Popular singer, Davido has shared a very funny chat he had with his four-year-old daughter, Hailey Veronica Adeleke.
‘This is crazy. Somebody dead.’ Inmate body underscores staffing woes in Georgia prison system
This blurred image shows the body of a Georgia prisoner hanging over the railing at Ware State Prison. Fellow inmates say he was there for at least 2 and a half hours because no officer was assigned to their dormitory to help.
WAYCROSS, Ga. – Cell phone video shot inside Ware State Prison in Waycross, Georgia provides a stark example of how few employees are actually on the job these days.
The video showed a dead prisoner slumped over a cell block railing, while others complain he’s been there for hours because no officer is on duty in their section of the prison.
“No officer has came back in this building,” said the anonymous inmate who narrates the video. “Ain’t nobody in over three hours. We have an inmate here that is dead …. hanging right here for the last two hours at least. Two and a half hours. Dead.”
The cell phone video begins by documenting the time and date, then eventually shows a dead inmate slumped over a second floor railing. No foul play is suspected according to a prison spokesperson.
The video starts with a shot of the narrator’s watch showing the time of 8:17 a.m. on July 3, 2021.
The video also shows no officer behind the glass of the control center for the cellblock.
The dead man is 54-year-old John Ekers, convicted in 1991 for murder in Cobb County. He was sentenced to life with the possibility of parole. No foul play is suspected. A Department of Corrections spokesperson said staff arrived 18 minutes after the video was recorded.
Inmate body underscores staffing woes in Georgia prison system
Cell phone video shot inside Ware State Prison in Waycross, Georgia provides a stark example of how few employees are actually on the job these days. The video showed a dead prisoner slumped over a cell block railing, while others complain he’s been there for hours because no officer is on duty in their section of the prison.
Another prisoner in the cellblock said staff only showed up for the standard morning count, making sure all inmates were there. He said there was no way to alert an officer before that.
A GDC spokesperson said “It is extremely important to ensure any premature judgments of the details are reserved until the facts are fully investigated and confirmed, and our Office of Professional Standards is currently investigating the incident to determine specifics.”
Christina Remlin is head of litigation for the Southern Center for Human Rights, a regular critic of how the state prison system is run.
“I can’t imagine a more dramatic illustration of the total crisis of violence and chaos inside of our prison system,” said Christina Remlin of the Southern Center for Human Rights in Atlanta.
Georgia’s prison system is already under federal investigation. The Justice Department cited lawsuits filed by the Southern Center for Human Rights as a basis for its probe.
Those lawsuits accused the state of violated the civil rights of prisoners, putting their lives in danger often because of low staffing.
“Many other men have died of unknown causes when no or few officers were present in the dormitory,” reads one allegation in the lawsuit.
“You have many facilities across the state running staffing vacancy rates that are close to 70 percent,” Remlin said. “So you really only have one officer in a situation where you need three.”
According to records collected by the Southern Center for Human Rights, Ware had a 68 percent job vacancy rate in January.
DOJ investigators visited Ware State Prison in the days leading up to Ekers’ death. (GDC photo)
The DOJ investigators actually paid a visit to Ware last month, days before Ekers’ body would be left hanging over a railing for hours.
The Department of Corrections turned down a request from the FOX 5 I-Team to interview Commissioner Timothy Ward.
Georgia Department of Corrections Commissioner Timothy Ward. (GDC photo)
In a written statement, a spokesperson said “we remain committed to ensuring the safety of both staff and offenders, and we continually evaluate any need for improvement in our processes as they relate to our non-negotiable mission of the safe and secure operations of our facilities and the safety of the public.”
But some aren’t so sure.
“I think the Department of Corrections is trying to manipulate the free world saying that it’s not a problem,” said Andrew Richardson, a former state prisoner released in November.
Andrew Richardson blames low staffing on not getting him quick medical care after a prison yard stabbing.
Before he finished his sentence on drug charges at Rogers State Prison, the 43-year-old Madison resident said he was stabbed by a fellow inmate multiple times.
“I was bleeding out like three ways like the cartoon, the water coming out of the cartoon,” he demonstrated. “Just bleeding, bleeding, bleeding and then passed out. There wasn’t an officer 100 foot away from me. No help.”
He said the lack of guards made life more dangerous than when he first went to prison nearly 20 years ago. And for anyone who doesn’t care about what happens to inmates, if a federal investigation determines civil rights violations, Georgia taxpayers could be on the hook for a lot of money.
“I accepted my punishment,” said Richardson. “I took it. Now it’s time for the Department of Corrections to take their wrongdoing and to fix this.”
GDC recruiters seek applicants across the state, even during holiday parades. (GDC photo)
They seem to be trying. Recruiters fan out across the state nearly every week. Entry level pay was raised to $18.28 an hour. But in this economy, job seekers can likely find similar pay without the workplace dangers.
“The job is a very, very traumatizing one, and in this context right now there’s a lot of chaos, a lot of violence,” said Remlin. “It’s understandable why people don’t want to work there.”
Underscoring the staffing issues, the FOX 5 I-Team managed to interview one of the inmates who was there when Ekers body was left hanging, apparently for hours.
The inmate used a smuggled cell phone to talk to us through Google Duo directly from his bunk.
