to be transferred to prison to serve his sentence, it is not easy, and it is necessary to wait for a series of procedures such as **investigation of the case, court ** trial, etc.
Depending on the case and the degree of the crime, the length of detention in the detention center is also different. Generally speaking, the detention time in a detention center is about two months, but those who commit more serious crimes may face longer detention. This is a normal situation stipulated by the law, and the good people will not be wronged, and the bad people will not be easily let go. Why, then, is it that the family is most afraid of not caring in the detention center?
1. Poor food conditions.
Food conditions in detention centers are usually commensurate with the local economy, while detention centers in economically disadvantaged areas tend to be even worse. In the detention center where I stayed, the black-haired sour steamed buns for breakfast seemed to have become a local specialty, which was both unpalatable and difficult to get used to.
Lunch and dinner are also dominated by steamed buns, and there are only five black steamed buns in total a day, and there is nothing else after eating. In detention centers, if you want to improve your food, you have to rely on your immediate family to top up your card, but without the support of your relatives, you have to endure hunger and rely on steamed buns and vegetable soup provided by the guards.
On weekends, the detention center provides rice, one meat and one vegetable, but the oil and water are quite limited. For those who have no one, no one cares, not even a family visit, let alone a family member who gives money, so they can only suffer hunger in silence and rely on the food provided by the guards.
2. Strict regulations.
In detention centers, the time and frequency of toilet visits are limited. When you feel abdominal pain and need to go to the tuba, you must report it before you can go, and you need to be cautious about getting tuba half an hour before eating. In a detention center, you can no longer be as relaxed and casual as you are outside, because the people around you are being held here for some reason, and people in this environment are usually not easy to mess with.
In the detention center, two people take turns on night shifts when they fall asleep, monitoring detainees for unusual behavior. Dozens of people huddled on a large bunk, and all kinds of voices come and go, which may be difficult to adapt to when you first enter the detention center, but after a long time, you will get used to this environment.
Detention centers have strict rules and regulations, and detainees must abide by the detention center's regulations and follow the instructions of the guards. When family members are not concerned, the custodian will give a certain degree of care, for example, in the winter, when there are no relatives to send clothes or money, the custodian may provide clothes left by the previous detainee and occasionally give some daily necessities and snacks to facilitate the detainee's life.
The relationship between people is always mutual, and despite the difficult environment, in this strange and indifferent world, the care between people is still precious. Thank you for your interest!
February** Dynamic Incentive Program