A man who will be one of the most notorious and feared inmates in the USA is sitting in his cell at Arizona State Prison, Florence. He gets out of bed and moves his steps from one side of the cell to the other, looking at a picture of his sister on the wall, occasionally struck by feelings of self-loathing when he sees her few worldly possessions. You are bound, you are lonely, you are lost and you are angry. All he wants is a TV to pass the hours. You will get what you want, but as an indirect result, you will kill someone cruelly. You will do so without regrets. Even the most experienced security guards will be amazed at the brutality of the killings. And it won’t be the first Robert Wayne Vickers to kill in prison. He didn't know it at the time, but his name will go down in history. At a young age, Vickers was not called a maniac, a young man with a relentless desire to harm people. Not at all. It was the prison and youth institutions that made him what he became. Do not say that those places served as an ancestral form in which the Devil was created. The man entered the prison of a boy who was only 19 years old, and he would never be free again. Standing tall but small in stature, Vickers was never known as a terrible man when he was in Arizona’s children’s centers. However, he was wireless, and he had a history to prove it. His first arrest came in the 6th grade, and he would be in trouble with the law consistently after that. We can't tell you much about her upbringing, but we do know that when she was a child, she stabbed two boys with pencils at a children's center in Arizona called Catalina Mountain School. Yes, you think that sounds good. scary enough for me. But you should know that he did not always do things and attack people. He would be calm, handsome, and then BANG, exploding, sometimes with such intense anger that his actions seemed immeasurable to those around him. To understand this, you need to know that Vickers suffers from a condition called temporary epilepsy. This was later challenged in his life, but it seemed unquestionable that Vickers was mentally disabled, not only because of the wild things he did but also because the medical professionals supported him. Loving care and parental guidance was not available, on the contrary. That alone is often the road to crime. As a child, she was treated by a psychiatrist, who noticed that Vickers suffered a brain tumor that left her unconscious. If you do not know how the brain works, many people who have suffered brain damage later have shown violent behavior. During Vickers' court appearance, a medical professional testified that the brain injury caused Vickers to experience occasional isolation, meaning that he sometimes did not really know what he was doing. His frontal cortex, the part of the brain sometimes referred to as the "executive suite" which is responsible for controlling pressure and controlling emotions, continued to blink from time to time. As one medical expert once said, Vickers was simply “incapable of making a decision again. . . I cannot distinguish right from wrong. “This will not surprise you after you have seen what this child did later in life. He ended up in Arizona State prison when he was only 19 years old. He was not involved in any form of violence, but in a series of burglaries in Tempe, Arizona. He was not just an ordinary thief, however, he was what you would call a big one. In just 13 days in Tempe, he broke into 12 houses, which was quite a task. On various occasions, he also broke into 33 homes in California. Because of his background in the juvenile detention center and because of the burglary rate, he was sentenced to three to nine years in prison. With good morals on his side, he could have gone out of his twenties and might have been able to start a new life, but Vickers could no longer know what it was like to be slapped on the shoulder by a woman, to watch the sun set over the Pacific, His home for the rest of his life will be a series of prison cells, culminating in a short trip to Death House when he arrived at the prison in 1977, a place notorious for gang violence. In fact, in that year a federal judge ruled that the prison was overcrowded, and that the state should reduce the number of people incarcerated or build another prison. the moment he may get caught or lose his ability to control his emotions. A probation officer who spent 25 years working for the Arizona Department of Corrections said he was present when Vickers entered prison for the first time. He said the baby did not look strong at all. He looked dangerous when he was there, being small and looking weak compared to the hardened criminals he lived with where he lived. The official said that's why Vickers almost immediately tried to make a name for himself. He had to look at the part otherwise he would have been abused by older boys, such is the atavistic attitude that harms almost all American prisons. Vickers stabbed a man named Homer Burns with a stick in 1978, although the officer believed that Vickers did this only to please the white gang, the "Aryan Brotherhood". The victim was an African American man, so it is possible that Vickers was what was called a slang prison, "job placement." In that deadly attack, Vickers' short sentence turned out to be much longer. He was sentenced to another 10 to 15 years. Now his feet were attached to the upper slope, which the prisoner intended to see below. In October of the same year, Vickers received
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