“That was very traumatic,” he told us, remembering the morning Ekers’ body was discovered by his fellow prisoners. “People that need to get the proper attention are dying that don’t need to be dying. If they had the proper staffing, people will get the proper attention they need.”
Mexico – “Peace begins with a smile”: amid violence, “Happy Holidays with Jesus” bring joy and hope to Tijuana

(ANS – Tijuana) – Playing, running, jumping, having fun… but above all offering a space for peace: this is the meaning of the Salesian summer camp in Tijuana, known as “Happy Holidays with Jesus” (VAFEJE).
VAFEJE weeks were held under the banner of the value of Peace and the motto of the Rector Major’s Strenna for 2022: “Do all through love, nothing through constraint.” In total, more than 400 children and adolescents took part, accompanied by various educational and recreational proposals by more than 130 animators.
VAFEJE’s initiative, already significant in itself for the lives of so many children and youth, takes on even more value when considering the context in which it is carried out. A border city located on the U.S. border, Tijuana is currently hit by a gruesome wave of violence – figures show there have already been over 2,000 deaths in the first half of the year – and many innocent people are paying dearly for simply being in the wrong place at the wrong time, or even more, of having wanted to help, to offer the last sacraments, as was the case of the two Jesuits killed last June 20 in Cerocahui, for wanting to help a person who had fled from his captors in another northern state of the country, that of Chihuahua.
That is why the Salesians, in the face of the bishops’ invitation to pray for peace, renewed their commitment to build and live peace: “We must be builders of peace with concrete actions, with convincing examples of life, but above all by telling the truth, by bearing witness to truth and justice in all our environments, especially in the youth environments of each of our works in Tijuana,” say the Sons of Don Bosco present in the city.
“Every Salesian playground we have played in these weeks has been a time of encounter, of healthy sharing, a place where problems are solved without using physical and verbal violence,” they continue.
That is why they are committed to reaching out to young people, adolescents, boys and girls, and offering them a safe space, a space where they can build peace together, going to replace a frown with a smile, going to offer a word that encourages, that uplifts, instead of one that wounds and hurts.
For this reason, the Salesians in Tijuana work a lot in the training of animators, so that they are educators who accompany and guide the students through example and different activities; and, without a doubt, they try to live the “Salesian sacrament of presence” firsthand, so that they themselves can be a reference point for the youth.
Significantly, at the close of the summer activities, the Salesians of Tijuana brought together all the communities of the different works active in the city and organized a March for Peace, with the phrase “peace begins with a smile.” Amidst songs, shouts of joy, placards, and the typical Salesian family atmosphere, children, youth, Salesians, and their lay collaborators marched through the streets of Tijuana conveying their feelings and values to the community. Then, they gathered around the Eucharist to continue asking for peace, in the neighborhoods, in the city, between countries, and in the world; and they completed the final day of VAFEJE with the presentation of different artistic and cultural events, a moment of agape and fraternal play among all participants.
“As ‘Proyecto Salesiano Tijuana A.C.,’ part of the Mexican Catholic Church, we cannot remain indifferent to the pain caused by delinquency and organized crime, which is why we want to imbue our spaces with the values that can promote peace and social justice,” concluded the Tijuana Salesians.
{gallery}Messico – MEG – Marcia Pace 2022{/gallery}
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Jill Biden Disguises Herself for April Fool’s Prank on Media, Staff During Flight
First Lady Jill Biden had a prank in mind for this year’s April Fool’s Day.
During a plane ride on Thursday, “a flight attendant with short black hair — wearing a black pants suit, black face mask and a name badge reading Jasmine — walked through the staff, Secret Service and press cabins passing out Dove ice cream bars,” per the White House pool report.
The “flight attendant” named “Jasmine” then came back to the press section without the wig, “revealing herself to be Dr. Jill Biden.”
Jill Biden had disguised herself as a flight attendant to play an April Fool’s Day prank on the media and staff.
“April Fool’s,” the first lady said, per the pool report.
The pool was “totally fooled,” the report says, and the first lady’s close staffers were also surprised by the disguise.
The pool report added, “The ice cream bars — vanilla with a hard chocolate coating — were delicious.”
First Lady Jill Biden disguised herself as a flight attendant to pull off an April Fools prank, according to a pool report. pic.twitter.com/YhWUgDLIcO
— Kate Sullivan (@KateSullivanDC)
As White House Correspondent for Bloomberg Justin Sink noted on Twitter, this was not the first time Jill Biden has pranked someone. She previously stuffed herself in an overhead compartment for a prank, he noted.
reminds me of when she was second lady jill biden once stuffed herself into an overhead compartment for a prank https://t.co/mcVlv1Zywq pic.twitter.com/u63E3JtCV9
— Justin Sink (@justinsink)
In 2014, President Joe Biden shared that April Fool’s Day is “like a tradition” for his wife’s family.
“What I worry about when I wake up on April Fool’s Day is, ‘What in the hell is Jill gonna do this time?’” he said at the time.
Joe Biden also touched on Jill Biden’s overhead compartment moment.
He said, “Like for example, one April Fool’s Day … we get in Air Force Two, we’re flying and I’m saying, ‘Where the hell is Jill?’ And I open up the baggage compartment on top, above, you know? And she jumps out of the compartment. This is the Second Lady of the United States of America jumping out of the overhead baggage compartment.”